“What is here?
Gold? Yellow, glittering, precious gold?”
— Timon of Athens by William Shakespeare
Suppose you’re a doctor in California with a patient who complains that his back hurts a lot. Suppose further that Michael Drobot, the owner of California’s Pacific Health Corporation, will give you $15,000 if you refer your patient to his Pacific Hospital of Long Beach for lumbar fusion surgery, which may or may not be warranted. And what if Drobot’s Pacific Hospital were hundreds of miles away and that other qualified hospitals that wouldn’t pay you a kickback were much closer. What would you do?
It is illegal under both California and Federal law to pay doctors for referring patients to hospitals. Yet, according to Andre Birotte, Jr., U.S. Attorney for the Central District of California, this is precisely what Drobot was doing on a massive scale in California from 2003 through 2008. The kickbacks amounted to between $20 million and $50 million. That was chump change compared to what Drobot netted from the surgeries. On Friday, Birotte announced that Drobot had pleaded guilty to paying the kickbacks in what amounted to a $500 million dollar fraud conspiracy and now faces up to 10 years in prison.
Drobot began building his health care empire in the mid-1990s. He bought a number of hospitals, but Pacific Hospital was his jewel in the crown. It was his “spine center,” and, according to U.S. Attorney Birotte, it is where doctors, who apparently think the Hippocratic Oath a mere suggestion, would refer patients for questionable lumbar fusion surgery at $15,000 per surgery. That is, unless the referral was for a cervical fusion, in which case the kickback was only $10,000. Needless to say, there were more lumbar fusions.
Workers compensation paid for all of this. More than 150 insurance companies were “ripped off,” according to Eric Weirich, Deputy Commissioner of the California Insurance Department’s Enforcement Branch.
The Los Angeles Times has been covering the Michael Drobot saga for the last 6 years. Drobot’s Pacific Health Corp. got itself out of big trouble in 2012 when it agreed to pay $16.5 million dollars to the government to avoid criminal conspiracy charges. From 2003 to 2008 it recruited homeless people, drove them to one of Pacific Health Corp’s hospitals and then charged Medicare and Medicaid for services never performed. The whole thing makes “ambulance chasing” look like a PBS donor acknowledgement.
But that little traipse into the dark side pales in comparison to the spinal fusion scheme.
In 2012, California SB 863 threatened to put more than a little crimp in Michael Drobot’s hose of money. Up until SB 863, Pacific Health Corp was paid highly inflated prices for both the surgeries and the surgical hardware, because it could charge duplicate invoices for the surgical implant hardware. The provisions of SB 863 would have severely limited duplicate payments beginning 1 January 2013. If Dobrot couldn’t collect the duplicate payments he wouldn’t be able to pay the kickbacks to get the patients he needed to keep the scheme going. He desperately wanted those provisions to be mitigated to some degree. To do that, he needed help.
He got it from friends in high places – the California Legislature. It’s a little murky as to method, but prior to final passage, SB 863 was changed to allow half the duplicate payments to continue, status quo, for all of 2013. The authorities have been looking into this, and U.S. Attorney Birotte has begun to reel in the fish.
The day before he indicted Michael Drobot, Birotte indicted state Senator Ron Calderon and his brother, former Assemblyman Tom Calderon, on 24 charges, including bribery and money laundering. Ron Calderon is alleged to have been paid more than $100,000 in bribes by Michael Drobot and in an FBI sting operation that Calderon thought was a film studio. If convicted, he faces up to 400 years in prison. And that’s the blood in the water that California’s media sharks now circle. Here’s an LA Times infographic of the Calderon family’s tree of connections and alleged corruption.
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However, as that great TV salesman, Ron Popeil, used to say, “But wait! There’s more!”
An FBI affidavit leaked to, of all places, Al Jazeera America, is making life uncomfortable for at least four other legislators, including Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg. Look deeply enough at this and one begins to think that Teapot Dome was nothing more than a benign business deal gone bad. (See the full associated Al Jazeera story: State Compensation Insurance Fund’s lawsuit against Michael Drobot)
Notwithstanding all of this, I keep coming back in my mind to those doctors, those chiropractors, those medical professionals who sold their souls and endangered their patients for all that “yellow, glittering, precious gold.” I ask, “Where is the outrage?” At some point, one hopes that U.S. Attorney Birotte turns his eyes to them.
Tags: California, crime, fraud, medical care, politics, surgery