Attorney
General Mike DeWine...
DeWine
announces Home Health Aid Convictions
June 10, 2012
(COLUMBUS,
Ohio) – Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine announced today that a judge
has
ordered a co-owner of A Caring Alternative, a home health care agency
in Cleveland,
to pay nearly $262,000 in restitution to the Ohio Department of Job and
Family
Services after an investigation revealed she was hiring home health
care aides
who did not pass background checks.
Agents in
the Health Care Fraud Division of the Ohio Attorney General’s Office
said Rose
Radovanic, who pleaded guilty to a felony charge of theft by deception,
hired
the home health aides, despite their criminal convictions, because they
signed
up elderly family members or friends to become clients of the company.
The
corporation then billed Medicaid for the services the workers illegally
provided to the new and current clients.
“Our
elderly residents need to know they are
safe when they invite health care aides into their homes, which is the
main
reason why we require background checks for home health aides,” said
Attorney
General Mike DeWine. “I find it incredibly disturbing that anyone would
blatantly ignore a person’s convictions and allow them into the homes
of our
most vulnerable adults.”
As the result
of a bench trial this week in Columbus, the judge also ordered that A
Caring
Alternative pay more than $242,000 in restitution and $15,000 in fines
be paid
out of the business’s assets. The
second
co-owner was acquitted on all charges.
Agents began
investigating the company more than a year ago after a client ran a
background
check on his aide and found she had a criminal history. Investigators
later
found health aides with a slew of previous convictions, including a
woman
convicted of domestic violence for trying to hit her wheelchair bound
mother
with a beer bottle and a man convicted of robbery after leaving his
elderly
father on the floor for three days.
“When I
learned about the accusations in this case, I made it a priority in my
office
to examine the laws regulating the employment of convicted criminals in
the
home health and transportation area of the Medicaid program,” said
DeWine. “We
found several serious loopholes and helped create a consistent
background check
policy across all home health care agencies.”
That plan
was included in the Mid-Biennium Review which is currently in the hands
of
Governor John Kasich to potentially become law.
The
Attorney General’s Health Care Fraud Section investigates and
prosecutes health
care providers who defraud the state’s Medicaid program. The Section
also
investigates alleged misappropriations of patient funds and enforces
Ohio laws
protecting mentally or physically disabled or elderly citizens from
financial
exploitation, neglect and abuse in long-term care facilities.
Anyone who suspects Medicaid fraud or
patient abuse or neglect can contact Attorney General DeWine’s office
at
1-800-282-0515 or www.OhioAttorneyGeneral.gov
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