URBANA, Ill. – A chiropractor who previously owned and
operated the Bradley Chiropractic Clinic, located in Bradley, Ill., pleaded
guilty today to wire fraud and failure to file tax returns. Joseph Mayotte, 72,
of Kankakee, Ill., appeared in Urbana before Chief U.S. District Judge James E.
Shadid. Mayotte’s trial had been scheduled to begin today with jury selection.
Sentencing is scheduled on June 7, 2019. The clinic’s former office manager,
Constance Leadingham, aka Connie, had previously pleaded guilty to bank fraud
and filing false income tax returns and is scheduled to be sentenced on March
1, 2019.
Mayotte admitted that from January 2007 to October 2015, he
executed a scheme to defraud Blue Cross / Blue Shield Insurance by submitting
false billing claims. The false claims were typically made on behalf of
patients for whom the clinic had not provided any services or were made in
excess of the actual services provided. As a result, Blue Cross / Blue Shield
paid the clinic more than $250,000 to which it was not entitled. Mayotte then
used the money for his own benefit. In addition, Mayotte admitted that he
failed to file federal income tax returns for tax years 2011 through 2014.
Leadingham, of Watseka, entered pleas of guilty on Nov. 28,
2017, to bank fraud and filing false income tax returns for tax years 2011,
2012, and 2013. Leadingham admitted that as the clinic’s office manager, she
participated in the scheme by submitting fraudulent billing claims to the
company. Leadingham then wrote checks payable to herself from the clinic’s
checking account in addition to her salary. As a result, Leadingham obtained
more than $380,000 to which she was not entitled. Further, Leadingham admitted
that she did not disclose the additional income that she had fraudulently
obtained from the clinic for her tax filings in 2011, 2012, and 2013.
The charges are the result of investigation by the FDIC
Office of Inspector General; Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigations,
and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Eugene L.
Miller and Timothy A. Bass represented the government in the case prosecutions.
The maximum statutory penalty for wire fraud is 20 years in
prison; for bank fraud the penalty is up to 30 years in prison. The maximum
statutory penalty is prescribed by Congress and is provided here for
informational purposes; sentences are determined by the court based on the
advisory Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.
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