Rehab Riviera fraud: Tustin man gets 15 months for patient brokering scheme [The Orange County Register]
Some folks have gone so far as to call it a form of human trafficking — “body brokers” bribing folks with good private health insurance to come to
The brokers and patients get paid thousands of dollars by the rehabs. The rehabs then bill insurers many, many thousands more. It’s an investment with fabulous returns, if you don’t get caught.
But sometimes, you get caught.
Kevin M. Dickau, 35, of
We’ve been reporting variations on this story for many, many years now. Dickau was part of a multistate scheme “in which he directed recruiters to bribe drug-addicted individuals to enroll in drug rehabilitation and received referral fees from the rehabilitation centers,”
Six others have already pleaded guilty in connection with this particular scheme:
They brokered “scores” of patients, according to the DOJ. The conspiracy bled millions of dollars from health insurers.
Mohammad, Philhower and Passas ran rehabs here in
“The marketing company also engaged a nationwide network of recruiters – including Costas in
“To convince drug-addicted individuals to travel to and enroll in rehabilitation when they otherwise would not have, Costas and other recruiters offered to bribe them – often as much as several thousand dollars – with the approval of Dickau, Welsh and Devlin.
“Once the patients agreed to enroll in drug rehabilitation in exchange for the offered bribe, Dickau, Welsh, Devlin and Costas would arrange and pay for cross-country travel to the drug treatment centers in
“Costas would stay in touch with the
New laws have been passed expressly forbidding this type of thing, but we have it on rather good authority that it continues to happen every single day.
Legally, it’s approached as health care fraud, focusing on the money rather than the toll it takes on human beings.
People suffer
We think of the patient flown into LAX, taken to a park in
We think of the woman who came from
“Why aren’t things changing?”
“The overall consensus is, ‘These people don’t matter anyway. Let them die. It’s easier that way.’ It’s investigated on the health care white collar crime level, not for the human trafficking, the deaths, the drugging, the horrific things that are happening to these people.”
When the OC District Attorney charged
The DOJ tipped its hat to the FBI in
“From the insurance fraud angle, there are so many different violations of the law that occur, and it’s so lucrative and the dollar amounts are so high,”
“Unfortunately — and this does really impact the local communities — the resources we have for investigating, the length of time of these investigations, the lengthy court process and then, in the end, the short jail sentences that they receive — it encourages recidivism,” he said.
Indeed. Stark’s last assignment was as a human trafficking detective. Patients here on the Rehab Riviera strike him as victims caught in a similar web.
“We’ve had conversations with people who have been convicted and have been in state and federal prison,” Stark said. “We ask, ‘What are you going to do when you get out?’ They say, ‘I’m going to go right back to it.’ Why wouldn’t they? If you’re making that much money with that little penalty …. “
Legal types tell us health care fraud is a much more clear-cut type of case to prosecute successfully, and the behavior here might not square completely with the definition of trafficking (“transporting or coercing people in order to benefit from their work or service, typically in the form of forced labor or sexual exploitation”).
But it seems that the harm here involves way more than just money. It might help if the justice system acknowledged that and tackled the human misery these schemes can leave in their wake.
©2024 MediaNews Group, Inc. Visit ocregister.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



A WAY BACK INTO THE MARKET?
Lawmakers show openness to Medicaid expansion
Advisor News
- Retirement moves to make before April 15
- Millennials are inheriting billions and they want to know what to do with it
- What Trump Accounts reveal about time and long-term wealth
- Wellmark still worries over lowered projections of Iowa tax hike
- Wellmark still worries over lowered projections of Iowa tax hike
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- New Allianz Life Annuity Offers Added Flexibility in Income Benefits
- How to elevate annuity discussions during tax season
- Life Insurance and Annuity Providers Score High Marks from Financial Pros, but Lag on User Friendliness, JD Power Finds
- An Application for the Trademark “TACTICAL WEIGHTING” Has Been Filed by Great-West Life & Annuity Insurance Company: Great-West Life & Annuity Insurance Company
- Annexus and Americo Announce Strategic Partnership with Launch of Americo Benchmark Flex Fixed Indexed Annuity Suite
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- Studies from University of Maryland Describe New Findings in Hypertension (Use and Out-of-Pocket Costs of Antenatal Fetal Surveillance for Patients With Chronic Conditions): Cardiovascular Diseases and Conditions – Hypertension
- Higher buprenorphine doses help patients stay in opioid use disorder treatment, new study finds
- Minnesota’s uninsured rate jumped last year — and it could be going higher
- Walz seeks to shake up Minnesota’s human services system amid fraud concerns
- Higher buprenorphine doses help patients stay in opioid use disorder treatment, new study finds
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News
- Thrivent plans to add 600 advisors this year
- Third Federal Named a top Financial Services Company by USA TODAY
- New Allianz Life Annuity Offers Added Flexibility in Income Benefits
- Investors Heritage Promotes Andrew Moore to Executive Vice President; Names Him CEO of Via Management Solutions
- Kansas City Life: Q4 Earnings Snapshot
More Life Insurance News