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  • Updated
    1
    May
    2013
    4:19pm, EDT

    NYC heart doctor admits putting patients at risk to steal millions from Medicare

    View more videos at: http://nbcnewyork.com.

    By Jonathan Dienst, Joe Valiquette and Shimon Prokupecz, NBCNewYork.com
    Follow @jonathan4ny

     

    A New York City cardiologist with offices on Fifth Avenue and in New Jersey admits he intentionally misdiagnosed up to 80 percent of his patients with heart problems so he could collect millions in extra Medicare money. 


    Follow @openchannelblog

     Dr. Jose Katz, 68, pleaded guilty to falsifying charts diagnosing patients with angina and other heart ailments so he could prescribe extra tests and treatments when hundreds of patients did not need them.

    See original story at NBCNewYork.com

    Prosecutors said it was the largest fraud ever executed by a single doctor in New York or New Jersey. 

    "After years of prominence in his field, Jose Katz will now be remembered for his record-setting fraud," said U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman.

    In court Wednesday he agreed his actions could have caused "serious bodily harm" to his patients. He and his lawyer disagreed when prosecutors said some patients were at risk of death due to his actions.

    In all, Katz admitted his scheme took in over $19 million. 

    Katz's crimes went on from at least 2004 through 2012. His resume said he is affiliated with NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, but a spokeswoman said he has not been linked there since 2003.

    Fishman said many patients who were exploited went to Katz's clinics, called Cardio-Med Services in Union City, Paterson and West New York.  He also ran clinics called Comprehensive Healthcare in Manhattan and Queens. 

    Katz said he performed many so-called EECP procedures based on false diagnoses to overbill Medicare and private insurers like Blue Cross and Aetna.   

    In court, Katz told the judge as a doctor he had "done everything he could to help patients."  The judge told him he would have time to speak at sentencing set for July 23. After the court hearing, Katz and his attorney, Blair Zwillman, left the courthouse admitting mistakes were made but insisting Katz always cared for his patients.    

    See court document on the case in PDF

    Katz faces up to 10 years in prison on the conspiracy to commit health care fraud charges. He also admitted creating a no-show job in his office in order to rip off more than $250,000 in Social Security benefits. 

    Katz was born in Cuba but is a U.S. citizen. Prosecutors said he spent $6 million advertising on Spanish-language television and radio to try to lure in patients. 

    Fishman said investigators are attempting to contact all the patients affected by the fraud, who can also reach out to the New Jersey FBI or U.S. attorney's offices for additional information. 

    Related story at NBCNewYork.com: 4 charged in alleged medical billing scam

    Investigate this!

    Read and vote on readers' story tips and suggested topics for investigation or submit your own. Click here to read more about this tool.

    This story was originally published on Wed Apr 10, 2013 3:47 PM EDT

    143 comments

    The bottom of the barrel. Make him give it ALL back to Medicare

    Show more
    Explore related topics: medicare, health-care, crime, new-york-city, featured, updated, medicare-fraud, nbcnewyork
  • 6
    Dec
    2012
    11:54am, EST

    Gang tactic -- shared 'community guns' -- challenges police, prosecutors

    /

    New York City District Attorney Cyrus Vance, at podium, speaks at a press conference on Oct. 12 after 16 members of two East Harlem gun trafficking networks were charged with selling more than 100 illegal firearms, including assault weapons and machine guns.

    By Shimon Prokupecz and Jonathan Dienst
    NBCNewYork.com

    Criminal gangs in parts of New York City are getting increasingly savvy at carrying out violent crimes and eluding police detection, thanks to a practice of hiding and sharing so-called "community guns," police and prosecutors say.

    “They don’t want to keep the weapons on them but want to have access to them,” said Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vance. “It poses challenges in terms of prosecution, to the police on the street. It all puts the weapon in the hands of a larger number of people."


    Community guns are often used by gang members to enforce drug territory. But several recent shootings have resulted in the deaths of innocent civilians, including children.  Four-year-old Lloyd Morgan was hit by a stray bullet last summer while on a Harlem basketball court with his mom; Zurana Horton, a pregnant mother, was killed by a bullet fired from a community gun last summer. 

    Follow @openchannelblog

    Law enforcement surveillance video obtained by the News 4 I-Team shows suspected gang members sharing weapons and hiding them in public places like building mailboxes, garbage cans or under the wheel of a car. 

    ”They have unique ways of hiding these guns," said Inspector Kevin Catalina. "Every gang member has access.  It can be in a garbage can, under a tree. They go get it, bring it to a location and then carry out the shootings.”

    Catalina said gang intelligence units have made more than two dozen arrests and seized more than a dozen guns this past year.  As a result, crime is down – but the community gun problem continues.

    “We have a couple of gangs that pose a particular problem for us over here,” said Catalina. He pointed to one crew that uses a .45-caliber weapon to shoot rivals. In one recent shooting, a 10-year-old child was caught in the crossfire in Claremont Park near Webster Avenue, though the child was able to escape unharmed.

    Police said gang members know they are under increased surveillance so they take the added measures to try to hide their weapons. Some use children as young as 12 years old to carry weapons for them because they believe police are less likely to stop and question a teen or child. 

    “This is the way they operate. It is very rare that one individual will have access to a gun full time,” Catalina said.

    Ballistic tests can often match a community gun to a shooting, but finding the shooter can be more difficult, according to Sgt. Richard Zacarese. 

    Also on NBCNewYork.com: Subway push victim mourned after suspect charged

    “Often you’ll recover the gun, and if that gun was used in numerous shootings, the person you caught with it isn’t necessarily the person who used the gun, since it was passed to hand to hand to hand,” said Zacarese.   

    Vance highlighted the recent case of Afrika Owes, a 17-year-old prep student who admitted she stored and carried weapons for a violent Harlem drug gang. In prison recordings of phone conversations she had with a gang leader on Rikers Island, she boasted of carrying three guns for the gangs, including a 9 mm. 

    Police and prosecutors are now using conspiracy laws to bring cases against suspected gang members who are caught with or are known to have used community guns.

    “We are always confronted with a changing crime dynamic,” Vance said. “I think the community gun circumstance is an adaptation to effective prosecution and police action. It’s designed to try to insulate themselves from being caught with weapons on their person."

    More from Open Channel:


     

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    Follow Open Channel from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    29 comments

    Police are so darn clueless! Gang members share guns.....why is it called a Community Gun? A gun is a gun and these Young idiots share hundreds of them due to the fact that 90% of them are stolen or bought illegally. *Note....Gang Members aren't the only ones out here shooting "innocent" people!

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    Explore related topics: investigation, police, guns, crime, weapon, featured, gangs, nbcnewyork

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