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A doctor claims there were "perverse incentives" during the pandemic to administer COVID vaccines. As an outpatient physician, she states she could have made $1,500,000 if she had vaccinated the 6,000 COVID patients she treated. She suggests that both outpatient and inpatient settings had "financial incentives" to adhere to government protocols.

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A Michigan doctor has been sentenced to 45 years in prison for falsely diagnosing hundreds of patients with cancer and administering unnecessary chemotherapy. The doctor, Farid Fata, admitted to intentionally misdiagnosing over 550 patients and profiting over $17 million from their treatments. Outside the courtroom, families expressed their anger and disappointment, feeling betrayed by the doctor's lies. One patient, Monica Flagg, described the experience as extremely emotional and stressful. Fata, in his statement, acknowledged his misuse of power and greed but offered no comfort to the victims. The sentencing was seen as insufficient by some, who believed that 45 years was not enough for the lives he had affected.

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We are announcing today charges against 324 defendants for their alleged participation in health care fraud schemes involving approximately $14,600,000,000 in false claims submitted to Medicare, Medicaid, and other health care programs. These criminals didn't just steal someone else's money. They stole from you. The days of transnational criminal organizations using the American health care programs as their personal piggy bank are over. Third, this takedown resulted in criminal charges against 74 defendants including medical professionals who fueled America's deadly opioid crisis for personal profit. This is not health care. It is a staggering breach of trust. Today's enforcement action represents the largest health care fraud takedown in American history, but it's not the end. It's the beginning of a new era of aggressive prosecution and data driven prevention.

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I have a gag order from my former healthcare employer, but I want to share my experiences. The corruption and greed I witnessed were appalling. Patients were coerced into taking medications they didn’t want, often for profit. I reported serious issues, including a near-fatal medication error, but was told to keep quiet. I eventually took legal action, and the company settled, knowing I was right, but imposed a gag order to silence me. They prioritize money over patient care, using threats to manipulate vulnerable individuals. I urge everyone to share their healthcare stories. This is just the beginning; we need to expose these injustices and not let them win.

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Linda Pino confesses that in 1987, as a physician, she denied a man a life-saving operation, resulting in his death. She claims no one held her accountable because her action saved a company $500,000. This decision, she says, secured her reputation and led to her advancement in the healthcare field, from a few hundred dollars a week to a six-figure income. Pino states her primary duty was to use her medical expertise for the financial benefit of the organization. She says she was told she was not denying care, but denying payment. She claims to know how managed care maims and kills patients and is haunted by the thousands of denials she wrote.

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Linda Pino confesses that in 1987, as a physician, she denied a man a life-saving operation, resulting in his death. She states that she was not held accountable because her action saved a company half a million dollars, secured her reputation, and ensured her career advancement. Pino explains that she went from earning a few hundred dollars a week to a six-figure income as a physician executive. Her primary duty was to use her medical expertise for the financial benefit of the organization. She says she was told she was not denying care, but denying payment. Pino states she knows how managed care maims and kills patients and is haunted by the thousands of denials she wrote.

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Doctor Death: Bad Magic tells the story of doctor Serhat, who was considered a genius and a healer, offering hope to parents whose children were very sick when medicine had seemingly reached its limit. People believed he saved their lives, and his company was worth half a billion dollars with research promising breakthroughs for HIV and cancer. However, the doctor was hiding a secret and was willing to lie to people's faces. He lived an extravagant lifestyle, including expensive dinners, private flights, and fancy hotels. He was also a suspected murderer who died from multiple gunshot wounds and an international fugitive. The podcast explores illusion and the desperate search for a cure, including the devastation caused by certain experiments.

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"In all the autopsy I've done of cancer patients, not one of them died of cancer. They died of liver failure, they died of cardiac failure, renal failure, all due to chemotherapy." "We got a patient that had been through chemo they had cooked her liver and cooked her kidneys." "We looked at the blood work and realized she had no organ function to speak of left." "And I said we can make her more comfortable but the radiation treatment that they used on her has actually destroyed her organs." "She'd been given three weeks, we gave her six months and she got time to say goodbye to her family." "I'm doing the death certificate and I don't know what to write for cause of death." "You might try writing the truth for a change." "And she wrote radiation poisoning, cause of death."

