Macomb County Dentist Charged with Racketeering in Massive Alleged Medicaid Fraud Scheme

Faddi S. Salim, DDS, 37, of Troy, was arraigned in the 54B District Court in East Lansing on March 19 for allegedly conducting a massive Medicaid fraud scheme involving dental crowns, announced Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel. Salim has been charged with one count of Conducting a Criminal Enterprise, a 20-year felony, and 131 counts of Medicaid fraud, each a felony punishable by up to four years’ incarceration and/or a fine of up to $50,000.

It is alleged Salim repeatedly billed the taxpayer-funded Medicaid program for placing large numbers of crowns on individual patients that were both unnecessary and never provided. This case came to light partly because some of the patients who allegedly had many crowns billed under their benefits were subsequently told they were not covered for needed treatment because their annual benefits were exhausted.

“Flagrant abuse of the Medicaid program diverts critical funds from patients in need,” said Attorney General Nessel. “My office remains committed to investigating and prosecuting those responsible for fraudulent schemes.”

Former patients of Dr. Salim who believe they may have been billed for crowns (or other services) that were never provided are encouraged to contact the Department of Attorney General and report it by calling 1-800-24-ABUSE.

Salim was arraigned on March 19 by Judge Lisa Babcock and granted a $50,000.00 personal recognizance bond. Salim appeared for a Probable Cause Conference yesterday and will next appear before the 54B District Court on May 1.

The Attorney General’s Health Care Fraud Division (HCFD) is handling this case for the Department. The HCFD is the federally certified Medicaid Fraud Control Unit for Michigan, and it receives 75% of its funding from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under a grant award totaling $5,517,524.00 for the fiscal year 2026. The remaining 25% percent, totaling $1,839,170.00, is funded by the State of Michigan.

An investigation by special agents with TBI’s Medicaid Fraud Control Division and Drug Investigation Division has resulted in the indictment of a former intensive care nurse.

In July 2025, at the request of 2nd Judicial District Attorney General Barry Staubus, TBI agents began investigating allegations involving Joseph Juszak (DOB: 11/12/93). During the investigation, agents learned that in September 2024, while employed as a nurse in the intensive care unit (ICU) atHolston Valley Medical Center in Kingsport, Juszak fraudulently obtained a controlled substance from an ICU patient’s room.

Last week, the Sullivan County Grand Jury returned an indictment charging Juszak with one count of Prescription Drug Fraud. Today, he turned himself in and was booked into the Sullivan County Jail on a $12,500 bond.

The charges and allegations referenced in this release are merely accusations of criminal conduct, not evidence. The defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt and convicted through due process of law.

NOTE: The TBI’s Medicaid Fraud Control Division receives 75 percent of its funding from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under a grant award totaling $11,616,724 for federal Fiscal Year 2025-2026. The remaining 25 percent, totaling $3,872,240 for Fiscal Year 2025-2026, is funded by the State of Tennessee.

In coordination with the Vice President’s Task Force to Eliminate Fraud, eight defendants, including three nurses, a chiropractor, and a purported psychologist, have been arrested on federal charges that they schemed to defraud the nation’s health care system out of more than $50 million – including by running sham hospice care facilities that bilked Medicare by using people without terminal illnesses as beneficiaries, the Justice Department announced today.

Six of the defendants arrested today are expected to make their initial appearances this afternoon in United States District Court in downtown Los Angeles. One defendant is expected to make his initial appearance in U.S. District Court in Idaho.

“We are enforcing a zero-tolerance policy for criminals who defraud American taxpayers,” said First Assistant United States Attorney Bill Essayli. “The defendants arrested this morning who are charged with stealing millions of dollars of health care benefits got caught and now face years in federal prison.”

“The Southern California region is a high-risk environment for hospice-related and many other forms of health care fraud,” said Akil Davis, the Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office. “The United States loses hundreds of billions of dollars annually to healthcare fraud at the expense of all American taxpayers, whose benefits decrease as premiums, co-payments and taxes grow. Our aim is to reverse that trend with ‘Operation Never Say Die’ and others like it.”

