Investors send UnitedHealth stock down on report of DOJ criminal investigation into Medicare Advantage
Investors punished
In a story posted late Wednesday, the Journal quoted unnamed sources familiar with the matter who said the investigators are focusing on the company’s business practices in the Medicare Advantage health plan. The exact nature of the allegations is unclear, but the probe — ongoing since at least last summer — is overseen by the health care fraud unit of the Justice Department’s criminal division.
The health care company said in a statement to the
“We stand by the integrity of our Medicare Advantage program,” the health care company said.
“The potential for Medicare fraud at the largest Medicare Advantage insurer is spooking investors, and if wrongdoing is eventually found, the monetary damages could be stiff,”
The news late Wednesday and into Thursday followed reports earlier this year that the company’s Medicare Advantage business was being investigated in a civil probe, after it had been singled out in a federal watchdog report for the questionable use of Medicare diagnosis data to boost payments by billions of dollars.
Allegations that insurers, including UnitedHealthcare, the massive health insurance division at
But investigative news reports over the past year, combined with widespread public anger at the company that was piqued following the killing of a top company executive on a public sidewalk in
Hemsley put a brave face on the challenges in an internal message to employees earlier this week, which was obtained by the
“I am optimistic about our future since many of the issues standing in the way of achieving our goals are within our capacity to resolve,” he wrote. “I know we will approach them with humility, rigor and urgency, guided as always by our mission to help people live healthier lives and help make the health system work better for everyone.”
Medicare Advantage is a program in which the government pays private health insurers a per-member, per-month fee to provide medical benefits to seniors. These payments are increased based on “risk-adjustment” data submitted by insurers, so they are rewarded financially for managing care for people with serious health problems.
Historically, insurers faced criticism for shunning patients with high medical costs.
In early 2017, the federal government joined a whistleblower lawsuit from a former
In March, a court-appointed special master recommended the lawsuit not be allowed to move forward after finding no evidence to support key allegations about the company’s gaming risk-adjustment payments. The
The company was the biggest recipient of the add-on funds based on “questionable” practices for 2023, according to the report from the
OIG’s reporting, plus coverage over the past year by the
Last July, the
Then in
“We are aware, however, that the Journal has engaged in a yearlong campaign to defend a legacy [Medicare] system that rewards volume over keeping patients healthy and addressing their underlying conditions,” the company said at the time. “Any suggestion that our practices are fraudulent is outrageous and false.”
The Journal’s new report Wednesday, however, cited a filing this week in the
Optum is the health services division within United.
“Their inquiry is still in the early stages, and we do not know whether or when the government might seek to contact you,”
The filing is part of an ongoing lawsuit from shareholders alleging securities fraud by the company.
Beyond allegations of Medicare Advantage wrongdoing,
Just this week, the company announced the return of longtime company leader Hemsley as chief executive, a move meant to restore confidence with investors amid a steep decline in the value of United shares. The stock has plunged with financial missteps under the leadership of former CEO Witty, who remains as a senior adviser.
Meanwhile, the company’s reputation was significantly tarnished amid public outrage over health insurance industry practices following the killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO
Lawsuits settled just in the past four months alleged the company’s health insurance divisions weren’t providing sufficient access to an emerging cancer treatment called proton beam radiation therapy as well as emergency room care and urinary drug screenings.
Other controversies include the continuing fallout from a massive cyberattack and withering criticism of the pharmacy benefit manager (PBM) industry where
In
And tough investigative reports over the past year or so from the
United has pushed back on all fronts.
©2025 The Minnesota Star Tribune. Visit startribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC


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