Miami Man Pleads Guilty to his Role in $55M Fraud Scheme, Sentenced to 22 Years in Prison

A Miami resident who pleaded guilty to his role in a fraud scheme that filed $55 million in false claims to Medicare has been sentenced to 22 years in prison, according to a Miami Herald news report.

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Ihosvany Marquez admitted that he and several other co-conspirators worked together to file more than $55 million in false claims to Medicare for HIV and cancer treatments at his seven clinics in the Miami-Dade and Orlando area. Mr. Marquez and his conspirators pocketed $22 million in reimbursements from the government as a result of the scheme, which went toward purchasing a five-bedroom home, thoroughbred horses and luxury cars including Mercedes-Benzes and Lamborghinis, according to the report.

The judge who sentenced Mr. Marquez will suspend her decision for one week to give his attorney and prosecutors time to conclude how many millions of dollars he actually bilked from the federal healthcare program, according to the report.

Read the Miami Herald news report about Mr. Ihosvany Marquez’ sentence.

Read other coverage about Medicare fraud:

Orthopedic Device Supplier Charged With Fraudulently Billing Medicare $100K

CHRISTUS Health in Houston to Pay $1M Settlement in Medicare Fraud Lawsuit

CMS to Distribute $9M in Grants to Strengthen Senior Medicare Patrol Program

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