“The defendants charged today allegedly turned hospice care into a cash producing operation, resulting in more than $50 million in losses to taxpayers. The magnitude of the losses underscores a deliberate abuse of the authority and trust afforded to health care providers,” said Inspector General T. March Bell of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG). “Today’s takedown reflects HHS-OIG’s commitment to deploy every tool at our disposal, and collaborate with our law enforcement partners, to dismantle hospice operations built on deception. Anyone who seeks to weaponize hospice care to bilk Medicare should expect to be held accountable.”

“Today’s arrests are another decisive strike in our war on fraud,” said U.S. Department of Labor Inspector General Anthony P. D’Esposito. “My office is relentlessly pursuing those who target union benefit plans and exploit employee healthcare programs for personal gain. Working side-by-side with the FBI, the Department of Labor’s Employee Benefits Security Administration, and our law-enforcement partners, we are aggressively dismantling fraud schemes and taking down those who exploit American workers. Let this be a warning: If you steal from workers or taxpayers, your time is up. We will find you, investigate you, and hold you accountable.”

“When employee benefit plans become targets for fraud, it’s not just the plans that are hurt – everyday working Americans who earned those benefits honestly, their families, and the communities they live in are hurt,” said Robert Prunty, Acting Regional Director U.S. Department of Labor Employee Benefits Security Administration’s Los Angeles Regional Office. “In the Trump Administration, we will relentlessly seek out fraud and ensure those responsible are brought to justice.”

“Health care fraud undermines federal programs, threatens public trust, diverts resources away from legitimate patient care, and is a calculated attack on programs meant to protect the vulnerable,” said Tyler Hatcher, Special Agent in Charge, IRS‑CI Los Angeles Field Office. “The enforcement actions taken today demonstrate IRS‑CI’s commitment to uncovering the financial lies behind these schemes and holding accountable those who profit at the expense of taxpayers and patients. Our agents will continue to work alongside our law‑enforcement partners to protect the integrity of our healthcare system and ensure that those who abuse it are brought to justice.”

     MEDICARE HOSPICE CARE FRAUD

USA v. Minerd
Lolita Beronilla Minerd, 65, a.k.a. “Lolita Beronilla Rice,” of Anaheim, a licensed vocational nurse, was arrested today on a federal criminal complaint charging her with health care fraud.

According to court documents, Minerd owned and operated the Artesia-based Topanga Hospice Care Inc. From July 2020 to April 2025, Minerd used this company to submit more than $9,174,117 in fraudulent hospice claims to Medicare, which paid more than $8,510,448 on these claims.

Through Topanga, Minerd billed Medicare for hospice services for beneficiaries who were not terminally ill. Numerous beneficiaries had common addresses and lived far from the facility, which is consistent with being recruited by marketers. The investigation further revealed that Minerd paid kickbacks to beneficiaries and marketers for the referral of purported hospice patients to her company.

One beneficiary couple was approached at a market about signing up and then were visited at home by Minerd and three other Topanga employees, who promised them if they signed up everything would be free, and they each would receive $300 per month. The money was delivered in an envelope in cash: $600 per month for six months. Neither beneficiary stated they had a terminal illness, which their physician confirmed. The couple also reported receiving unneeded items such as nutritional shakes, non-prescription vitamins, and wheelchairs.

Topanga had a non-death discharge rate of approximately 85%, nearly five times the national average of 17.2% from 2021.

The FBI is investigating this matter along with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG).

Assistant United States Attorney Alexandra M. Michael of the Major Frauds Section is prosecuting this case.

USA v. Gill, et al.
Gladwin Gill, a 66-year-old purported psychologist, and his wife, Amelou Gill, a 70-year-old registered nurse, both of Covina, were arrested today on a federal criminal complaint charging them with health care fraud.

According to an affidavit filed with the complaint, the Gills owned and operated the Glendale-based 626 Hospice Inc., which did business as St. Francis Palliative Care.

