Thursday, May 28, 2009

Rick Scott- Conservatives for Patients Rights

Thursday, May 28, 2009
HCA International- Conservatives for Patients Rights
Conservatives for Patients' Rights commercial with the Doctor in England?

2008--- HCA International

Welcome to London's leading private hospitals- HCA International

Why we are London's No. 1 private hospital group- HCA International

� More than 3,000 top London and UK specialists in private practice- HCA International

No. 1 private hospital?- HCA International

This is what STUPID AMERICA gets:

LARGEST HEALTH CARE FRAUD CASE IN U.S. HISTORY SETTLED; HCA INVESTIGATION
Note: Hospital Corporation of America (HCA) was acquired by Columbia in 1994.

1997- As part of Richard Scott's severance package from Columbia he was paid $5.13 million and given a five year consulting contract at $950,000 per year.

1997+5 years consulting =2002

In 2002 FBI raided the offices of National Century Financial Enterprises in Dublin, Ohio.

National Century Financial Enterprises

Guess where ALL of Rick Scott’s Columbia homecare units were? National Century Financial Enterprises.

Largest fraud case the FBI has ever investigated-one acquittal- James K Happ, the ex-CFO of Columbia Homecare Group, Inc.

Jurors stated; "PROSECUTOR DID NOT DO HIS JOB"�hmm

Leo Wise , now at the ethics CBO ---jurors stated 'PROSECUTOR DID NOT DO HIS JOB'

"Ladies and gentlemen, this is a case of staggering fraud," 'It is one of the largest frauds the FBI has ever investigated. (Leo Wise )

The ONLY acquittal; James K Happ--the CFO of Columbia Homecare Group.
Leo Wise , (now at the ethics CBO) stated "Ladies and gentlemen, this is a case of staggering fraud," 'It is one of the largest frauds the FBI has ever investigated.

Then- low and behold: December 18, 2008 The ONLY acquittal; James K Happ!...belief that federal prosecutors had not done their job, the juror said.

Columbia/HCA is a partnership of financier Richard Rainwater of Ft. Worth and lawyer Richard Scott. Scott was recently terminated by Darla Moore, the wife of Richard Rainwater.

Richard Rainwater, ex-partner of GW Bush with the Rangers

Leo Wise, now at the ethics CBO ---jurors stated 'PROSECUTOR DID NOT DO HIS JOB'

In 2002 FBI raided the offices of National Century Financial Enterprises in Dublin, Ohio

"This case is one of the largest corporate fraud investigations involving a privately held company headquartered in small town America," said Assistant Director Kenneth W. Kaiser of the FBI Criminal Investigative Division.

Richard Scott -- sometimes called "the Bill Gates of health care" -- quit as chairman of Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corp. amid a massive federal investigation into the Medicare billing, physician recruiting and home-care practices of the nation's largest for-profit health care company.

Columbia/HCA is a partnership of financier Richard Rainwater of Ft. Worth and lawyer Richard Scott. Scott was recently terminated by Darla Moore, the wife of Richard Rainwater.

Rainwater also owned a large stake in Magellan Health Care which controls Charter Medical. Magellan, run by Darla Moore, is the largest network of psychiatric hospitals in the country. They are becoming more and more involved in obtaining government money for services formerly not covered as health care, according to Fortune Magazine.

1997 - Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corp. - the nation's largest for-profit health care company

Monday, May 4, 2009

Bigger than Enron...what about the Tennessee Largest Bankruptcy

Tennessee's Largest Bankruptcy in 1999 held most of NCFE so called purchases.

What about the bankruptcy fraud for the case filed July 29, 1999 in Memphis Bankruptcy Court? All the NCFE Debtor in Posession finance tool used to hide Columbia Homecare Group?

The court room full of lawyers cried FRAUD- the judge forbade the 'F' word in her court.



National Century victims awaiting repayment
Sunday, May 3, 2009 3:22 AM
By John Futty

THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
When National Century Financial Enterprises collapsed into fraud-fueled bankruptcy, few investors were hit as hard as those in Arizona.

