Texas' civil Medicaid fraud unit is falling apart Texas' civil Medicaid fraud unit is falling apart
For years, an elite team of lawyers at the
And the team was wildly successful, securing positive press for the attorney general's office and bringing in money for the state - lots of it. In a little more than two decades, the Civil Medicaid Fraud Division has helped recover a whopping
The cases the team handled weren't necessarily the kind to rouse the conservative base of
"Paxton Recovers
He praised the team again last fall, a couple of months after state senators acquitted him in a widely watched impeachment trial in which Paxton faced allegations of corruption and bribery.
"Our Civil Medicaid Fraud Division has done an outstanding job holding these pharmaceutical companies accountable," a November news release quoted Paxton saying, about a lawsuit his office had filed against pharmaceutical giants
But over the last year, the team of lawyers responsible for pursuing this and other big lawsuits like it has shrunk to its smallest size since Paxton took office.
Nearly two-thirds of the lawyers who were on the team a year ago have quit. Despite some replacements, the division is down from 31 attorneys last January to 19 at the beginning of this year, according to an analysis of staffing records by
The departures followed the ouster of the Civil Medicaid Fraud Division's longtime and beloved chief,
However, a former attorney from the division said agency higher-ups told Winter if he didn't resign or take the demotion, he'd be fired. The attorney, like the multiple former Civil Medicaid Fraud attorneys interviewed for this story, asked
The news organizations spoke to 10 attorneys who worked in the division with Winter. They said his ouster came as a shock. Months earlier, Winter had received a
Several attorneys said the exodus that followed Winter's ejection is a sign of a state agency at a crisis point. The 19 lawyers who left the division last year constitute a significantly higher number than the seven who departed in 2022, one of whom moved to another unit within the attorney general's office, the news organizations found.
The attorney general's office did not respond to multiple interview requests or written questions.
Paxton's agency has been beset by operational struggles in recent years. Last year, ProPublica and the Tribune reported on Paxton's repeated refusals to defend state agencies in court.
Paxton himself has been the subject of a whistleblower lawsuit filed by his former lieutenants, as well as a securities fraud investigation ongoing since before he was elected attorney general. Paxton recently moved to settle the whistleblower lawsuit, saying he no longer contests the facts, as part of his ongoing effort to avoid testifying in the case. He has pleaded not guilty in the securities fraud case, which is set to go to trial in April.
The attorney general has so far survived these personal and professional challenges, becoming even more emboldened since his impeachment acquittal in September. Days after his reinstatement, he publicly pledged to help unseat some of the lawmakers who voted to impeach him and has supported numerous primary challengers to sitting Republican legislators.
The personnel losses in the Civil Medicaid Fraud Division carry a different consequence because it is one of the departments at the attorney general's office that generates money. In fiscal year 2000, the team's first in existence, lawyers there helped bring in a little more than
Besides the money that went to the state general fund, Paxton's office also benefited, getting to keep a portion of attorney's fees from its cases, money that goes to the agency as a whole. In fiscal year 2023, the division helped collect more than
Without the full crop of lawyers, achieving those kinds of wins will be significantly harder, former lawyers for the division said.
"When a lawyer who's been there for years and has handled multiple lawsuits and built relationships with the feds, with other states, all of that - when that walks out the door, you start over, and that is not easily regained," said
Medicaid fraud cases can take years to complete, and money from legal settlements coming in this year is most likely the result of cases investigated and litigated under Winter's leadership, a former attorney said. So it is too soon to know how the division's ability to secure financial settlements will be affected by the loss of so many experienced attorneys. Last fiscal year, however, the Civil Medicaid Fraud Division opened only 56 cases, the lowest number since at least 2013, according to a review of annual reports jointly issued by the attorney general's office, the
Winter declined to be interviewed for this story. The
Medicaid fraud litigation is complex and requires a sharp understanding of state and federal law. The attorneys regularly take on big pharmaceutical companies with deep pockets. Often, the state faces off against multiple white-shoe law firms in a single case.
Another former Civil Medicaid Fraud attorney, who left the division last year, predicted it could take a decade to rebuild the unit because of the institutional knowledge that was lost.
"As a
A close-knit team
Winter was the kind of hands-on leader who inspired uncommon admiration among his staff. In his earlier life, he'd been a member of
And it was a close-knit team in Civil Medicaid Fraud.
In 1999, then-
When Winter first started working on Medicaid fraud cases in 2000, there were only two other people on the team. They had few resources.
But that quickly began to change. In 2000,
In 2003, the Civil Medicaid Fraud unit settled with
As the settlements grew, so did the unit's reputation across the country, said
Texas Medicaid fraud attorneys were always willing to help and provide Winget-Hernandez guidance when she called with questions about pursuing similar Medicaid fraud lawsuits in her state. "I know they say
By 2007, Winter was the unit's acting chief. The following year, Abbott, who was the state's attorney general from 2002 to 2014, made it its own division.
