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Federal law says marijuana is illegal. He's doing his job. Sounds like a snowflake issue when you say a law enforcement officer shouldn't do his job because it unduly effects your ability to break the law. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Even a dumbass can occasionally get something correct. Dude seriously needs to drop the pot needle thing. It's not helping. I'm sure there are literally countless federal laws NOT being enforced at this time,but why not go after the big fish-hillary,holder,comey,lerner,etc....? It's like a cop going after a jaywalker,while ignoring rape,murder,burglary,and rape. I'm pretty sure I'm not the only one that wanted to see this administration go after all the lying scum that inhabit the swamp right from the start. |
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The Federal law is unconstitutional. Pass a Constitutional amendment or let it go. View Quote |
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[Karl Denninger]"Notwithstanding any other provision in state or federal law, a person who presents themselves while uninsured to any provider of a medical good or service shall not be charged a price greater than that which Medicare pays for the same drug, device, service or combination thereof."[/Karl Denninger]
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And out of the tens of millions of prosecutions for the crime, over many decades, nationwide, with some of the finest lawyers in the world-- fighting for the stoned Hippies etc.....How come it hasn't been overturned? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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The Federal law is unconstitutional. Pass a Constitutional amendment or let it go. It's really too bad the Founders didn't grant most of the power to the States,and the people,and only gave the federal government limited powers................. |
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Same reason 2nd Amendment infringements and a lot of other stuff haven't. It's really too bad the Founders didn't grant most of the power to the States,and the people,and only gave the federal government limited powers................. View Quote Got NOWHERE. |
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That's up to SCOTUS, not gd or armchair justices. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Federal law says marijuana is illegal. He's doing his job. Sounds like a snowflake issue when you say a law enforcement officer shouldn't do his job because it unduly effects your ability to break the law. |
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My wife's former boss was arrested in this mess on Wednesday. (Wife had no idea about the fraud). Nice enough guy, I had to ask myself if there was a card for this event, something along the lines of "Sorry to hear about your federal felony indictment." View Quote Curious if he was defrauding,or it's just one of the cases NavyDoc referenced. O/T-There's an old man here in town that used to run a small Mom and Pop bakery with his wife.She did the books. They lived very frugally and didn't have much.They get audited one year,and apparently she had been making a mistake from the start.Lost everything,and his wages were garnished for years. Meanwhile,Sharpton owes millions,Rangel and Geithner were allowed to pay their back no problem,and hillary....... It's almost as if there are 2 sets of laws in this country.............. |
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Christ in heaven, who in the fuck thought law enforcement/investigation should be done for profit? Because someone is getting kickbacks out of that. View Quote ETA: Curious that I don't see the usual "revenue generation" crowd in here... and the cops don't even *get* a percentage of speeding ticket revenues. Recall that in cases where the "contractor" gets a cut of the fines (as in the case of red-light and speed cameras), there have been multiple cases of shenanigans, including yellow-light-times deliberately shortened to increase the number of fines. It's a system ripe for abuse. |
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Dog and pony show. They nabbed 412 suspects in what is possibly the most fraud ridden industry in America, and now they parade themselves around and want pats on the back. That's some mighty fine police work. Maybe next month they can wrangle up a few frauds using their welfare monies to buy drugs. Think it's doable? View Quote The difference here being this.......Someone is actually doing something about it instead of just watching it go on. |
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Yea, except the Second Amendment never had legions of very good, Harvard and Yale educated lawyers arguing for decades for it, which, Weed has had. All through the 60's and 70's the long haired lefty lawyers argued and argued and argued- guys like Dershowitz, Kuntsler, The Peoples Law Office, Lawyers for Justice....Well funded, TRUE BELIEVERS, plenty of clients etc.... Got NOWHERE. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Same reason 2nd Amendment infringements and a lot of other stuff haven't. It's really too bad the Founders didn't grant most of the power to the States,and the people,and only gave the federal government limited powers................. Got NOWHERE. Never done it,but don't think it should be illegal. Seems to be more of the gov not wanting to let go of the power than anything else. Funny thing to me,you would think Obama would have pushed to legalize it.If he didn't have wealthy white grandparents to help him out,he probably would have ended up a statistic of Chicago violence years ago. |
