Montgomery, Alabama – On Tuesday, May 28, 2019, G. Ford Gilbert, 71, of
Carmichael, California received a 12-month sentence for conspiring to commit
bribery of a state official, announced United States Attorney Louis V.
Franklin, Sr. The judge ordered that the 12-month sentence be served by
completing six months of incarceration in federal prison, to be followed by six
months of home detention.
Gilbert’s
sentencing follows his guilty plea that occurred back in January of this year.
Court documents show that Gilbert was the owner of a California-based company
that provided a form of diabetes treatment that would not be covered by the
state’s largest health care insurer, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Alabama
(BCBS-AL). After his attempts to persuade BCBS-AL to cover the treatments were
unsuccessful, he developed another plan.
During the
2016 Alabama Legislature session, he conspired with the majority leader of the
Alabama House of Representatives at the time, Mickey Ray Hammon, to pass a bill
that would have required BCBS-AL to cover the treatments offered by his
clinics. Court documents indicate that Hammon used his influence in the House
of Representatives to generate support for Gilbert’s bill and was paid $2000.00
by Gilbert to do so. However, the bill failed when it did not advance out of
committee.
This case
was investigated by the United States Postal Inspection Service with assistance
from the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Assistant United States Attorneys
Jonathan S. Ross, Joshua Wendell, and Stephanie C. Billingslea prosecuted the
case.
No comments:
Post a Comment