CAMDEN, N.J. – An Ocean County, New Jersey, woman was
sentenced today to 24 months in prison for defrauding New Jersey state health
benefits programs and other insurers by submitting fraudulent claims for
medically unnecessary prescriptions, U.S. Attorney Craig Carpenito announced.
Kristie Masucci, 37, of Cedar Run, New Jersey, previously
pleaded guilty before U.S. District Judge Robert B. Kugler to an information
charging her with conspiracy to commit health care fraud. Judge Kugler imposed
the sentence today in Camden federal court.
According to documents filed in this case and statements
made in court:
Compounded medications are supposed to be specialty
medications mixed by a pharmacist to meet the specific medical needs of an
individual patient. Although compounded drugs are not approved by the Food and
Drug Administration (FDA), they are properly prescribed when a physician
determines that an FDA-approved medication does not meet the health needs of a
particular patient, such as if a patient is allergic to a dye or other
ingredient.
From January 2015 through February 2016, Masucci served as a
recruiter in the conspiracy and persuaded individuals in New Jersey to obtain
very expensive and medically unnecessary compounded medications from an
out-of-state pharmacy, identified in the information as the “Compounding
Pharmacy.” The conspirators learned that certain compound medication
prescriptions – including pain, scar, antifungal, and libido creams, as well as
vitamin combinations – were reimbursed for thousands of dollars for a one-month
supply.
The conspirators also learned that some New Jersey state and
local government and education employees, including teachers, firefighters,
municipal police officers, and state troopers, had insurance coverage for these
particular compound medications. An entity referred to in the information as
the “Pharmacy Benefits Administrator” provided pharmacy benefit management
services for the State Health Benefits Program, which covers qualified state
and local government employees, retirees, and eligible dependents, and the
School Employees’ Health Benefits Program, which covers qualified local
education employees, retirees, and eligible dependents. The Pharmacy Benefits
Administrator would pay prescription drug claims and then bill the State of New
Jersey for the amounts paid.
Masucci and conspirators working under her recruited public
employees and other individuals covered by the Pharmacy Benefits Administrator to
fraudulently obtain compounded medications from the Compounding Pharmacy
without any evaluation by a medical professional that they were medically
necessary. In return, the pharmacy paid one of Masucci’s conspirators a
percentage of each prescription filled and paid by the Pharmacy Benefits
Administrator, which was then distributed to Masucci and other members of the
conspiracy.
Masucci’s conspirators would then cause the prescriptions to
be signed by a doctor who never evaluated whether the patients had a medical
necessity for the compounded medication. The prescriptions were then faxed to
the Compounding Pharmacy, which filled the prescriptions and billed the
Pharmacy Benefits Administrator.
According to the information, the Pharmacy Benefits Administrator
paid the Compounding Pharmacy more than $50 million for compounded medications
mailed to individuals in New Jersey, including $1.8 million for prescriptions
submitted by Masucci and her cohorts. Masucci received $388,608 for her role in
the scheme.
In addition to the prison term, Judge Kugler sentenced
Masucci to three years of supervised release and ordered her to pay $1.8
million in restitution.
U.S. Attorney Carpenito credited agents of the FBI’s
Atlantic City Resident Agency, under the direction of Special Agent in Charge
Gregory W. Ehrie in Newark; IRS – Criminal Investigation, under the direction
of Special Agent in Charge John R. Tafur in Newark; and the U.S. Department of
Labor, Office of Inspector General, New York Region, under the direction of
Special Agent in Charge Michael C. Mikulka, with the investigation leading to
today’s sentencing. He also thanked the Division of Pensions and Financial
Transactions in the State Attorney General’s Office, under the direction of
Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal and Division Chief Eileen Schlindwein Den
Bleyker, for its assistance in the investigation.
The government is represented by Assistant U.S. Attorneys R.
David Walk Jr. and Christina Hud of the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Camden.
Defense counsel: Amy Luria Esq., Roseland, New Jersey
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