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Now, you know that's not really true....You don't have to buy anything.....You can CHOOSE to pay a tax penalty instead View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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Being able to read, I think I'm more than qualified to determine whether it's constitutional or not. Is there an amendment in our constitution that strictly mentions a prohibition on intoxicants? No? Unconstitutional. We needed one to ban alcohol. Where's your amendment for pot? I don't see it anywhere. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Federal law says marijuana is illegal. He's doing his job. Sounds like a snowflake issue when you say a law enforcement officer shouldn't do his job because it unduly effects your ability to break the law. |
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Where is your constitutional amendment? One was needed to prohibit alcohol. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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You ever consider running for SCOTUS? Until then your opinions are , well just opinions. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Federal law says marijuana is illegal. He's doing his job. Sounds like a snowflake issue when you say a law enforcement officer shouldn't do his job because it unduly effects your ability to break the law. |
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Yep,he gets one of those black robes and his opinion would be the law of the land............ View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Federal law says marijuana is illegal. He's doing his job. Sounds like a snowflake issue when you say a law enforcement officer shouldn't do his job because it unduly effects your ability to break the law. |
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Constitutional scholars still argue as to whether an actual amendment was even needed for that. Some things in the constitution are not clear, there are people that have devoted their entire life to interpreting it that still argue about what some of it means. But here in GD everyone knows View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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The Federal law is unconstitutional. Pass a Constitutional amendment or let it go. |
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That's cool, I guess the Obamacare tax is constitutional, as well as any infringements on our 2A rights by NY,CA,MD,NJ, and CT. If you disagree, well, that's just like your opinion man. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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The Federal law is unconstitutional. Pass a Constitutional amendment or let it go. |
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Putting aside the question of the federal government even having the Constitutional authority to go after drugs,how about PRIORITIES??? I'm sure there are literally countless federal laws NOT being enforced at this time,but why not go after the big fish-hillary,holder,comey,lerner,etc....? It's like a cop going after a jaywalker,while ignoring rape,murder,burglary,and rape. I'm pretty sure I'm not the only one that wanted to see this administration go after all the lying scum that inhabit the swamp right from the start. View Quote If you could solve 500 crimes and save the taxpayers 4.5 trillion dollars with X amount of political capital, that's not worth doing it if that political capital could save taxpayers zero dollars (or cost 5 billion for the prosecution) and solve 15 crimes by the same cunt? Sorry, your logic is "i didn't get my way, going to whine about it". We're all hoping hillary gets thrown in jail before she dies, but banking everything on that and doing NOTHING ELSE is fucking stupid. |
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I'd like to hear more of this. Curious if he was defrauding,or it's just one of the cases NavyDoc referenced. O/T-There's an old man here in town that used to run a small Mom and Pop bakery with his wife.She did the books. They lived very frugally and didn't have much.They get audited one year,and apparently she had been making a mistake from the start.Lost everything,and his wages were garnished for years. Meanwhile,Sharpton owes millions,Rangel and Geithner were allowed to pay their back no problem,and hillary....... It's almost as if there are 2 sets of laws in this country.............. View Quote |
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Short version is that they provided mental health service with a medicaid contract, if they provide service A, they charge X amount of money, if the provide the service B, they changed Y (more amount of money). They did service A but charged more money for service B. That and they had a conspiracy kickback scheme with another service provider, that service provider would refer clients to former boss, then get a 10% kickback in violation of federal anti kickback laws. They are fucked. View Quote |
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How do you know there isn't anybody "going after" the big fish? If you could solve 500 crimes and save the taxpayers 4.5 trillion dollars with X amount of political capital, that's not worth doing it if that political capital could save taxpayers zero dollars (or cost 5 billion for the prosecution) and solve 15 crimes by the same cunt? Sorry, your logic is "i didn't get my way, going to whine about it". We're all hoping hillary gets thrown in jail before she dies, but banking everything on that and doing NOTHING ELSE is fucking stupid. View Quote I'm just going by years of experience watching this shit play out. Somewhere in DC,right this minute,top men are building a case against holder,hillary,comey,etc.............. Many of us wanted/expected Trump to go after the criminals at the top of our government.The more time that goes by,the less likely it is to ever happen. |
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Sounds like a good pinch then. Crush the fucking cockroaches like the bugs they are. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Short version is that they provided mental health service with a medicaid contract, if they provide service A, they charge X amount of money, if the provide the service B, they changed Y (more amount of money). They did service A but charged more money for service B. That and they had a conspiracy kickback scheme with another service provider, that service provider would refer clients to former boss, then get a 10% kickback in violation of federal anti kickback laws. They are fucked. |