The Gills allegedly schemed to defraud Medicare by paying illegal kickbacks for the referral of patients who were not dying. The Gills also submitted more than $5.2 million in fraudulent claims to Medicare for hospice services that either were not medically necessary or were not provided. Medicare paid the Gills more than $4 million on these fraudulent claims.

They then laundered the scheme’s proceeds and spent their ill-gotten gains on personal expenses such as mortgage payments, car payments, international flights, restaurants, and personal bills.

The Gills are expected to make their initial appearance this afternoon in U.S. District Court in downtown Los Angeles.

HHS-OIG, the FBI, IRS Criminal Investigation, and the Food and Drug Administration are investigating this matter with assistance from United States Trustee, Region 16, Los Angeles Field Office.

Assistant United States Attorney David Y. Pi of the Major Frauds Section is prosecuting this case.

USA v. Palma, et al.
Nita Almuete Paddit Palma, 76, a thrice-convicted health care fraudster now incarcerated at a federal prison in Seattle, and her husband, Adolfo Cezar Catbagan, 68, of Glendale, are charged in an 11-count indictment with operating at least three fraudulent hospice care facilities – including while Palma was free on bond awaiting a hospice fraud trial. Law enforcement arrested Catbagan this morning.

Palma, who is a lawful permanent resident from the Philippines, and Catbagan are charged in an indictment with one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and health care fraud and 10 counts of health care fraud.

According to the indictment, from June 2022 to April 2024, Palma and Catbagan opened three Glendale-based hospice care facilities despite Palma being legally barred from doing so: One Up Hospice Care Inc., Rosewood Hospice and Palliative Care Inc., and Advance Hospice and Palliative Care Inc.

Catbagan was named as the nominal owner and CEO of the three hospices when Palma in fact owned and exercised operating control of them – despite her exclusion – so Medicare would not deny the companies’ claims. The defendants submitted false claims to Medicare for beneficiaries who were not terminally ill and the physicians supposedly providing hospice services did not treat the patients.

Palma and Catbagan submitted at least $4.8 million in fraudulent claims through these companies, resulting in Medicare payments of at least $4.2 million.

HHS-OIG and the FBI are investigating this matter.

Assistant United States Attorneys Andrew M. Roach and Roger A. Hsieh of the Major Frauds Section are prosecuting this case. Assistant United States Attorney Alexander Su of the Asset Forfeiture and Recovery Section is handling asset forfeiture matters for this case.

USA v. Tindimobuna
Evelyn Tindimobuna, 51, a licensed vocational nurse from Chatsworth, is charged in a federal criminal complaint with health care fraud. According to an affidavit filed with the complaint, from January 2022 to September 2025, Tindimobuna used the Tarzana-based Comfort Choice Hospice Inc. to submit to Medicare hundreds of fraudulent claims for purported hospice services to dozens of beneficiaries. For those claims, Comfort Choice sought more than $3.8 million, of which Medicare paid approximately $3.4 million.

For example, in November 2022, Comfort Choice submitted a claim to Medicare in the amount of $7,021, for reimbursement of hospice services for a beneficiary. Law enforcement later interviewed this beneficiary and other Comfort Choice patients who said they were not terminally ill, a requirement to qualify for hospice care.

Tindimobuna allegedly also paid kickbacks to marketers for their referral of hospice patients to Comfort Choice in violation of the Anti-Kickback Statute.

HHS-OIG is investigating this matter.

Special Assistant United States Attorney Yervant P. Hagopian of the Major Frauds Section is prosecuting this case.

USA v. Lauritzen
Ivan Verne Lauritzen, 50, of Simi Valley, was arrested Tuesday on a federal criminal complaint charging him with health care fraud. According to court documents, Lauritzen was the CEO and CFO of the Simi Valley-based Valley Pacific Hospice Inc., whose Medicare enrollment was revoked in August 2024.

