[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 51 (Tuesday, April 13, 2010)]
[House]
[Pages H2480-H2481]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MEDICARE FRAUD
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentlewoman from Florida (Ms. Ros-Lehtinen) is recognized for 5
minutes.
Ms. ROS-LEHTINEN. Madam Speaker, this morning, my good friend and
Florida colleague Congressman Ron Klein and I held a press conference
at the Little Havana Activity and Nutrition Center where we unveiled
our bipartisan anti-Medicare fraud bill.
Medicare fraud is a problem that hurts our most vulnerable citizens.
Our South Florida community knows firsthand the hardship that it
creates. In 2008, approximately $703 million in false Medicare claims
originated from South Florida. Last year, that figure rose to $952
million from South Florida.
Our community needs to say in no uncertain terms that fraud and abuse
in Medicare will not be tolerated and that our seniors will not be
preyed upon by opportunistic vandals. That is why Congressman Ron Klein
and I filed the Medicare Fraud Enforcement and Prevention Act. This
legislation will help curb the fraud in the Medicare system. It will
not only toughen the penalties on those individuals who engage in fraud
but it will also help implement new screening procedures and biometric
checks for all Medicare claims and services.
Medicare fraud is not isolated to cases that involve rogue
individuals. Unfortunately, the reality is that more and more Medicare
fraud is being perpetrated by groups that are organized and are
sophisticated in their technique. This bipartisan bill will help catch
up existing rules and regulations with the reality of today's threats.
Fraud and abuse costs the Medicare system billions of dollars each
year. It costs the system, in fact, $60 billion every year. It harms
the health care industry as a whole, and it undermines the market for
legitimate health care products. It hurts legitimate suppliers who
cannot compete with illegitimate suppliers who pad their income by
billing for services that they never rendered. Fraud undermines public
confidence in health care providers.
The Klein-Ros-Lehtinen bill will create a strong deterrent for would-
be
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criminals by doubling the fines and jail time for those convicted of
scamming the Medicare system. It creates a new offense for illegally
distributing a Medicare or Medicaid beneficiary ID and establishes a
penalty of 3 years in prison and a fine equivalent to the dollar amount
stolen from Medicare. The Klein-Ros-Lehtinen bill doubles the criminal
penalty for making false statements and for violating the anti-kickback
statute from 5 to 10 years in prison and from $25,000 to a $50,000
fine. The Klein-Ros-Lehtinen bill will also create a pilot program that
will implement biometric technology to ensure that Medicare
beneficiaries are physically present to receive those services. This
bill mandates strict background checks for Medicare suppliers that
would be carried out before they start cashing those taxpayer checks.
Since its inception in the year 2007, Miami-Dade County's interagency
Medicare Strike Force has helped stem the tide of Medicare fraud in our
South Florida community. It has gotten more than $220 million in court-
ordered restitution to Medicare from defendants in 87 separate cases.
The task force has saved Medicare approximately $1.75 billion in phony
claim submissions. But, Madam Speaker, lamentably there is so much more
that needs to be done.
The bill that Ron Klein and I have filed today will help give law
enforcement the tools necessary to make even more arrests and to crack
down on fraud in a more efficient and effective manner. It will direct
the Secretary of Health and Human Services to provide real-time access
to data regarding fraud that will then be given to local law
enforcement officials. The Klein-Ros-Lehtinen bill also directs the
GAO, the Government Accountability Office, to follow up with Medicare
contractors and report back to us in Congress with recommendations to
make this system work even better for seniors all across the country.
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