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Press Release

Oklahoma City Woman to Serve 27 Months in Prison for Committing Health Care Fraud and Food Stamp Fraud

For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, Western District of Oklahoma

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Mark A. Yancey, United States Attorney for the Western District of Oklahoma, and Scott Pruitt, Attorney General for the State of Oklahoma, jointly announce that SHALONDA SUGGS, 36, of Oklahoma City, was sentenced by Chief United States District Judge Joe Heaton to serve 27 months in federal prison for submitting false claims to Medicaid for behavioral health counseling services and for stealing Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits (SNAP benefits, formerly known as food stamps). Suggs was also ordered to pay restitution to Medicaid in the amount of $204,334.24 and to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program in the amount of $4,959.00.

 

On April 5, 2016, Suggs was indicted on sixteen counts of health care fraud and one count of theft of government funds. The Indictment alleged that in July 2013, Suggs opened a behavioral health counseling agency called Focus Pointe Counseling, LLC. It was alleged Suggs obtained a contract with the Oklahoma Health Care Authority (OHCA), which allowed Focus Pointe to receive reimbursement from Medicaid for providing behavioral health counseling services to Medicaid-eligible children. It was alleged that Suggs then submitted Medicaid claims for behavioral health counseling services that were purportedly provided by four counselors supposedly employed by Focus Pointe. It was alleged that the counselors were never actually employed by Focus Pointe and never provided any of the counseling services claimed by Focus Pointe. It was alleged that the OHCA paid Focus Pointe for the false claims and that Suggs used the proceeds for her personal benefit. It was further alleged that during the time period Suggs was fraudulently receiving funds from the OHCA, she was receiving SNAP benefits by making false statements to the Oklahoma Department of Human Services that she was unemployed and had a negligible source of income.

 

On June 30, 2016, Suggs pled guilty to two counts of the Indictment. Suggs admitted that she used Focus Pointe Counseling to submit a claim to the OHCA using the name and Medicaid provider number of a certain counselor for a behavioral counseling session. Suggs admitted that the counselor was not in fact employed by Focus Pointe and that the counseling session never actually occurred. She also admitted that from August 2014 through May 2015, she was receiving SNAP benefits that she obtained by making false statements about her lack of income.

 

Medicaid and SNAP are programs that are funded and administered jointly by the federal government and the State of Oklahoma. This case is the result of a cooperative federal and state investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Oklahoma Attorney General’s Office, and the United States Department of Agriculture, Office of Inspector General. It is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Amanda Maxfield Green and Oklahoma Assistant Attorney General Lory Dewey.

Updated February 3, 2017

Topic
Health Care Fraud