Luke Rosiak
👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
because they know exactly who it is that's billing Medicaid for these services that it's important to understand are essentially unverifiable because they're happening behind closed doors in private residences.
One manager told us about 70% of his employees are just people hanging out with their own relatives.
Which is apparently legal.
But then you also have this other category which claim to drive to people's houses and visit them.
And they used to have GPS on the cars to make sure they went,
but apparently Ohio got rid of that rule.
So how are you going to prove they really went, that they aren't just paying a little kickback to somebody in exchange for using their social security number?
But what's more striking than who's doing it is the sheer number of these firms.
I mean, there are entire blocks where...
Virtually every business has been replaced by home health care in northeast Columbus.
One building I visited is the address for 93 Medicaid companies that build a combined $66 million.
And when I visited, almost nobody was there.
I mean, the smoke alarms were chirping for batteries.
There were stray cats walking around.
Just nobody.
It was creepy.
Well, part two includes a politician who ran an $11 million Medicaid business on the side and a landlord who bought private planes after renting office space to hundreds of these home health care companies, which build a quarter billion dollars of your money.
— The SPLC is a nonprofit entity that purports to fight white supremacy.
It was instead manufacturing the extremism it purports to oppose by paying sources to stoke racial hatred.
A grand jury returned an 11-count indictment charging the Southern Poverty Law Center with six counts of wire fraud.