In 2022, the live discharge rate of Valley Pacific patients was more than 75%, vastly higher than the national average that year of approximately 17%. Based on an audit examining 18 Valley Pacific Medicare claims from August 2023 to March 2024, CMS determined the company had a pattern and practice of submitting claims that failed to meet Medicare’s hospice standards and requirements. To facilitate this fraud, Lauritzen forged the signature of at least one physician on the Medicare enrollment forms.

During the alleged scheme, Valley Pacific billed Medicare more than $580,000 and was paid more than $526,000.

Lauritzen made his initial appearance Tuesday and was ordered released on $10,000 bond. His arraignment is scheduled for April 27.

HHS-OIG is investigating this matter.

Assistant United States Attorney Neil P. Thakor of the Major Crimes Section is prosecuting this case.

     PRIVATE HEALTH CARE PLAN FRAUD

USA v. Aulava-Moala, et al.
Four defendants with South Bay ties – one of them a licensed chiropractor – have been charged in a two-count information with conspiracy to commit health care fraud and wire fraud in connection with a $19 million scheme to defraud a labor union’s health plan via false claims for chiropractic services and physical therapy that weren’t needed or never provided.

The defendants charged are:

Tolu Aulava-Moala, 51, of Carson, who was the director of the facilities;
John Nicola, 77, of El Segundo, a licensed chiropractor;
Crysta Richter, 40, of Torrance, who owned a medical billing company; and
John Keohuloa, 49, of Long Beach.
These defendants will be summonsed into Los Angeles federal court and are expected to make their initial appearances in the coming weeks.

According to court documents, from January 2010 to September 2023, they fraudulently submitted at least $19,005,463 in claims to International Longshore and Warehouse Union Pacific Maritime Association and other private health insurers on behalf of several chiropractic and physical therapy service companies: Ohana Wellness Center, Ohana Management Corp., and R3New Wellness – all based in Carson – and the Huntington Beach-based One Life Acupuncture APC.

Aulava-Moala and Keohuloa induced beneficiaries to visit clinics to receive medically unnecessary services, such as massages or endoscopies, in exchange for kickback payments. Nicola knowingly created fake client notes for beneficiaries, and Aulava-Moala, Nicola, and Richter submitted false and fraudulent claims to health insurers for reimbursement for medical services.

In August 2022, the former owner of the Ohana companies testified under oath at a civil trial that the companies falsified patient chart notes and billed claims under chiropractors’ names and insurance numbers without their knowledge. A state court later that month found the Ohana companies liable for the fraud scheme.

In addition, from March 2016 to June 2023, Aulava-Moala and Keohuloa conspired to submit approximately $700,000 in fraudulent receipts for a charity donation program operated by a Los Angeles-based oil refinery for which the company paid at least $500,000.

The FBI, the U.S. Department of Labor Office of Inspector General (DOL-OIG), and the U.S. Department of Labor – Employee Benefits Security Administration are investigating this matter with assistance from Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) and the United States Secret Service.

Assistant United States Attorney Jason C. Pang of the Transnational Organized Crime Section is prosecuting this case.

USA v. Cartmell; USA v. Surace
Gregory Cartmell, 62, of Coeur D’Alene, Idaho, a licensed chiropractor, was arrested today on a four-count indictment charging him with two counts of health care fraud and two counts of aggravated identity theft. He is expected to make his initial appearance today in U.S. District Court for the District of Idaho. He will be arraigned in Los Angeles in the coming weeks.

According to the indictment, from December 2018 to November 2022, Cartmell submitted approximately $9.14 million in fraudulent claims to the ILWU-PMA health plan for chiropractic services – including for services not rendered – and received approximately $6.43 million in payment from the union’s health plan, which had terminated him from the plan in December 2020.

To circumvent his termination, Cartmell arranged with a co-conspirator – Vincent Surace, 87, of McKinney, Texas – to bill ILWU-PMA’s health plan under the co-conspirator’s name and identification number. In exchange for allowing his name and ID number to be used in the scheme, Cartmell paid Surace a portion of the proceeds the union’s plan paid for the fraudulent claims.

