Federal
agents arrested 68 people in Puerto Rico on Wednesday morning as part of an
investigation into alleged abuse of the Social Security Disability Insurance
program, two people familiar with the operation said.
More
arrests are expected. The bust appears to be one of the largest disability fraud
cases ever assembled by federal investigators.
The
identity of those arrested couldn't be learned immediately. One person familiar
with the arrests said it included two psychiatrists, one physiatrist, a
secretary, and a person who works to help people win disability benefits. The
person said the probe centers on alleged abuse of the federal program over
several years that could have helped scores of people obtain benefits who should
not have qualified.
Update: From an
Associated Press article:
Those charged include three doctors and 71 Social Security claimants
accused of receiving more than $2 million in disability benefit
payments. But the biggest haul allegedly went to a former Social
Security worker accused of taking $2.5 million while directing claimants
to doctors who would file false claims. ...
The former Social Security worker claimed to help clients seeking
benefits and directed them to doctors who would earn up to $500 for each
fake claim, said Ed Ryan, New York-based special agent in charge of the
Inspector General's office of the Social Security Administration's
investigations office.
Rodriguez said agents took videos of people
that belied their claimed ailments. She said one who claimed back
problems was a gym owner who posted a picture of himself on Facebook
lifting a girl above his head. ...
Rep. Sam Johnson, a Texas Republican and the Social Security chairman
of the Ways and Means Subcommittee, said he will discuss the Puerto
Rican case during a September hearing.
"Clearly this isn't a case
of just a few bad apples," he said in a statement. "That such fraud
could occur in the first place raises serious and troubling questions
regarding Social Security's management of the disability program."
I was wondering when they were going to get around to investigating the far away land with the ridiculously high number of folks on disability and significant history of US benefits-related fraud...about time
ReplyDeleteIt does go to prove that some fraud does exist, but not in massive, denial type amounts of fraud.
ReplyDeleteFOX will be all over this one, you can count on that.
ReplyDeleteRight, while the networks will ignore it completely.
DeleteIn contrast to PR, take a look at Alaska's approval rates.
ReplyDeleteRepresentative Johnson is correct. The existence and stopping of fraud means the system does not work.....wait, what the hell? When the system works, sammy calls for an overall and when it doesn't, sammy calls for quiet. One would almost think Rep. Johnson is uninterested in disabled people
ReplyDelete