Three's a Charm: Ohio Medicaid Fraud Scheme Explodes Into the Open
MAY 6, 202616 MIN
Three's a Charm: Ohio Medicaid Fraud Scheme Explodes Into the Open
MAY 6, 202616 MIN
Description
1. Massive Spending With Little Oversight Ohio reportedly spent about $1 billion in 2024 on home healthcare services. Services occur inside private homes, making verification of work extremely difficult. 2. Questionable Services Being Funded Payments are allegedly made for vague or low-skill activities like: “companionship” “conversation” basic chores (cleaning, cooking) Workers do not need healthcare credentials. 3. Family Members Paid as Caregivers Many caregivers are relatives of the patient. Example: Someone being paid to care for (or simply spend time with) their own parent. Little to no way exists to confirm whether services are actually provided. 4. Rapid Growth of “Shell-like” Companies Large numbers of home healthcare LLCs have appeared, especially in Columbus. Some buildings house dozens of companies with minimal physical presence. These companies collectively billed tens of millions of dollars. 5. Patterns Suggesting Fraud or Abuse Red flags mentioned include: Businesses reaching full client capacity almost immediately No advertising or visible operations Owners with prior debts, criminal records, or unrelated business failures Multiple LLCs created across industries 6. Examples of Alleged Abuse Politicians with undisclosed healthcare businesses tied to campaign funding. Individuals with criminal histories running million-dollar Medicaid firms. Businesses allegedly billing hundreds of thousands shortly after starting. 7. Incentive Structure Encouraging Exploitation Medicaid pays providers standardized rates, removing competition on price. This allegedly encourages: Kickbacks to recruit patients Rapid sign-ups to maximize billing 8. Lack of Effective Government Oversight Claims that: The system is a “black box” with limited transparency. Regulators cannot effectively monitor services. Even obvious irregularities are not addressed. 9. Program Design Issues No strict spending cap. Eligibility can depend on a single doctor’s approval. This makes the system vulnerable to exploitation. Fraud is not limited to politically liberal states, but also occurs in conservative states like Ohio. The issue as systemic rather than isolated. Mentions a federal task force targeting Medicaid fraud. Suggests Ohio may be an early focus for investigation. Please Hit Subscribe to this podcast Right Now. Also Please Subscribe to the The Ben Ferguson Show Podcast and Verdict with Ted Cruz Wherever You get You're Podcasts. And don't forget to follow the show on Social Media so you never miss a moment! Thanks for Listening X: https://x.com/benfergusonshowSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.