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Every early cancer detection is customer creation and fraud, with no proof that it cures anyone. The cancer industry is a $300,000,000,000 industry driven by money, with each patient bringing in between $3,000,000 and $7,000,000. If a patient doesn't have cancer, they may be given it. Cancer is not an illness but an accumulation of symptoms. Cancer rates have increased from seven percent in 1900 to fifty-six percent today, and including "the thing we cannot talk about," it's ninety-two percent. The speaker claims to have cured 66,000 cancer patients.

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A Michigan doctor was sentenced to 45 years for falsely diagnosing over 550 patients with cancer, leading to unnecessary treatments. Victims expressed anger and disappointment, with one family member recalling the doctor's false promises. The doctor admitted to misusing his talents for greed, earning millions from the fraudulent diagnoses. Patients described the experience as stressful and emotional.

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Public institutions may be complicit in allowing a questionable doctor, Bamidell Adiego, to conduct forensic autopsies in Canada and the US without verified credentials. Despite inconsistencies in his records and lack of verification from his Nigerian medical school, Adiego conducted 5,000 autopsies in Alberta and testified in court. Concerns were raised about his qualifications, with allegations of wrongful convictions based on his testimony. The Indiana Medical Licensing Board chose not to sanction Adiego for a drinking and driving offense, fearing legal scrutiny of his expert witness testimonies. The lack of oversight raises questions about how many other foreign medical graduates with fake credentials are practicing in North America.

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The Department of Justice announced the largest coordinated health care fraud takedown in its history, charging 324 defendants for alleged participation in health care fraud schemes involving approximately $14,660,000,000 in false claims submitted to Medicare, Medicaid, and other health care programs. Key points emphasized: - First, these health care fraud schemes affect every hardworking American family. The announcement states that criminals didn’t just steal money from others; they stole from taxpayers who fund these programs. Every fraudulent claim, fake billing, and kickback scheme represents money taken from American taxpayers, driving up the national deficit and threatening the long-term viability of health care for seniors, disabled Americans, and vulnerable citizens. The enforcement action involves seizure of cash as well as luxury vehicles and properties, returning real money to taxpayers and to government health care programs. - Second, there is a disturbing trend of transnational criminal organizations engaging in increasingly sophisticated schemes. The takedown identifies and charges defendants operating from Russia, Eastern Europe, Pakistan, and other foreign countries, who have infiltrated the U.S. health care system to steal taxpayer dollars. An example described involves a sophisticated operation run from Russia and Eastern Europe that bought dozens of medical supply companies in the United States and submitted more than $10,000,000,000 in fraudulent health care claims to Medicare. This operation used the stolen identities of more than 1,000,000 Americans spanning all 50 states. Federal agents intercepted and arrested key members of that organization at U.S. airports and the U.S.–Mexico border, cutting off their escape routes. The days of transnational criminal organizations using the American health care programs as their personal piggy bank are over. - Third, 74 defendants, including medical professionals, were charged, highlighting those who fueled America’s deadly opioid crisis for personal profit. Pill mill operators who prescribed unnecessary opioids were charged, and networks of corrupt pharmacies that distributed drugs to addicts and dealers were dismantled, feeding the addiction crisis that has devastated communities. This is described as a staggering breach of trust, and the Department’s Criminal Division will prosecute these criminals aggressively, equating them with drug dealers. - Fourth, some defendants targeted vulnerable citizens in nursing homes, individuals with disabilities, and those battling serious illnesses. Prosecutors charged seven defendants, including five medical professionals, in connection with approximately $1,000,000,000 in fraudulent claims to Medicare and other health care benefit programs for performing medically unnecessary skin grass on dying patients as they sought to spend their final days with dignity and peace. This conduct is described as callous and disturbing, reflecting a breach of trust between patients, families, and providers. The overall message: today’s enforcement action represents the largest health care fraud takedown in American history, signaling the beginning of a new era of aggressive prosecution and data-driven prevention.

