LEXINGTON, Ky. – Today, an Owensboro man admitted in federal
court that he participated in a conspiracy to defraud health insurance programs
of more than $1.3 million.
Dinesh Goyal, 60, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy
to commit an offense against the United States, before United States District
Judge Joseph Hood. Goyal owned a
toxicology laboratory in Owensboro, Kentucky called Tristate Medical Laboratory
(“Tristate”). His co-conspirators, Mason
Routt and Sam Ford, owned or were affiliated with a Nicholasville, Kentucky
toxicology lab known as C.A.L. Laboratory Services (“CAL”). Among other things, CAL provided urine drug
testing services for physician clients.
Beginning in late 2015, health care organizations who administer the
Kentucky Medicaid program placed payment restrictions on CAL’s claims seeking
reimbursement for urine drug tests, due to concerns about the legitimacy of
those claims. In October 2016, Goyal,
Routt, and Ford agreed that urine drug tests referred to and performed by CAL
would be billed to the health insurance programs using Tristate’s billing
information, falsely representing that the tests were performed by
Tristate. In this way, CAL evaded the
payment restrictions placed upon it by the insurers, and received reimbursements
to which it was not entitled. In
exchange for the use of his lab’s billing information, Goyal agreed to receive
40% of these fraudulent reimbursements.
In the plea agreement filed today, Goyal admitted that these fraudulent
claims caused Humana Caresource, Aetna Coventry Cares, and Anthem Blue Cross
& Blue Shield Medicaid to suffer a combined loss of $1,378,449.
Goyal was charged by way of information in the Eastern
District of Kentucky, waiving his right to indictment by a federal grand
jury. Sam Ford, one of his
co-conspirators, pled guilty to the same offense in March 2019 and is scheduled
to be sentenced on August 12, 2019.
Mason Routt, the owner of CAL and the other co-conspirator, passed away
unexpectedly in August 2017.
In addition to his guilty plea, Goyal entered into a
separate settlement agreement resolving his civil liability under the federal
False Claims Act for the same misconduct.
Pursuant to the False Claims Act settlement agreement, Goyal is
obligated to sell personal and commercial property and remit 75% of the net
sale proceeds to the United States, in addition to certain cash payment
obligations. Goyal also agreed to be
excluded from the Medicare and Kentucky Medicaid programs for a period of 10
years, meaning that he cannot own or work for any company that submits claims
to those federal health insurance program.
Robert M. Duncan, Jr., United States Attorney for the
Eastern District of Kentucky; James Robert Brown, Jr., Special Agent in Charge,
Federal Bureau of Investigation, Louisville Field Office; and Derrick L.
Jackson, Special Agent in Charge, Department of Health and Human Services,
Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG), Atlanta Field Office, jointly announced
the guilty plea.
The investigation was conducted by the FBI and HHS-OIG. The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern
District of Kentucky was represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Paul McCaffrey
in the criminal case, and by Assistant U.S. Attorney Christine Corndorf in the
parallel civil case.
Goyal is scheduled to be sentenced on October 15, 2019, in
federal court in Lexington. He faces up
to 5 years in prison and a maximum fine of $250,000, or twice the amount of
loss caused by his crime, whichever is greater.
However, any sentence will be imposed by the Court after consideration
of the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and the applicable federal statutes.
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