Insurance company CEO fired after Texas House DOGE hearing
The dismissal of
"The conduct highlighted yesterday during the course of the
Sanders' termination comes hours after
"The allegations concerning Superior's actions, such as actions that were characterized as potentially blackmailing lawmakers to secure state contracts and surveilling private citizens to avoid paying legitimate claims, are deeply troubling," Paxton said in a statement. "I will get to the bottom of this, uncover any illegal activity, and hold bad actors responsible."
At the center of the probe is a series of private investigations, starting in 2017 and allegedly ordered by Sanders, who had just taken the helm as chief executive officer of Superior. The health care firm was facing lawsuits at the time over declining coverage.
Sanders, who headed one of the state's biggest providers of health insurance for children on Medicaid, told lawmakers under questioning Wednesday that investigators had done "routine" background checks into several state representatives, senators, health care providers, patients and their families, and a journalist several years ago.
The company has abandoned that practice, Sanders told the committee during a tense hearing he acknowledged was "rough" for him.
"We've done what I would call general research," Sanders said. "Anything that's publicly available."
"Superior's credibility rests on being a trusted partner to our members, government stakeholders and providers,"
"We are committed to building transparent and trusted relationships with our government partners and remain focused on our mission to improve the health and well-being of the
The subjects of those investigations included Texas Land Commissioner
"You've hired private investigators to look at not only but also people who have filed claims and felt that they deserved those claims but that you felt that they didn't," Capriglione, chairman of the DOGE committee, said at Wednesday's hearing.
"You were doing that for what purpose?" he asked. "Why would you go and run a background check, hire a private investigator to follow, to dig into the records of people who are your customers?"
In an interview Thursday, Capriglione said while it was good Sanders is no longer with the company, Paxton's investigation should proceed.
"When this happens, it's a culture within the company," he said. "This company is likely to have known about his actions before yesterday, and I think that has to be investigated as well."
House bills have been filed to prevent this issue from happening again, Capriglione said.
"We have legislation that will make sure that these government contracts have even more transparency and accountability, that we prevent anybody who uses these funds to go after private citizens, to go after state employees or anyone else," he said. "If any company does something like this again, they will never get a government contract again."
Investigators from the
The lawmakers at the time were members of budget-writing committees in their respective chambers.
The background checks took place over a period of time in which
The award-winning series revealed a pattern by health care companies, including Superior, of denying or stalling taxpayer-funded medications and treatments to critically ill and suffering patients while making billions in profits, according to the documents, which include emails between Sanders and the personnel firm, photographs and investigative reports from 2017 to 2019.
McSwane, patients and health care providers in the articles were subjected to background checks ordered by Superior, with reports that included photos of houses and credit checks.
"I don't think what any of us expected was for a health insurance company that is funded mostly by
The revelations came as lawmakers from the DOGE Committee — tasked with rooting out waste, fraud and abuse of state tax dollars — questioned him and other health care executives about ongoing battles over hundreds of billions of dollars in Medicaid contracts.
Superior was one of the biggest losers in a proposed
Superior, a for-profit national company, stands to lose up to
Before the hearing, Capriglione distributed a slim folder with the report that had been gathered on him and emails from Sanders to the firm in 2017 ordering a "rush" on his report, lawmakers said.
Capriglione and other lawmakers demanded to know why the checks had been ordered and threatened investigations into the motivation and purpose of those checks.
Rep.
"It could be illegal. I don't know," Tinderholt said. "I would ask the attorney general to potentially investigate your actions on whether they were legal and whether you tried to use what you found out during those investigations against these people in order to gain billion-dollar contracts."
Rep.
"When are you going to tell us that you're going to do better, that you're going to change?" she asked. "Instead, you come here and you complain that you didn't get a procurement? What kind of grand miscalculation was that?"
"I—I don't have a response there," Sanders told her.
Proxy Statement (Form DEF 14A)
Proxy Statement (Form DEF 14A)
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