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The anti-fraud task force, led by Vice President JD Vance, made the announcement Wednesday, just weeks after the administration suspended the licenses for 447 hospice facilities and 23 home health agencies for suspected fraudulent billing.
“Giving people medications they don’t even need, it’s a defrauding of the American taxpayer, but it’s a violation of the trust that should exist between every American and the people who prescribe the medications.
“That’s one thing that we want to, we’re targeting, and this is why we’re taking this action because we want California to get serious about this fraud,” said Vance.
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“As Americans across the country have seen the rampant level of fraud going on in California, the Trump administration will not tolerate it,” a senior Trump administration official told The Post. “We thank Dr. Oz and Vice President Vance for their leadership on this issue.”
The move comes as the administration said it is doing a full accounting of hospice and home health agencies across the country.
“We want to protect Medicare, but we can’t do that if the states that are administering those programs are allowing those programs to be fleeced by fraudsters. We encourage, whether it’s California or New York or Maryland or Ohio, we encourage people to work with us,” he explained.
“The Vice President’s task force is taking all steps necessary to ensure that American taxpayer dollars don’t make it into the hands of fraudsters,” a Vance spokesperson told The Post.
Vance announced the administration was withholding more than $250 million in Medicaid funds in Minnesota due to fraud concerns back in February, and gave Democratic Governor Tim Walz 60 days to submit a “corrective action plan” or face additional action.
A few months later, CMS Administrator Dr. Oz said an additional $91 million in federal medicaid funding was being deferred in Minnesota, citing the program’s “serious vulnerabilities to fraud.”
“This happens way too much in the United States of America, and it happens because until recently we did not have a government or an administration that actually took the fraud program and took anti-fraud prevention seriously,” Vance added.
California’s hospice and home health programs have been at the center of the nation’s clampdown on fraud.
Multiple investigations from The Post revealed dozens of suspicious hospice and home health facilities, and uncovered a network of doctors that appear to be fueling tens of millions in fraudulent billing — resulting in CMS revoking one doctor’s license to bill Medicare and dozens of agencies licenses being suspended.
“You may think, obviously this is a Republican administration. We’re all proud Republicans up here. You may think that this is purely a red state or blue state issue. That’s actually not true.
“We hope this wake-up call will be heard loudly across the beautiful state of California, whose people we’re trying to protect — sometimes from their own leaders,” Vance concluded.
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