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Charlotte Health Care Provider Convicted of Medicaid, COVID-19 Relief Fraud

Woman behind bars, healthcare fraud documents

Charlotte Health Care Provider Convicted of Medicaid, COVID-19 Relief Fraud

Charlotte, N.C. – A Charlotte behavioral health services provider was convicted Friday by a federal jury after a nine-day trial, for defrauding the South Carolina Medicaid Program (SC Medicaid), falsely obtaining COVID-19 relief funds, and money laundering.

Ashley Nicole Cross, 41, from Charlotte, was found guilty of healthcare fraud, making false statements and writings related to a healthcare matter, promotional money laundering, wire fraud, and conspiracy, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of North Carolina.

According to trial evidence, including 25 witnesses and over 600 documents, Cross owned and operated Odyssey Health Group (OHG), a Charlotte-based company, which was enrolled with SC Medicaid to provide outpatient behavioral health services to eligible Medicaid beneficiaries.

Fraudulent Reimbursement Claims

From 2016 to 2021, Cross’s company submitted fraudulent reimbursement claims to SC Medicaid and its contracted managed care organizations for rehabilitative behavioral health services that were never provided. To carry out the scheme, Cross used the personal identifying information (PII) of qualified SC Medicaid beneficiaries to file reimbursement claims totaling $1.3 million dollars.

For some claims, Cross bought the PII of Medicaid beneficiaries she used to submit claims. To further the scheme and to give the appearance that OHG’s fraudulent claims were legitimate, Cross instructed OHG employees to create fake clinical service notes after she filed fraudulent claims in the names of Medicaid beneficiaries.

Money Laundering and Cover-Up

Trial evidence established that in September 2019, Cross was informed of audits of OHG’s Medicaid claims. To cover up the fraud, Cross submitted fictitious patient medical records and made false statements to auditors. Trial evidence further established that Cross engaged in money laundering and used some of the fraudulent proceeds to promote the scheme by paying for Medicaid beneficiary names and PII.

Fraudulent Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) Loans

In addition to the Medicaid fraud scheme, evidence showed that from April 3, 2020, to May 14, 2022, Cross executed a scheme to obtain fraudulent Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans on behalf of OHG and Gucci International Inc. (Gucci), a purported event planning business owned by Cross’s boyfriend and co-conspirator.

To obtain the PPP loans, Cross submitted loan applications and supporting documents that contained false statements regarding OHG’s and Gucci’s payroll expenses, number of employees, and other misrepresentations. Cross obtained more than $287,000 in COVID-19 relief funds for her companies and Gucci.

Legal Consequences

At the time of Gucci’s loan application, Cross’s boyfriend was under indictment for a federal offense. Cross was remanded into custody after the jury returned its verdict. A federal district court judge will determine Cross’s sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors. A sentencing date has not been set.

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HERE Charlotte
Author: HERE Charlotte

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