Vijay Reddy Annappareddy submitted false claims.
By The American Bazaar Staff
WASHINGTON, DC: A federal jury has convicted Reddy Vijay Annappareddy, 46, of Fallston, Maryland, of health care fraud and aggravated identity theft in connection with a scheme to defraud Medicaid and Medicare by submitting false claims for prescription refills.
Annappareddy owns Pharmacare, LLC and Caremerica, LLC, a pharmacy store chain doing business in Maryland and elsewhere, according to the Justice Department.
Annappareddy hired co-defendants Vipinkumar Patel and Jigar Patel as pharmacy technicians in 2009 and 2010, respectively, at Pharmacare located at 208 Plumtree Road; and at Caremerica located at 2227 Old Emmorton Road, both in Bel Air, Maryland.
The Patels were citizens of, and licensed pharmacists in India, working in the United States under a temporary visa issued to individuals in certain specialty occupations. Annappareddy agreed to sponsor their work permits.
According to evidence presented during the five week trial, from at least 2007 to July 2013, Annapareddy and the Patels billed insurance programs for prescription refills when the pharmacy customers had not requested the refill. As soon as a prescription was eligible for refill, Annapareddy and his conspirators would cause a false claim to be electronically submitted to a health care benefit program, such as Medicare and Medicaid. These refills were often billed and filled without the customer’s knowledge. They used the actual name and insurance and identification number of hundreds of customers.
The medications targeted for automatic refills were typically expensive HIV and cancer medications used by very ill customers. The claims for payment were not reversed when the customers did not receive the medications, which the customers had not requested in the first place. Annapareddy also knew that medications filled but not delivered to the customer – usually because the customer had not requested the refill – were placed back on the shelves at the pharmacy to be re-used to fill other prescriptions.
Six federal search warrants were executed in July 2013, as well as Annappareddy’s residence, several pharmacies and a corporate office in Maryland.
In August 2013, a federal search warrant was executed at a vacant home in Annappareddy’s wife’s name that was used to house Pharmacare employees. Federal agents recovered undelivered medications worth over $100,000, as well as binders of alphabetically arranged signature logs which purported to confirm the delivery of medication to Pharmacare customers.
However, the signature pages were undated and contained only the customer’s name and signature. Many of the undelivered medications found at the home were actually billed and filled by the Patels in their capacity as pharmacy technicians, and some were billed by Annappareddy as the pharmacist.
The loss to the government insurance programs is at least $2.5 million.
Annappareddy faces a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison for health care fraud and a mandatory minimum of two years in prison consecutive to any sentence imposed for aggravated identity theft, plus a $250,000 fine.
Vipinkumar Patel, 31, of Edgewood, Maryland; and Jigar Patel, 28, of Columbia, Maryland, previously pleaded guilty to making false statements relating to health care matters in connection with the scheme.
Additionally, Ram Guruvareddy, 59, of Belcamp, Maryland and Venkata Srinivas Mannava, 45, of Hyattsville, Maryland, also pled guilty to their roles in the scheme, and testified at the trial to their knowledge of the scheme.
1 Comment
Excellent writing about health care ,it is actually
useful for me. Thanks for share