Surace is charged via information with one count of conspiracy to commit health care fraud. He will be summonsed to Los Angeles federal court in the coming weeks.

The FBI, the U.S. Department of Labor Office of Inspector General (DOL-OIG), and the U.S. Department of Labor Employee Benefits Security Administration (DOL-EBSA) are investigating this matter.

Assistant United States Attorneys Jason C. Pang of the Transnational Organized Crime Section and William M. Larsen of the Criminal Appeals Section are prosecuting this case with assistance from Assistant United States Attorney Christopher C. Kendall of the Transnational Organized Crime Section.

USA v. Griffen
Sonia Griffen, 51, of Lakewood, was arrested today on a five-count indictment charging her with health care fraud. From April 2019 to May 2024, Griffen allegedly submitted nearly $5 million in fraudulent claims to ILWU-PMA’s health care plan through her wellness company, Bee Well Holistic Wellness Center, for purported chiropractic services given to union members, even though the plan had previously terminated Bee Well and barred it from submitting claims.

According to the indictment, to circumvent Bee Well’s termination from the ILWU-PMA plan and obtain payments, Griffen concealed Bee Well’s identity and involvement by arranging with two chiropractors to bill the plan under their names and at fictitious addresses. She also submitted false claims billing the plan for chiropractic services that were never rendered.

In total, Griffen submitted approximately $4.9 million in fraudulent claims to the ILWU-PMA plan, resulting in payments of approximately $2.5 million.

The FBI, the United States Department of Labor Office of Inspector General (DOL-OIG), and the Department of Labor – Employee Benefits Security Administration (DOL-EBSA) are investigating this matter.

Assistant United States Attorney Jing Yan of the General Crimes Section is prosecuting this case.

     IMMIGRATION HEALTH CARE FRAUD

USA v. Ko
Young Joo Ko, 59, of East Hollywood and a lawful permanent resident from South Korea, was arrested today on a federal criminal complaint charging her with fraud and misuse of visas, permits, and other documents.

According to an affidavit filed with the complaint, Ko engaged in a medical fraud scheme exploiting the green card application process by creating fraudulent immigration documents. Civil surgeons designated by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) and operating in the Los Angeles area did not examine green card applicants as required by law.

Instead, Ko – for a fee – fraudulently prepared the required forms by presenting herself as a nurse or doctor and indicating false compliance with medical examination requirements necessary for immigration applicants to register permanent residence or adjust their immigration status.

If convicted, Ko would face a statutory maximum sentence of 10 years in federal prison.

HSI, IRS Criminal Investigation, and USCIS are investigating this matter.

Assistant United States Attorney Brenda N. Galván of the General Crimes Section is prosecuting this case.

Health care fraud-related charges in these cases carry a statutory maximum sentence of 10 years in federal prison. Wire fraud is punishable by up to 20 years in federal prison. Aggravated identity theft carries a mandatory two-year consecutive prison sentence.

Complaints and indictments contain allegations that a defendant has committed a crime. Every defendant is presumed to be innocent until and unless proven guilty in court.

A close associate of former New York City Mayor Eric Adams has been indicted on insurance fraud charges, according to prosecutors.

Zhan Petrosyants was accused of obtaining millions of dollars from no-fault auto insurance claims from 2018 to 2023, said U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Jay Clayton. In the indictment, Petrosyants’ scheme involved submitting tens of millions in phony medical claims, and then laundering the ill-gotten gains.

In order to carry out the alleged scheme and prepare the fraudulent bills, Petrosyants and co-conspirators used the license information and signatures from licensed psychologists and other medical professionals on the fake billing records submitted to insurance companies for payment.

The money paid to Petrosyants and the others was sent to two shell corporations, according to the U.S. Attorney’s office, neither of which provided medical services or were run by a medical professional. Nearly all the money the shell companies received was later transferred to a bank account help by a jewelry business in Manhattan’s Diamond District, prosecutors said.

