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FBI
Identity Theft
Fake Hospice
Nurse Treated More Than 200 Patients
10/08/15
Imagine the emotional difficulty of arranging in-home hospice care for
a terminally ill family member. Now imagine learning after the fact
that your loved one had been cared for not by a nurse but by a medical
imposter.
That is exactly what happened in more than 200 cases in the Dallas/Fort
Worth area over nearly a three-year period when a woman who had stolen
the identity of a registered nurse used those credentials to gain
employment with multiple hospice companies.
“Jada Necole Antoine had absolutely no nursing experience or medical
training,” said Special Agent Brian Marlow, who investigated the case
out of the FBI’s Dallas Division. “The thought of having someone who is
not a nurse taking care of your parent or loved one is not only
criminal, it is morally outrageous.”
The Bureau’s investigation began in 2013 as a result of a local traffic
stop in Texas. When the patrol officer asked for identification,
Antoine produced her own driver’s license, and it turned out there was
a warrant for her arrest on another matter. She also had other
identification in the car—including documents belonging to the victim
nurse—along with a number of medical records. That information was
forwarded to the Medicare Fraud Strike Force team in Texas, which
consists of the FBI, the Department of Health and Human Services, the
Texas State Attorney General’s office, and local law enforcement. The
strike force is part of a larger, nationwide effort aimed at combating
health care fraud and abuse.
As the strike force team began to investigate the paperwork found in
Antoine’s car, “we learned about the hospice companies Antoine had been
associated with,” Marlow said. “In all, we found eight different
hospices she had worked for using the nurse’s stolen identity.”
During the time she was carrying on this fraud—from approximately
January 2009 through April 20, 2012—Antoine was paid more than $100,000
from the various companies who unwittingly employed her. She had direct
responsibility for patient care and submitted documents to the hospice
companies that falsely indicated care was provided by a registered
nurse. Those false statements caused the hospice companies to submit
false claims to Medicare and Medicaid totaling approximately $800,000.
Antoine victimized 243 hospice patients by depriving them of legitimate
health care from a properly licensed individual, Marlow said. Court
records show that Antoine treated patients who were mentally ill,
comatose, asleep, and otherwise unresponsive to sound and touch, and in
those instances, she made her own assessments of the patient’s pain and
comfort levels, digestive function, and breathing.
She also had access to patients’ medical charts and detailed personal
information, which, said Marlow, “was greatly concerning because of her
history of identity theft crimes.”
With investigators on her trail, Antoine fled Texas but was apprehended
in Georgia in 2014 and charged with fraud and identity theft. She pled
guilty, and this past August, a federal judge sentenced the 34-year-old
to four years in prison.
“Many of the patients she allegedly cared for were completely at her
mercy,” Marlow said. “Now that she is behind bars,” he added, “she will
not be able to victimize anyone else.”
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