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And just under HALF of those people say we do not have a right to own guns. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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I don't "know" if anyone is going after the big fish. I'm just going by years of experience watching this shit play out. Somewhere in DC,right this minute,top men are building a case against holder,hillary,comey,etc.............. Many of us wanted/expected Trump to go after the criminals at the top of our government.The more time that goes by,the less likely it is to ever happen. View Quote |
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He said specifically he would be going after hillary. He said it to her face on national TV in front of god and everybody. Just campaigning promises. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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I don't "know" if anyone is going after the big fish. I'm just going by years of experience watching this shit play out. Somewhere in DC,right this minute,top men are building a case against holder,hillary,comey,etc.............. Many of us wanted/expected Trump to go after the criminals at the top of our government.The more time that goes by,the less likely it is to ever happen. |
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Being able to read, I think I'm more than qualified to determine whether it's constitutional or not. Is there an amendment in our constitution that strictly mentions a prohibition on intoxicants? No? Unconstitutional. We needed one to ban alcohol. Where's your amendment for pot? I don't see it anywhere. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Federal law says marijuana is illegal. He's doing his job. Sounds like a snowflake issue when you say a law enforcement officer shouldn't do his job because it unduly effects your ability to break the law. |
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Yep,5 people in black robes found it Constitutional for the federal government to force us to buy something. All hail SCOTUS. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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See... people like you are part of the reason this country is fucking fucked up. Good shit gets done and all you do is piss, moan, and groan... View Quote I am glad some one is doing something. But let's be honest here. Insurance and medicaid/medicare fraud has to be more than a few hundred billion a year. Just because you nabbed the low hanging fruit estimated at 1.2 (or whatever) billion doesn't mean jack shit to me. Keep up the pressure and get 25% or even 40% cleaned up and I will be giving my praise. Not .5% A very common politician tactic. |
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Folks....we have a Supreme Court justice in our midst. The question is....which one is this poster? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Federal law says marijuana is illegal. He's doing his job. Sounds like a snowflake issue when you say a law enforcement officer shouldn't do his job because it unduly effects your ability to break the law. |
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That's up to SCOTUS, not gd or armchair justices. View Quote |
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Let me make my point crystal clear since I seem to have been quoted at least 12x in this thread. I am glad some one is doing something. But let's be honest here. Insurance and medicaid/medicare fraud has to be more than a few hundred billion a year. Just because you nabbed the low hanging fruit estimated at 1.2 (or whatever) billion doesn't mean jack shit to me. Keep up the pressure and get 25% or even 40% cleaned up and I will be giving my praise. Not .5% A very common politician tactic. View Quote |
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How much weight does your opinion hold in the nation's courts? How much weight does a majority decision from the Supreme Court hold in the nation's courts? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Please point out how I'm wrong. How much weight does a majority decision from the Supreme Court hold in the nation's courts? Are you OK with people in NY being arrested for magazines that hold more than 10 rds? If the AWB had been permanent,would you be OK with people being arrested for having items that were completely legal a day previous? Are you happy with SCOTUS upholding the power of the federal government to force you to buy health insurance or pay a penalty? |
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I thought we didn't like Sessions? Maybe he's good at doing his job--- ENFORCING THE DAMN LAW--- and we've forgotten what that looks like? View Quote No doubt if you look back a year, you will find arfcom's praise for this program and for Loretta Lynch's fine leadership. <SNICKER> |
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How much weight does your opinion hold in the nation's courts? How much weight does a majority decision from the Supreme Court hold in the nation's courts? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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You've failed to point out where I'm wrong. All you have is "weight of majority decision", which is in no way necessarily correct. My stance isn't opinion. It's fact. The war on drugs is unconstitutional. No where within the constitution is the U.S. government given the power to tell people what they can or can't put into their own bodies. The role of government isn't to protect dopers from themselves. View Quote Does your opinion carry any weight in the nation's courts? |
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RAC audits explained.