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In 1987, as a physician, Linda Pino denied a man a life-saving operation, resulting in his death. She was not held accountable because her action saved a company half a million dollars. This secured her reputation and advanced her career from a medical reviewer making a few hundred dollars a week to a physician executive with a six-figure income. Her primary duty was to use her medical expertise for the financial benefit of the organization. She states she was told she was not denying care, but denying payment. She says she knows how managed care maims and kills patients and is haunted by the thousands of denials she wrote.

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Forgiveness is not an option; there's a strong desire for vengeance. This is not the time for apologies but for accountability. The healthcare system has seen unprecedented harm due to the actions of both politicians and physicians, who have allowed government influence to dictate patient care. The principles of "do no harm" and informed consent have been compromised. It's unacceptable for any physician to assure a pregnant woman that an experimental product is safe. Those who have done so should face serious consequences.

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Federal agencies are reportedly interfering in doctor-patient relationships, targeting physicians who offer alternative treatments like ivermectin or chronic pain management. Dr. Neil Anand highlights an upcoming trial in Philadelphia concerning the use of AI to analyze personal data (social media, phone records, banking) to build cases against doctors. He claims thousands of physicians have faced imprisonment or license revocation. Dr. Anand mentions Dr. Joseph Parker is currently imprisoned for treating pain patients. He notes the demonization of pain medication, despite the legitimate needs of patients, including those with cancer. Dr. Anand suggests civil asset forfeiture is a motivation behind targeting physicians, particularly older ones, labeling them as drug dealers to seize their assets. He thanks the platform for giving exposure to the issue, because many doctors are scared of speaking out.

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Doctor Eitan Haim faces 4 felony charges for HIPAA violations related to releasing redacted records about a transgender clinic for kids at Texas Children's Hospital. The US attorney's office alleges Haim obtained patient information without authorization to harm the hospital. Haim claims the hospital lied about shutting down the clinic and continued procedures in secret. If convicted, he could face up to 10 years in prison. Haim will appear in federal court in Houston today.

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PainMD, which ran Mid South Pain Management clinics in Virginia, North Carolina, and Tennessee, went bankrupt in 2009. Principals were tried in October of last year in Nashville, and four either plead guilty to or were convicted of healthcare fraud. The CEO was convicted of 13 felonies. The company perpetrated a "pay to play" scheme, requiring patients to receive unnecessary injections in order to obtain needed pain medication. Over eight years, 700,000 injections were performed; some patients received as many as 24 injections at a single visit, and two patients had over 500 injections. One employee had to stop doing injections due to hand inflammation from overuse. The speaker states that this violated the medical ethics principles of beneficence, non-malfeasance, and autonomy. The speaker encourages those who have had similar experiences to share their stories in the comments. The speaker also promotes his book, "Saving Grace, What Patients Teach Their Doctors About Life, Death, and the Balance in Between," available on Amazon and savinggracebook.com.

