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Oz Says California鈥檚 Not Fighting Health Care Fraud, but Data Shows It鈥檚 Part of a Larger Battle

SACRAMENTO, Calif. 鈥 For weeks, Mehmet Oz has been waging a public feud with California leaders over health care fraud, accusing the blue state of failing to adequately combat such abuse.

Oz, who heads the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, there was approximately $3.5 billion of fraud in the hospice and home health care industry in Los Angeles County alone. 鈥淭his administration under President [Donald] Trump is not going to tolerate taxpayer dollars being stolen because people aren鈥檛 paying attention anymore. We鈥檙e focused on this,鈥 . He claimed the fraud was largely orchestrated by the 鈥淩ussian, Armenian mafia鈥 and said that most of the money spent on home and community-based services across California 鈥渕ight be fraudulent.鈥

However, CMS clarified that not all billing activities referenced by Oz were presumed to be improper. And a review of the most recent available data shows that there are hotbeds of health care fraud across the country and across practice areas, most of them allegedly perpetrated by health insurers and other domestic actors, and that California outperforms most other states in recovering fraud dollars.

As the temperature heats up in the conflict between the Trump administration and California, a handful of Republican state lawmakers have entered the fray, accusing Gov. Gavin Newsom in of allowing 鈥渞ampant fraud.鈥 Democratic state officials insist they aggressively combat fraud, and Newsom has filed a against Oz, calling language in the allegations 鈥渂aseless and racially charged.鈥

鈥淭he Trump Administration is attempting to take the issue of fraud 鈥 a very real, and national issue 鈥 and weaponize it against Democratic states,鈥 California Attorney General Rob Bonta said in an early February statement.

Oz said that he would halt 鈥渉undreds of millions of dollars鈥 in payments to California if he didn鈥檛 get satisfactory answers from state officials. He and Vice President JD Vance announced in late February that they would delay about $260 million in Medicaid payments , another Democratic-led state, over fraud allegations there, and the state is now suing.

Oz has also launched social media campaigns alleging high-dollar public benefit fraud in Democratic-led Maine and New York. On March 17, he added a Republican-led state to his target list: Florida.

Georgetown University professor Andy Schneider, who served as a senior adviser primarily on Medicaid integrity issues during the Obama administration, said fraud has always been an issue across states, dating back decades. About $3.4 billion in Medicare and Medicaid fraud across the country was , according to the most recent report available. Insurers have paid the highest settlements in alleged health care fraud schemes.

鈥淏ad actors trying to steal public health care funds have been around for a long time,鈥 Schneider said.

How California Stacks Up

The federal government is responsible for Medicare, which primarily benefits older people, while Medicaid, which primarily serves people with lower incomes, is a joint federal-state program. Melissa Rumley, a spokesperson for the Department of Health and Human Services鈥 Office of Inspector General, said the office could not make state-by-state data on Medicare fraud available because the federal probes often cross jurisdictions.

States file annual reports on actions by Medicaid anti-fraud units that are jointly funded with the federal government and run by state attorneys general. They investigate fraud as well as abuse and neglect of Medicaid patients.

These reports provide a sense of the scale of Medicaid fraud across states. In fiscal 2024, states recovered , compared with $949 billion in total Medicaid spending, according to from the HHS Office of Inspector General. California recouped an outsize share, recovering more than 50% of all the criminal recoveries made by the anti-fraud units nationwide in fiscal 2024 even though the state made up only about 17% of enrollment.

California ranked fourth in the U.S. in 2024 in dollars recovered per Medicaid enrollee across civil and criminal investigations, behind the District of Columbia, Montana, and Delaware. It led all the most populous states, followed in order by Texas, Florida, and New York. (California and federal officials noted that state recovery data varies significantly year to year, often because of the length of investigations.)

Vulnerability of Hospice Care

One aspect of health care fraud that has been at the center of Oz鈥檚 attack on California is hospice fraud, which has plagued Republican and Democratic administrations.

The use of hospice, intended to provide care to patients expected to die within six months, increased by over 8% from fiscal 2020 to 2024, to about 1.84 million Medicare beneficiaries, significantly.

To combat fraud, the Biden administration in 2023 of hospices in California, Arizona, Nevada, and Texas. The Trump administration Ohio and Georgia.

CMS spokesperson Chris Krepich did not say specifically what criteria were used to choose which states to monitor, only that the decision was based on 鈥渁ctivity typically indicative of hospice-related fraud.鈥 As of June, the agency had revoked the Medicare enrollment of 122 hospices in the original four states, but Krepich said a breakdown by state was not available.

While Oz stated there was some $3.5 billion of fraud in the hospice and home health care industry in Los Angeles County alone, his agency clarified that the number is for overall Medicare billing related to hospice and home health services. Krepich said that 鈥渘ot all billing activity referenced in the remarks is presumed to be improper鈥 and added that the agency could not identify the amount of fraudulent activity until an 鈥渆vidence-based鈥 investigation was completed.

That鈥檚 not to say there is no truth to allegations of hospice fraud.

A published in 2022 found 鈥渘umerous indicators鈥 of large-scale fraud in Los Angeles County, and a highlighted nearly 500 hospices within a 3-mile radius, including 89 companies registered to a single building in Van Nuys. that 鈥渉ospice fraud has become an epidemic in California.鈥 He noted that state officials have been aggressively combating it for years, including with .

In January, the state in Monterey County with hospice fraud. That follows hospice scam cases in and .

However, California public health officials are overdue in adopting that were supposed to be . The state鈥檚 Department of Public Health is currently revising the regulations, according to spokesperson Mark Smith.

In the interim, the state has revoked the licenses of more than 280 hospices over the past two years and is evaluating an additional 300 hospices, . California had licensed hospice agencies as of 2022, according to the state audit.

Civil Rights Complaint

Meanwhile, Newsom is pushing back on Oz. The governor filed his discrimination complaint with the at HHS, which oversees CMS. The office said it will first decide whether it has the authority to investigate, then, if so, will gather information through interviews and documents. However, the process seems designed to aid individuals who have lost a job to discrimination, or to correct a specific policy, and it is unclear whether there could be any real-world consequences.

The governor wants the agency to address 鈥渟ystematic bias from their leadership,鈥 said Newsom spokesperson Marissa Saldivar.

Krepich said CMS 鈥渄oes not target communities, ethnic groups, or states鈥 and bases its decisions on 鈥渃onfirmed investigative findings.鈥 The allegations of organized fraud refer to 鈥渄ocumented criminal cases,鈥 Krepich said, providing a link to in which California residents were convicted of using the identities of foreign nationals to steal almost $16 million from Medicare.

It鈥檚 unclear what cases Oz was referring to when he spoke of the Russian and Armenian mafia.

Ciaran McEvoy, a spokesperson for the U.S. attorney鈥檚 office for the Central District of California, which includes Los Angeles County, said it doesn鈥檛 track whether hospice fraud defendants are alleged to be foreign nationals, but he pointed to the office鈥檚 online prosecution announcements. None alleged involvement by foreign influences or organized crime.

The state audit references by the U.S. Justice Department under President Barack Obama that an 鈥淎rmenian-American organized crime enterprise鈥 was behind a nationwide health care scam.

Federal officials at the time described an 鈥渋nternational organized crime enterprise鈥 based in Los Angeles and New York but with roots in Russia and Armenia. The scheme involved billing for unneeded medical treatments, not hospice fraud.

A revealed fraud schemes in which hospice operators recruited patients who were not actually terminally ill, then paid kickbacks to doctors who falsely certified these patients as dying so the hospices could bill Medicare. There was no mention of foreign involvement.

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