A partner at Central New York ENT Consultants and chief of otolaryngology at Crouse Hospital in Syracuse, Dr. Wanamaker has been audited by carriers several times in the past few years, and the experience is always similar: The insurance company comes into the physician’s office on a premise like the review of billing directly related to treatment of allergy-related issues. But, while culling through records related to that topic, the insurer starts looking at evaluation and management coding, extrapolates a package of records over the course of the practice and then presents the audited office with a bill that can easily be in the hundreds of thousands of dollars.
“You may get a $300,000 request for a repayment reduced to $50,000 or $100,000, and it will cost you $30,000, $40,000, $50,000 in legal fees,” Dr. Wanamaker said. “They make it so painful to challenge them or take them on that it can ruin your practice.” View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes A partner at Central New York ENT Consultants and chief of otolaryngology at Crouse Hospital in Syracuse, Dr. Wanamaker has been audited by carriers several times in the past few years, and the experience is always similar: The insurance company comes into the physician’s office on a premise like the review of billing directly related to treatment of allergy-related issues. But, while culling through records related to that topic, the insurer starts looking at evaluation and management coding, extrapolates a package of records over the course of the practice and then presents the audited office with a bill that can easily be in the hundreds of thousands of dollars.
“You may get a $300,000 request for a repayment reduced to $50,000 or $100,000, and it will cost you $30,000, $40,000, $50,000 in legal fees,” Dr. Wanamaker said. “They make it so painful to challenge them or take them on that it can ruin your practice.” xtrapolation. If you are a Medicaid provider and have either received a Tentative Notice of Overpayment (TNO) or heard horror stories about TNOs, then the word, ‘extrapolation,’ most likely, will cause you to grimace.
So many providers come to me asking, “The audit amount was only for $1,500. How did that $1,500 become $850,000?” Or $1.5 million. Or $400,000? It does not seem to make sense. But wouldn’t it be a beautiful thing if extrapolations worked in the opposite way? You put $1,500 in your bank account and the bank extrapolated the $1,500 to $850,000? Or $1.5 million? Or $400,000? If opposite extrapolation existed, then maybe I would like extrapolation. Why? Because I would have a monetary incentive to like, accept, even agree with extrapolation. Similarly, the Recovery Audit Contractors (RACs) have the monetary incentive to like, accept, even agree with extrapolation. Approximately a 12.3%-contingency-fee incentive. What exactly is an extrapolation? Extrapolation is a statistical procedure in which the auditor takes findings from a small sample of Medicaid-paid claims and, using a mathematical formula, projects those results over a much larger “universe” of claims producing, in many cases, large dollar audit overpayments…sometimes even producing a overpayment amount over the amount the provider was actually paid. “Medical Practice Compliance Alert” agrees with me. The July 8, 2013, issue of “Medical Practice Compliance Alert,” states “Like it or not, extrapolation audits are becoming the norm…” See Volume 25, Issue 13 (by Lauren C. Williams). Ms Williams also wrote that in one case she reviewed the overpayment was for only $10,000+, but the overpayment was extrapolated to $10 million. @1srelluc @Will I'm not "full of shit" obviously. Everything I've said is true. |
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10A NCAC 22F .0606 TECHNIQUE FOR PROJECTING MEDICAID OVERPAYMENTS
(a) The Medicaid agency will seek restitution of overpayments made to providers by the Medicaid program. (b) The agency may use a Disproportionate Stratified Random Sampling Technique in establishing provider overpayments. (c) This technique is an extrapolation of a statistical sampling of claims used to determine the total overpayment for recoupment. View Quote Disproportionate Stratified Random Sampling Technique.
