A New Jersey healthcare provider has been charged for submitting fraudulent Medicaid claims for physical therapy services that were never rendered. According to the New Jersey Office of the Attorney General and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG), the defendant billed Medicaid for hundreds of therapy sessions using patient identities without proper documentation or proof of treatment.
Investigators allege the provider routinely billed for services during hours when the clinic was closed, duplicated claims across multiple patients, and inflated treatment durations to maximize reimbursement. Several patients later told investigators they never received the billed services and were unaware their information had been used.
The fraud was detected through Medicaid analytics that flagged excessive billing volumes, abnormal service frequency, and utilization patterns inconsistent with peer providers. Auditors also identified identical treatment notes reused across patient records.
“Healthcare fraud drains resources from programs intended to support vulnerable populations,” said New Jersey Attorney General Matthew Platkin. “Strong oversight is essential to preserving trust in public health systems.”
The case highlights the need for real-time claims monitoring, identity validation, and provider behavior analytics to reduce improper payments.
Today’s Fraud of the Day is based on reporting from the New Jersey Office of the Attorney General and HHS-OIG regarding Medicaid billing fraud.