The 44-year-old Petrosyants was taken into custody by the FBI Tuesday night and was set to appear before a judge on Wednesday.

“Petrosyants orchestrated a complex scheme to cheat insurance providers out of millions of dollars,” Clayton said. “No-fault insurance fraud schemes raise costs for everyone and reduce benefits to consumers, an unnecessary burden we all unfortunately share.”

Petrosyants was charged with conspiracy to commit health care and wire fraud, identity theft and money laundering. Attorneys for Petrosyants did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

If convicted of all the charges, Petrosyants would face up to 60 years in prison.

Petrosyants was among the former mayor’s closest associates during his administration. Adams frequented restaurants run by Petrosyants, and the duo have been seen and photographed at several events together.

A Murray, Kentucky, insurance company owner is facing charges in connection with insurance fraud and theft.

According to the Graves County Sheriff’s Office, an investigation revealed that a Graves County church was defrauded of over $10,000 for insurance coverage.

Investigators said the insurance agent never purchased the policies for property and liability coverage.

The suspect was identified as 59-year-old Glen David Ramey, of Murray, Ky.

The sheriff’s offices said Ramey is also the owner of David Ramey Insurance Company in Murray.

Investigators claim that Ramey fraudulently misused funds paid to him and his business directly for the purpose of purchasing insurance policies.

They said that in some cases, the polices were never obtained for the victim, leaving them without coverage.

Detectives said the alleged offenses have been going on since 2022.

Ramey was arrested at his business around 10:40 a.m. on Wednesday, April 1.

He was taken to the Graves County Restricted Custody Center, then later to an out-of-county detention center.

Ramey was charged with fraudulent insurance acts – $10,000 or more and theft by failure to make required disposition of property over $10,000.

The sheriff’s office said this is an ongoing investigation.

Jonah Slatky, the owner of a framing and rough carpentry company in Somis, was charged with six felony counts of worker’s compensation insurance fraud with an alleged loss of $519,000 in state revenue.

Slatky was arraigned on March 27, 2026, where he pled not guilty to all charged counts before he was released on his own recognizance with the condition that he is prohibited from operating a business unless it is properly insured with worker’s compensation coverage noted the Ventura County District Attorney’s Office.

According to the complaint filed in Ventura County Superior Court, each count represents a separate policy year that Slatky is alleged to have intentionally underreported the number of employees at his business to his worker’s compensation insurance carrier.

Slotky allegedly reported having no employees between July of 2019 and July of 2025, significantly reducing his premium payments while using cash to pay multiple employees at construction projects his company Grand Custom were tasked with completing detailed the Ventura County District Attorney’s Office.

Financial records recovered during an investigation by the local prosecutor’s office revealed that Grand Custom conducted millions of dollars in business income during the six-year period alongside “substantial cash withdrawls” that the Ventura County District Attorney’s Office believes were used for payroll purposes.

The Ventura County District Attorney’s Office shared that Slatky is facing a special enhancement that the losses exceeded $100,000 and aggravating factors including that the allegations involve both attempted and actual taking as well as the manner in which the alleged crimes were carried out indicate planning, sophistication, or professionalism.

Slatky is currently scheduled for an early disposition conference on April 30 of this year.

He faces up to six years and four months in state prison if convicted and if the enhancement is found true, his potential prison sentence becomes mandatory shared the Ventura County District Attorney’s Office.

Your News Channel reached out to Grand Custom for comment and more information about the allegations, but after calling the business and detailing the nature of the call, the person who answered hung up.

The U.S. Department of Justice on Thursday announced what they called a major health care fraud takedown throughout Southern California, which included the arrest of doctors and nurses.

First Assistant U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli was joined during a press conference by several law enforcement agencies including the FBI, and Dr. Mehmet Oz, head of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

They said they served a series of search and arrest warrants throughout the region, from Covina to Lakewood. Eight people were arrested and more than a dozen are being charged for suspected health fraud.