What???? “Disproportionate” is defined as, “being out of proportion.” “Stratified” is defined as, “the process of dividing members of the population into homogeneous subgroups before sampling. The strata should be mutually exclusive: every element in the population must be assigned to only one stratum. The strata should also be collectively exhaustive: no population element can be excluded.” “Random” is defined as, “having no specific pattern, purpose, or objective.” The definition of “Stratified Random Sampling” is, “a method of sampling that involves the division of a population into smaller groups known as strata. In stratified random sampling, the strata are formed based on members’ shared attributes or characteristics. A random sample from each stratum is taken in a number proportional to the stratum’s size when compared to the population. These subsets of the strata are then pooled to form a random sample.” I had a tough time, as a double-major in English and Poli-Sci, with the whole “stratified” definition until I spoke, at length, with a statistician expert. According to (we will call him Bill) Bill, two of the most important factors in a Disproportionate Stratified Random Sampling Technique are randomness and strata being mutually exclusive. Meaning, each date of service (DOS) and each Medicaid recipient must be independent of one another, i.e. if Medicaid recipient X on DOS 1/1/10 is found to be incorrectly found noncompliant, then no other recipient and no other DOS should be contingent on finding of noncompliance from recipient X, DOS 1/1/10. (As I explained to Bill, I had heard of strata before…plural for a layer of sedimentary rock or soil…but, apparently, this was a different strata). Here’s a more specific and concrete example: PCG audited 100 claims of my client, Samantha, the Medicaid provider. Of the 100 claims, PCG audited 5 DOS for Medicaid recipient A: 2/3/10, 2/17/10, 3/1/10, 3/12/10, and 3/19/10. The reason that PCG cited all 5 claims as noncompliant was that the auditor found no consent for services by the recipient. In actuality, there was a consent for services. The Medicaid recipient was only 10, so his mother signed the consent. Problem? Mother’s last name was different from child’s last name? So PCG did not know that the signator was the mother. (Really, I say? Really?? In 2013? FYI: My last name is different from my daughter’s last name. But no private insurance has ever questioned the connection between my daughter and me). Anyway, once the issue with the consent was cleared up (by explaining the child’s mother signed the consent), all 5 DOS were found compliant. View Quote |
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RAC audits explained. http://www.enttoday.org/article/audit-agony-prepare-yourself-as-insurers-look-to-recoup-funds/ NC Medicaid Extrapolation Audits: How Does $100 Become $100,000? View Quote Guy got caught taking cash and not collecting sales tax (NY).Not sure how he got caught. Anyway,they figured he did that once a work day for so many years and it totaled up to a shit ton of money.Put him out of business,and I don't know what happened to the guy. If they actively defrauded the gov (taxpayers),then fine,but I can't help wonder how much is just a witch hunt on the little people that don't have the resources to fight back. Government at all levels has the ability to really screw you over. |
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Unfortunately, even the mere allegation of fraud leads to prepayment review. This, in turn, can harm even the most innocent provider. Last year in New Mexico, fifteen behavioral health care providers were put on prepayment review based on “credible allegations of fraud.” Because their Medicaid reimbursements were suspended, the providers could not afford to pay their staff, rent, or other bills. The providers tried suing the state and sought an injunction that would restore funding. The providers argued that they had been denied due process by not being told what the precise charges were against them, and that at the end of the day those suffering the most were their patients. However, they were denied the injunction.
As a result, the fifteen providers ended up filing for bankruptcy. Because the behavioral health care providers served 87% of New Mexico’s Medicaid recipients, the state of New Mexico had to bring in providers from Arizona to service residents. This caused state infighting, as New Mexico’s Legislative Finance Committee objected to the New Mexico Human Services Department moving $10 million from its budget to pay Arizona agencies to take over New Mexico providers. View Quote |
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Something similar happened to a guy running an auto repair shop some years ago (My Dad knew the guy). Guy got caught taking cash and not collecting sales tax (NY).Not sure how he got caught. Anyway,they figured he did that once a work day for so many years and it totaled up to a shit ton of money.Put him out of business,and I don't know what happened to the guy. If they actively defrauded the gov (taxpayers),then fine,but I can't help wonder how much is just a witch hunt on the little people that don't have the resources to fight back. Government at all levels has the ability to really screw you over. View Quote @TheGrayMan |
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