More than 100 of the state's agencies and communities were in an investment pool that held notes worth $131 million in the Dublin-based health-care finance company. Chandler, Ariz., a suburb of Phoenix, took the largest individual hit, losing $13 million.

"There was shock, there was disbelief," said Nachie Marquez, a spokeswoman for the city. "It's taxpayer funds. You put your trust in an investment pool and you think it's safe."

The Arizona investors were among hundreds of institutional victims across the U.S. whose losses totaled $2.38 billion -- the largest known fraud case in the country involving a private company.

The government is "aggressively working" to recover the money from the founders and executives of National Century. They were ordered to pay restitution after they were convicted in federal court in Columbus of conspiracy, securities fraud, mail fraud and money laundering, said Assistant U.S. Attorney Doug Squires.

Last week, U.S. District Judge Algenon L. Marbley issued an order requiring National Century co-founder Lance K. Poulsen, considered the architect of the scheme, and his co-conspirators to forfeit $1.7 billion in assets, the amount prosecutors say represents the proceeds of the conspiracy.

But attorneys for the victims say they are more likely to recover the most significant amounts through lawsuits filed against financial institutions that allegedly are liable for the fraud.

"While we appreciate the government's efforts to squeeze money out of the individual criminal defendants," the financial institutions named in the civil litigation "are able to pay much more than any of these folks have," said Scott Humphries of Houston-based Gibbs & Bruns. The law firm represents investors who lost a total of $1.6 billion.

Investors filed a flurry of lawsuits against National Century, its executives and its financial advisers after the company filed for bankruptcy in 2002. The suits, involving hundreds of plaintiffs in five states, were combined in 2003 and assigned to one federal judge in Columbus.

JPMorgan Chase, a trustee for National Century funds, agreed to pay $425 million to settle its portion of the lawsuit in February 2006, according to an annual report it filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The plaintiffs said JPMorgan Chase was negligent in allowing National Century to make fraudulent transfers among its accounts and for not detecting or revealing the illegal activity to investors.

Settlement money and insurance coverage helped the city of Chandler recoup some of its losses, Marquez said.

"We've recovered about 40 cents on the dollar for our clients," Humphries said.

Civil litigation continues against Credit Suisse, the investment bank that issued National Century's bonds.

Meanwhile, the U.S. attorney's office has collected $2.3 million so far from the criminal defendants, said Fred Alverson, an office spokesman.

The total includes $396,178 that federal agents seized in March from the bank account of Rebecca S. Parrett, a National Century executive who has been a fugitive since shortly after her conviction in March 2008.

The money recovered from the defendants was delivered to the federal clerk's office but has not been distributed to any victims, Alverson said.

National Century purchased the accounts receivable from hospitals, clinics and nursing homes using money obtained by selling asset-backed notes to institutional investors.

Evidence in the criminal trials showed that the company executives diverted money to support their lavish lifestyles and made unsecured loans to the health-care providers, leading to the company's collapse.

The bankruptcy process had begun in 2002 when the FBI obtained a warrant to search the company's Dublin headquarters. Agents collected more than 2,000 boxes of documents and computer files that formed the basis for an investigation involving the FBI, the Internal Revenue Service, U.S. postal inspectors and Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Institutional investors, which included police and firefighter pension funds, churches, labor unions, cities and counties, and insurance companies, were led to believe the company's bonds were among the safest investments available.

The business model presented to investors was solid but never followed by the company, Squires said.

"(Company executives) did not dip their toes in the pool of fraud, they jumped in from Day One," he said. "From the first investor report, it was fraudulent."

The assets of the conspirators were researched by the federal probation office, but the information is not public record. Defense attorneys have said their clients' assets largely were exhausted while fighting the criminal charges.

Squires said the U.S. attorney's office will attempt to get "every available penny" from those convicted by seizing bank accounts, pensions, 401(k)s and property.

jfutty@dispatch.com


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On the Web • Watch a video of Assistant U.S. Attorney Doug Squires at Dispatch.com/video. For complete coverage of the National Century case, visit Dispatch.com/metro.