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I'm Matthew Galiotti, head of the Justice Department's Criminal Division. Today we announce the largest coordinated health care fraud takedown in the history of the Department of Justice. We are announcing charges against three twenty four defendants for their alleged participation in health care fraud schemes involving approximately $14,600,000,000 in false claims submitted to Medicare, Medicaid and other health care programs. In a takedown this large, I can't possibly describe all of the work that went into dismantling each scheme. But there are four key points that bear emphasizing. First, these health care fraud schemes mean for every hardworking American family. These criminals didn't just steal someone else's money. They stole from you. Every fraudulent claim, every fake billing, every kickback scheme represents money taken directly from the pockets of American taxpayers who fund these essential programs through their hard work and sacrifice. And when criminals defraud these programs, they're not just committing theft. They're driving up our national deficit and threatening the long term viability of health care for seniors, disabled Americans and our most vulnerable citizens. This enforcement action involves the seizure of cash as well as luxury vehicles and properties returning real money to American taxpayers and to our government health care programs. Second, we are seeing a disturbing trend of transnational criminal organizations engaging in increasingly sophisticated and complex criminal schemes that defraud the American health care system. As part of this takedown, we've identified and charged defendants operating from Russia, Eastern Europe, Pakistan and other foreign countries. As just one example, we dismantled a scheme involving a sophisticated operation run from Russia and Eastern Europe that strategically bought dozens of medical supply companies in The United States and submitted more than $10,000,000,000 in fraudulent health care claims to Medicare. To make matters worse, these perpetrators used the stolen identities of more than 1,000,000 Americans spanning all 50 states to perpetrate this scheme and submit these false claims. But I'm pleased to report that federal agents intercepted and arrested key members of that organization at US airports and The US Mexico border, cutting off their intended escape routes. The days of transnational criminal organizations using the American health care programs as their personal piggy bank are over. Third, this takedown resulted in criminal charges against 74 defendants, including medical professionals who fueled America's deadly opioid crisis for personal profit. These are not isolated instances of poor judgment. These are calculated schemes designed to exploit Americans struggling with addiction while enriching the very people who were duty bound to help them heal. We charged pill mill operators who prescribed unnecessary opioids. We dismantled networks of corrupt pharmacies that existed solely to distribute drugs to addicts and dealers, feeding the addiction crisis that has devastated so many American communities. Fourth, many of the defendants charged as part of this takedown specifically targeted our most vulnerable citizens, elderly Americans in nursing homes, individuals with disabilities, those battling illnesses, and more. For example, our prosecutors charged seven defendants, including five medical professionals, in connection with approximately $1,000,000,000 in fraudulent claims to Medicare and other health care benefit programs for performing medically unnecessary skin grass on dying patients as they were seeking to spend their final days with dignity and peace. That conduct is exactly as callous and disturbing as it sounds. Patients and their families trusted these providers with their lives. Instead of receiving care, they became victims of elaborate criminal schemes.

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Most physicians and clinicians avoid getting involved in the issue of profit-driven healthcare. The real problem lies in the collusion between academic institutions, doctors, medical journals, and industry for financial gain. These corporations, as legal entities, often exhibit psychopathic traits, prioritizing profit over the well-being of patients. Many top drug companies have been fined billions for illegal marketing, hiding harm data, and manipulating results. However, these fines are often outweighed by the profits they make from selling the drugs. While the pharmaceutical industry has contributed life-saving treatments, the net effect of their practices is negative, with a significant amount of wasted resources and harmful drugs approved.

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A plastic surgeon from Utah, Dr. Michael Kirkmore Jr., faced 35 years in prison for allegedly refusing to follow the COVID narrative. He and three other doctors were accused of destroying over $20,000 worth of vaccine doses and issuing nearly 2,000 fraudulent vaccination cards. Instead of administering the vaccine, he allegedly gave patients saline shots, providing a way for them to attend school without the vaccine. Authorities investigated after tracing patterns where government-supplied COVID-19 vaccine doses were destroyed, and fraudulent CDC vaccination cards were issued. Some people paid dollars per card. Dr. Kirkmore was indicted on charges of conspiracy to defraud the United States, but the charges were dropped mid-trial. Supporters claim he didn't profit and acted on principle, giving parents a choice and saving lives. While what he did was illegal, some believe he was justified in helping people avoid something he felt was harmful or unnecessary.

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Medicare was scammed out of $760,000,000. An investigation in Phoenix was opened after a complaint about suspicious billing to Arizona Medicaid. This led to a network of sober living homes, intended to help those struggling with addiction, many of whom were Native Americans. Instead, it was a massive fraud scheme that billed for services never provided. The sober living home facilities owned by ProMD received more than $560,000,000 for services that were not provided.

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The individual under investigation by the DOJ and SEC for $15.1 million in insider trading also paid $22 million in ransomware due to inadequate security in the healthcare sector. A lawsuit against UnitedHealthcare claims the company knowingly used faulty artificial intelligence to deny legitimate claims, prioritizing profitability. This AI tool, with a 90% inaccuracy rate, particularly affected elderly individuals in care homes, forcing them to liquidate assets for survival. This situation reveals a troubling side of UnitedHealthcare, suggesting a deliberate strategy that goes beyond typical corporate profit motives.

