Federal prosecutors have charged about 20 people in the past two weeks with allegedly engaging in various fraud schemes related to the Covid-19 pandemic that amounted to about $150 million in improper government payments, officials said.

The charges come as the Justice Department steps up efforts to uncover theft from programs that were pumping billions of dollars into the healthcare system after the outbreak of the pandemic in 2020. The new cases are filed in districts around the country, and provide a sweeping look at how some healthcare providers allegedly sought to cheat Medicare and other programs by bundling charges for unnecessary services—or those that weren’t ever provided—with the delivery of relatively inexpensive Covid-19 tests.

To Read the Full Story

This post first appeared on wsj.com

You May Also Like

Congress Sets Stage for Exiling Chinese Stocks From U.S. Over Audit Dispute

WASHINGTON—The House unanimously approved legislation on Wednesday that threatens a trading ban…

New Hampshire Republicans are not yet ready to go for Trump: ‘He’s going to have to earn it’

In 2016, New Hampshire Republicans lifted Donald Trump’s candidacy after he lost…

Jury set to get case in Charlottesville ‘Unite the Right’ trial

CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. — White nationalists “planned, executed and then celebrated” racially motivated…

Elizabeth Holmes owes over $25 million to Theranos creditors, lawsuit says

Elizabeth Holmes hasn’t paid back over $25 million to creditors of her…