Recovery Connection Centers of America in Massachusetts and Rhode Island closed after federal government charges of overbilling insurers

Recovery Connection Centers of America has been charged with fraud resulting in millions of dollars paid for addiction treatment services. According to U.S. Attorney Zach Cunha of Rhode Island, not provided to patients. The company is headquartered in Providence, and half its patients are from Rhode Island and half from Massachusetts.

Ā The Massachusetts operator of a chain of addiction treatment clinics is charged in federal court in Providence, RI, with millions of dollars of health care fraud, aggravated identity theft, money laundering and obstruction, announced United States Attorney Zachary A. Cunha.Ā  In addition, the treatment center and its former supervisory counselor were also charged with healthcare fraud.Ā 

Michael Brier, 60, of Newton, MA, Mi Ok Bruining, 62, of Warwick, RI, and Recovery Connections Centers of America, Inc. (RCCA) are charged by criminal complaint with health care fraud.  Michael Brier was also charged in the complaint with aggravated identity theft, money laundering and obstruction. 

It is alleged inĀ court documentsĀ that, Brier, Bruining, and RCCA shortchanged Rhode Island and Massachusetts substance abuse disorder patients out of much-needed counseling and treatment services, while defrauding Medicare, Medicaid, and other health insurers out of millions of dollars.

At a press conference announcing the culmination of this investigation and resulting criminal charges and arrests, United States Attorney Zachary A. Cunha commented, ā€œWhat makes the fraud scheme that we have charged today particularly pernicious ā€“ is that not only was this scheme, as we allege, designed to defraud by enriching these defendants with federal and private healthcare dollars they did not earn, but that in the process it cheated a vulnerable population of recovery patients out of the full, genuine support and treatment that they need to have a chance at recovery.ā€

“Todayā€™s arrests serve as a strong reminder that we will not tolerate fraud schemes that target our federal health care programs, as alleged, nor will we accept anything less than high-quality care for the people served by those programs,ā€ said Special Agent in Charge Phillip M. Coyne of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General. ā€œOur agencyā€™s mission is to protect the well-being of the public and the integrity of the federal health care system, and we will hold accountable those who seek to exploit the opioid epidemic for personal gain.ā€

ā€œToday, we arrested and charged Michael Brier, Mi Ok Bruining, and Recovery Connections Centers of America, for a wide-ranging scheme in which they are accused of abusing our health care system, cheating taxpayers, and leveraging the opioid crisis to take advantage of those struggling with substance abuse so the company could rake in millions,ā€ said Joseph R. Bonavolonta, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI Boston Division. ā€œThe allegations set forth in this case represent one of the most brazen and egregious examples of health care fraud the FBI has seen here in Rhode Island in recent history, and make no mistake, it is not a victimless crime. Anytime the integrity of our federal health care programs is undermined, we all pay the price through the cost of higher insurance premiums, greater out-of-pocket expenses, and co-pays, and even reduced or lost benefits.ā€

According to the charging documents, Brier, Bruining and RCCA operated a chain of addiction treatment centers but failed to provide the patients with the required counseling sessions and treatment, while simultaneous billing Medicare, Medicaid and other health care payors for 45-minute counseling sessions on a routine basis even though the sessions were not more than 15 minutes, and often only 5-10 minutes or less.  At times, so many counseling sessions were billed at this level that the total amount of time would be impossible for the available therapist to have provided in any 24 hours period. 

Brier and RCCA are also alleged to have caused a fraudulent application to be submitted to Medicare which, among other things, misrepresented and concealed the role that Brier was playing in the business and failed to disclose Brierā€™s 2013 criminal conviction for federal tax crimes, which was relevant to Medicareā€™s consideration of the application. 

The Complaint also alleges that Brier purported to practice medicine and wrote and caused to be filled fraudulent prescriptions using the names and prescriber information, including Drug Enforcement Administration numbers, of doctors without their permission.

Brier is also alleged to have falsified a document in a matter within the jurisdiction of an agency of the United States by causing the Medical Director to sign a false and back-dated document.

The complaint alleges that defendants caused millions of dollars in fraudulent billings to be submitted to Medicare and millions more to other healthcare payors.

The government is also seeking to forfeit thirteen bank accounts, two buildings, and two vehicles allegedly realized by the defendants as a result of the alleged criminal conduct.

A defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

The case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Sara Miron Bloom and Kevin Love Hubbard.

According to Cunha’s office, the company CEO Michael Brier was arrested in his home in Newton and is accused of using a physician’s identification without the doctor’s knowledge to prescribe addiction medicines.

Also charged was Mi Ok Bruining of Warwick, who allegedly trained other counselors to fraudulently bill for services.

Jeffrey Newman is a whistleblower lawyer who can be reached at 617-823-3217 or at JeffNewman@Jeffnewmanlaw.com