Georgia ENT clinics owner sentenced to 3 years in prison for fraud 

Jeffrey Gallups, MD, owner of a chain of Alpharetta, Ga.-based medical clinics, has been sentenced to three years in prison for a scheme in which the former Georgia insurance commissioner also has been indicted, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported June 28. 

Advertisement

Dr. Gallups profited from ordering physicians who worked at his ENT clinics to require unnecessary lab tests through a secret arrangement with a Texas lab company. He split the profit generated by the tests with the lab company, according to the Journal-Constitution. 

The scheme defrauded payers and billed patients for thousands of dollars. Dr. Gallups pleaded guilty to submitting the fraudulent claims and was ordered to pay more than $700,000 in restitution. 

In a separate case, Dr. Gallups also agreed to pay about  $3 million to settle a federal lawsuit alleging the scheme billed federal healthcare programs. 

John Oxendine, Georgia’s former insurance commissioner, was indicted in May on charges  he was the middleman in the scheme, according to the Journal-Constitution. The lab company paid kickbacks to Dr. Gallups through the former insurance commissioner, according to prosecutors. 

 

Advertisement

Next Up in ASC News

  • The federal physician self-referral law — better known as the Stark law — was enacted in 1989 and aims to…

  • Hospital consolidation continued in the past month, with health systems across the U.S. signing and closing merger, acquisition and transfer…

Advertisement

Comments are closed.