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A Michigan doctor has been sentenced to 45 years in prison for falsely diagnosing hundreds of patients with cancer and administering unnecessary chemotherapy. Dr. Fareed Fata pleaded guilty to intentionally misdiagnosing over 550 patients, earning more than $17 million in the process. Many of the victims and their families expressed their anger and disappointment, as they had trusted the doctor with their lives. Dr. Fata admitted to misusing his talents and acknowledged his actions were driven by power and greed. The sentencing brought some closure to the victims, but for many, it was not enough to compensate for the pain and suffering they endured.

The Megyn Kelly Show

Fraud Week: Fiancé Doctor Pulls Off Personal and Medical Fraud, with Journalist Benita Alexander
Guests: Benita Alexander
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Megyn Kelly introduces a week focused on true crime stories involving fraud, starting with the tale of Bonita Alexander, an NBC News producer who fell in love with Dr. Paolo Macchiarini, a renowned surgeon known for his groundbreaking work in regenerative medicine. Initially celebrated for his innovative surgeries, including synthetic windpipe transplants, Macchiarini's reputation began to unravel as whistleblowers raised concerns about patient deaths and ethical misconduct. Bonita recounts how she was tasked with producing a documentary on Macchiarini while he prepared to perform a life-saving surgery on a young girl named Hannah. As she spent time with him, Bonita became enamored, unaware of the dark reality behind his charm. She describes Macchiarini as charismatic and attentive, which made her vulnerable, especially as she was coping with her ex-husband's terminal illness. Despite ethical concerns about dating a subject of her story, Bonita fell deeply in love, leading to a whirlwind romance that included a surprise proposal. However, as their relationship progressed, Bonita began to notice red flags, including Macchiarini's evasiveness about his personal life and the mysterious nature of his work with high-profile clients. The situation escalated when Bonita learned that Macchiarini had fabricated details about their wedding, claiming that Pope Francis would officiate. This revelation, coupled with an email from a friend revealing the Pope's scheduling conflict, triggered Bonita's realization that Macchiarini had been lying about everything. She discovered he had multiple families and was involved in unethical medical practices that led to patient deaths. After confronting him, Bonita decided to expose Macchiarini's deceit, leading to a Vanity Fair article and a subsequent documentary. The fallout revealed the extent of his medical malpractice, resulting in criminal charges against him in Sweden. Despite being convicted, Macchiarini managed to negotiate house arrest in Spain, raising concerns about justice for his victims. Bonita reflects on the psychological impact of her experience, emphasizing the importance of recognizing vulnerability and the tactics used by con artists. She shares her journey of healing and rebuilding trust in relationships, now in a supportive partnership. Bonita's story serves as a cautionary tale about the dangers of manipulation and the need for vigilance in personal and professional relationships.

The Megyn Kelly Show

The Disturbing and Incredible Story of Fake Cancer Survivor "Scamanda," With Host Charlie Webster
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In this episode of The Megyn Kelly Show, host Megyn Kelly discusses the true crime story of Amanda C. Riley, who faked having stage four blood cancer to defraud friends, family, and strangers out of over $100,000. This deception is the focus of the popular podcast "Scamanda," hosted by Charlie Webster. The podcast explores how Amanda manipulated her community, gaining sympathy and financial support through her fabricated illness. Charlie explains that the story began when investigative journalist Nancy Muscatello received an anonymous tip about Amanda's scam. Despite the emotional toll on those deceived, the podcast presents the narrative in an engaging manner, revealing Amanda's elaborate lies and the psychological motivations behind her actions. Amanda's blog, which detailed her supposed cancer journey, gained her a following and local celebrity status, allowing her to infiltrate cancer support groups and exploit charitable organizations. The investigation revealed Amanda's history of deceit, including her ability to produce convincing medical documentation and manipulate those around her. Despite her charm and the sympathy she garnered, the truth emerged through diligent reporting and police investigation, ultimately leading to her arrest and conviction for wire fraud. Amanda was sentenced to five years in federal prison, a significant punishment for her actions, which the judge deemed a threat to public safety. The episode highlights the broader implications of such scams, emphasizing the need for vigilance in charitable giving and the potential for similar cases to arise in the future. The discussion concludes with a call for awareness about fraudulent claims, particularly in the context of serious illnesses.
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