They also mentioned fraudulent hospice care.

“These defendants recruited beneficiaries who were not terminally ill, and paid them to pose as patients receiving hospice care. Medicare then paid millions of dollars – hundreds of millions of dollars – on false and fraudulent claims submitted by fraudsters,” said Essayli.

Among those arrested were a Covina couple. Prosecutors said 66-year-old psychologist Gladwin Gill and his wife, Amelou Gill, a registered nurse, operated a fraudulent hospice business out of Glendale.

“This particular hospice submitted more than $5.2 million in fraudulent claims, and Medicare actually paid out more than $4 million,” Essayli said.

Gill’s attorney told Eyewitness News he denies the allegations and looks forward to his day in court.

Oz announced a broader review of hospice providers in the state.

“We’re going to review every single hospice in California to make sure that they’re all appropriate, and we hope to do that expeditiously. We’ll do it this year,” Oz said.

During the news conference, federal authorities were questioned about a video Gov. Gavin Newsom said in January his office was reviewing. In that video, Oz, who is Turkish American, was shown standing in front of an Armenian-owned bakery in Van Nuys while alleging widespread fraud in the area.

Essayli confirmed that none of the defendants named Thursday were connected to that video. Oz responded to outcry that his accusations, which the business owner denounced as false, were discriminatory.

“I was stating the facts as they’ve been explained to me, and we have a lot of evidence of where the fraud is, just looking at the numbers,” Oz said.

Oz did not provide any evidence against a specific business in connection to that video. He suggested that half of Los Angeles County hospice care facilities are fraudulent, pointing to survival percentages as evidence.

“World experts at CMS say if you’ve got 100% or near survival, certainly if you’ve got a survival over 50% for population that’s supposed to have passed in six months, you’ve got a problem,” he said.

Newsom responded to accusations that California had not done enough to address hospice fraud, saying in part, “The Trump Administration – home to the biggest fraudsters on Earth – is trying to blame California for issues with THEIR federal programs.”

His press office said the state has taken action for years, including suspending more than 280 licenses and banning new ones.

Local 10 News obtained surveillance video on Tuesday that authorities say shows a staged crash tied to an alleged insurance fraud scheme involving two South Florida men.

Hector Cordero Jr., 33, of Hallandale Beach, and Jerry Detres Jr., 42, of Miami, were arrested in connection with the Feb. 25 incident at a Shell gas station at 16800 Collins Ave. in Sunny Isles Beach, according to their arrest reports.

Investigators say Detres reported his white 2016 Mercedes-Benz stolen after leaving it running with the keys inside while he went into the store.

Surveillance video from the gas station shows an unidentified man entering the vehicle and driving away moments later.

Authorities later determined the vehicle was driven to a nearby parking lot at 17100 Collins Ave., where additional video shows it being intentionally crashed multiple times into a concrete light pole behind Milam’s Market before being abandoned.

Detectives also reviewed surveillance footage from a nearby parking garage at 17000 N Bay Road that showed Detres meeting with two other individuals shortly before the reported theft.

Investigators said one of those individuals matched the person who later took the vehicle.

“I knew that the person who took the car smashed it into a poll, reversed, and then drove it into the same poll again, which was very odd,” said Javier Esteves, a lieutnant with the Sunny Isles Beach Police Department.

According to the report, Cordero later admitted during an interview on March 18 that the incident was “pre-planned and staged,” and said he was “promised a portion of the insurance proceeds in exchange for his participation.”

Detres also contacted his insurance provider to report the vehicle “stolen and wrecked,” investigators said.

They said the investigation concluded the incident was coordinated as part of an attempt to file a fraudulent insurance claim.

“We’re very meticulous and thorough when we do any investigation, and we have a lot of resources here,” Esteves said. “The vehicle had some sort of internal problems, and it just made more sense for him to file an insurance claim to try to get the full value of the car.”

“We knew what was up,” he added. “We sat here kicking around ideas, one thing led to another, and it just snowballed.”

