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Armenian pleads guilty to conspiracy in massive Medicare fraud schem

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  • Armenian pleads guilty to conspiracy in massive Medicare fraud schem

    Florida Times-Union, FL
    Sept 21 2012



    Armenian pleads guilty to conspiracy in massive Medicare fraud scheme


    Posted: September 21, 2012 - 12:39pm
    By Terry Dickson


    BRUNSWICK | An Armenian national pleaded guilty Friday to helping set
    up phony clinics in Brunswick and Savannah that were used to submit
    nearly $400,000 in false Medicare claims.

    Speaking through an interpreter, Khoren Gasparian, 29, acknowledged to
    Chief U.S. District Judge Lisa Godbey Wood his role in a fraud scheme
    that stretched from New York to Los Angeles.

    Run from Los Angeles by Armenian immigrant Arthur Mansarian, the
    scheme used doctors' and patients' identifications that were stolen to
    submit more than $200 million in phony claims.

    Mansarian, 49, pleaded guilty to submitting $7.4 million in false
    claims through nine phony medical supply businesses and is serving a
    14-year prison sentence. At his sentencing, Wood ordered him to repay
    the government $1.8 million.

    Shahak Tumanyan, 44, who pleaded guilty to money laundering, is
    serving five years and must pay $309,000 in restitution. Tumanyan is
    in the country illegally and will be deported as soon as he completes
    his sentence.

    When the government began making arrests in the scheme last year,
    Gasparian was living in Moscow and saw international news accounts,
    FBI Special Agent Tony Alig testified Friday in Gasparian's change of
    plea hearing.

    Gasparian went to the U.S. legal attache's office in Moscow and told
    officials there of his role in the scheme, Alig said.

    Familiar of the harsh treatment of suspects in Eastern Europe,
    Gasparian was initially fearful, Alig said.

    `When he was assured he would be treated politely and fairly, he
    agreed to return,'' Alig said.

    Gasparian flew to Washington on July 7, 2011, and was arrested. He
    admitted that the clinics he helped set up in Savannah and Brunswick
    were `completely a fraud,'' Alig testified.

    He also confessed to similar activities in New Mexico, where he is
    serving a three-year sentence in federal prison.

    Rather than be tried on the charges in an indictment, Gasparian
    pleaded guilty to a criminal complaint from the U.S. Attorney's Office
    for the Southern District of Georgia charging him with a single count
    of conspiracy to commit medicare fraud.

    To carry out his part of the scheme, Gasparian set up three storefront
    clinics in Savannah called SOJ, Healthy Families and Savannah Medical,
    and one in Brunswick called Brunswick Medical Supply. The later was on
    Gloucester Street a few blocks south of the federal courthouse where
    he entered his plea Friday.

    Gasparian used stolen Medicare providers' identifications to establish
    the corporations, set up bank accounts and rented post office boxes
    where Medicare mailed claims, Alig said.

    The claims were typically for wheelchairs, walkers, canes and other
    equipment. It caused some legitimate Medicare beneficiaries hardship
    because when they tried to buy needed supplies, Medicare sometimes had
    already paid a false claim for the same items.

    The offices in the coast-to-coast scheme typically had only one
    employee who picked up the mail and sent the checks to Manasarian's
    office in Los Angeles, where they were cashed at a liquor store, Alig
    testified in an earlier hearing.

    The identities of two physicians were stolen to establish the Savannah
    clinics, Alig said.

    Neither doctor know their Medicare provider numbers were being used, Alig said.

    Alig said that although Gasparian used the stolen identities, he did
    not personally steal them nor did he submit any false claims.

    In fact, Medicare was warned of the scheme and did not pay any of the
    $393,000 in false claims submitted through the shell corporations
    Gasparian established, Alig said.

    Medicare kept accepting the claims, Alig said, while he, Special Agent
    David Graupner of Health and Human Services and other investigators
    continued building their case.

    Wood told Gasparian he could be sentenced up to three years in prison,
    fined $250,000 and placed on three years probation. The government
    agreed, however, for him to get a lighter sentence for admitting his
    guilt and helping in the investigation, Assistant U.S. Attorney Brian
    Rafferty said. The government also agrees that he may serve any
    sentence concurrently with the one he already is serving in New
    Mexico, Rafferty said.

    Wood told Gasparian she would schedule his sentencing after federal
    probation officers complete a pre-sentencing investigation.

    http://jacksonville.com/news/georgia/2012-09-21/story/armenian-pleads-guilty-conspiracy-massive-medicare-fraud-scheme

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