The Civil Medicaid Fraud Division landed some of its biggest headlines when its attorneys joined a whistleblower lawsuit against health care behemoth
The case went to trial in
After roughly a week of the plaintiffs' case,
He "led by example, and was just completely trusted by the individuals who worked in the division," Jacks said.
The team's successes were a calling card for top-tier legal talent. The Civil Medicaid Fraud unit attracted law school stars and experienced private attorneys willing to take pay cuts in order to work for the state and for a mission they believed in, O'Keeffe said. "They wanted to come and work for us because we were on the right side of cases," O'Keeffe said. "It was complex, high-profile work, and we were incredibly successful."
When Abbott was still attorney general, job candidates sometimes asked in interviews about the politics of the agency and how that affected their work. "And we would say, 'Hey,
In
Growing pressure
Paxton's first election didn't initially change things in Civil Medicaid Fraud. The team kept securing settlements, and there was still a sense of a separation between the agency's day-to-day operations and the politics, said
The atmosphere started to shift sometime after Paxton was elected for a second term in 2018.
The differences were small at first. O'Keeffe, who also became a deputy chief in the unit, recalled higher-ups in the attorney general's office asking her to meet with a woman whose health care company the Civil Medicaid Fraud Division was investigating, though lawyers had not yet decided whether to pursue the case in court. The woman wanted to know why lawyers were looking into her business. "She made it very clear she wanted me to back off," O'Keeffe said.
Ultimately, nothing came of the interaction, and O'Keeffe said she doesn't believe a case was ever filed against the woman's company. Still, she couldn't believe leadership at the attorney general's office would even call such a meeting in the first place because of the potential precedent it could set. Lawyers don't meet directly with potential defendants because it could influence the course of a case or investigation and because "it gives the person who's being investigated the impression they are in charge, not you," O'Keeffe said.
"I thought, 'Greg Abbott would have never let this happen.
Previously, the team had felt free from political pressure, Miller said. The lawyers were working for Republican attorneys general yet were still able to take on big business. Under Paxton, however, she said the higher-ups started asking more questions about certain cases the attorneys chose to pursue and how long they took. "We had to start justifying things more," Miller said. O'Keeffe noticed Winter being cut out of discussions about certain matters and that executives weren't always heeding his legal advice - partly, she believes, because he wasn't in Paxton's inner circle.
O'Keeffe left the agency in fall 2019, followed by Miller in
One of the whistleblowers,
Maxwell, a former Texas Ranger, had been the attorney general's director of criminal law enforcement. Part of Winter's job with the state, separate from his leadership of the Civil Medicaid Fraud Division, was to defend Maxwell's ratings of law enforcement officers who were terminated from the attorney general's office.
Paxton ultimately fired Maxwell and gave him a general discharge, according to court filings, which indicates some kind of work performance problem or disciplinary issue. When Maxwell challenged the rating, wanting to upgrade to honorable discharge, the attorney general's office asked Winter to defend its decision. Winter declined, according to Maxwell's
Maxwell declined an interview request for this story.
"Paxton has totally devastated the agency with good people that he's gotten rid of because the criteria to get hired in the executive level is to plead your allegiance to him, not to the agency or not to the law," Maxwell told the investigators.
Ultimately, Paxton fired four other whistleblowers. Another three of them quit, among them Paxton's second in command, First Assistant
Among Paxton's new lieutenants was
His first day with the state, Webster kicked out one of the other whistleblowers,
Unlike his predecessor in the first assistant role, Webster was far less enamored with Winter and his team, according to one attorney who used to work with the Civil Medicaid Fraud Division. Other officials in the agency suspected Webster didn't appreciate any level of pushback on his ideas, the attorney said. But Winter was direct, the attorney said, and wouldn't necessarily hold back his legal opinion about a case if he thought it necessary to share it.
Webster did not respond to requests for comment.
Winter did his best to shield the division from politics and turmoil in the executive offices, several attorneys said. But in 2022, the attorney general's office and the Civil Medicaid Fraud Division joined a whistleblower lawsuit against
One of the attorneys told the news organizations that in the months leading up to Winter's ouster, there was a building sense of scrutiny, pressure and interference coming from the top of the organization, particularly when it came to the
The team kept trying to do its work. Then, in
"Anyone who was being honest with themselves in the moment knew things were about to be really bad," another former Civil Medicaid Fraud attorney said.
No one was safe
Winter's departure was a seismic event. If he wasn't safe, some of the division attorneys agreed, no one was.
By
These reductions will hurt the division's ability to detect Medicaid waste, said
"That's the only effect it can possibly have," Silver said. "The number of potential cases out there greatly exceeds the ability of either the states' AG departments or the federal government to police it all."
Some of the departing lawyers followed Winter to his new job at the
Now, there are only a handful of attorneys left in the division with experience litigating Medicaid fraud cases.
And the resignations haven't stopped. On



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