Jail records show Cordero is facing charges including grand theft of a motor vehicle, staging a crash/insurance fraud, and criminal mischief, while Detres is facing one count each of filing a false or fraudulent insurance claim and falsely reporting a crime.

As of Tuesday, neither man was listed as an inmate in Miami-Dade County jail records.

A South Florida insurance adjuster exploited Hurricane Ian victims by withholding more than $600,000 in insurance settlement money, according to arrest documents obtained by Local 10 News on Tuesday.

Jail records show Francisco Javier Chaparro Araus, 45, of Miramar, is facing multiple charges following an investigation by the Florida Department of Financial Services.

Investigators said that between Oct. 3, 2022, and Nov. 30, 2022, Chaparro Araus was “suspected of engaging in fraudulent, unethical, and dishonest acts within the insurance agency.”

They said that in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian, which made landfall Sept. 28, 2022, and caused widespread destruction across southwest Florida and the Gulf Coast, Chaparro Araus began “soliciting vulnerable homeowners that sustained property damage during the weather event.”

According to investigators, the homeowners entered into written agreements with Chaparro Araus, who worked for All Elements Public Adjusters LLC, to represent them in handling their insurance claims.

The contracts stated he would “serve on the policyholders’ behalf to adjust, negotiate, and attempt to secure a fair settlement of their insurance claim” in exchange for a 10% contingency fee based on recovered damages.

Authorities said a review of claim files and documents provided by multiple insurance companies showed the claims were resolved and settlement checks were issued.

However, investigators said the checks were deposited into a Bank of America business account controlled by Chaparro Araus, who “unlawfully withheld and failed to remit a total of $611,473.39 in insurance settlement proceeds owed to ten different policyholders.”

The affidavit states that the funds were later depleted through online transfers, Zelle transactions, wire transfers, debit card purchases and large cash withdrawals, including at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino and Calder Casino.

According to the report, Chaparro Araus is accused of “misappropriation, conversion, or unlawful withholding of money belonging to insured clients or their beneficiaries.”

Jail records show the Chilean national is facing one count of obtaining property over $50,000 by fraud, one count of exploitation of the elderly between $20,000 and $100,000, two counts of misapplying insurance premiums over $100,000, and six counts of misapplying insurance premiums between $20,000 and $100,000.

As of Tuesday afternoon, he was not listed as an inmate in Broward County jail records.

A Houston man is facing a felony insurance‑fraud charge after authorities in Floyd County issued a warrant detailing what investigators describe as an elaborate scheme involving falsified insurance documents. Bradford Lee McWhorter II, 43, was arrested in Rome after state insurance investigators linked him to a fraudulent Certificate of Liability Insurance allegedly used in an attempt to rent equipment from a California prop‑rental company.

According to the sworn affidavit filed in Floyd County Magistrate Court, the investigation began when Emmett Long of Jowers‑Sklar Insurance in Rome reported concerns about a suspicious insurance certificate sent to a rental company in California. The document, investigators say, was provided by McWhorter and appeared to show active coverage for “Atlanta Audio Visual (AAV Global, LLC).” Long told investigators the certificate was fraudulent and that all Travelers policies associated with the business had been canceled years earlier.

The affidavit states that Paul Andruszkewicz, owner of E.C. Prop Rentals in North Hollywood, contacted the insurance agency to verify the certificate after receiving it from McWhorter by email. When informed it was invalid, Andruszkewicz confronted McWhorter—who then allegedly sent a second certificate under a different company name, “McRue Concepts, LLC,” which investigators also determined to be fraudulent.

State investigators subpoenaed subscriber information for phone numbers and email accounts used in the alleged scheme. Records tied the numbers and email addresses directly to McWhorter, his previous business “Worldwide Audio‑Visual Services,” and the Atlanta‑area address listed on the fraudulent documents. The affidavit also notes that the email account used to send the certificate was registered to McWhorter and linked to multiple bank cards in his name.