A Wisconsin-based medical clinic owner has been charged for orchestrating a wide-ranging healthcare fraud scheme that targeted Medicaid and private insurers by billing for services that were never provided. According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Wisconsin and the Wisconsin Department of Justice, the defendant submitted thousands of false claims for patient visits, diagnostic tests, and durable medical equipment.
Investigators allege the clinic billed for high-frequency physical therapy sessions and diagnostic imaging for patients who either never appeared for appointments or received only brief consultations. In some cases, patient records were copied and reused to support repeated claims, while provider signatures were allegedly forged to validate reimbursement requests.
The fraud came to light after state Medicaid analysts flagged abnormal billing patterns, including unusually high volumes of identical procedure codes and claims submitted outside normal clinic hours. A subsequent audit revealed that several listed providers were not scheduled to work on the dates services were billed, and some patients were deceased at the time claims were submitted.
“This conduct exploited public healthcare programs designed to support the most vulnerable,” said U.S. Attorney Gregory J. Haanstad. “Fraud like this drains limited resources and undermines confidence in the healthcare system.”
The case highlights the importance of continuous claims monitoring, provider credential validation, and patient confirmation controls in healthcare reimbursement systems. The defendant faces multiple counts of healthcare fraud, false statements relating to healthcare matters, and identity misuse.
Today’s Fraud of the Day is based on reporting from the U.S. Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Justice regarding healthcare fraud in 2025.


