Healthcare Fraud Defense Lawyers

Our healthcare fraud defense lawyers defend clients nationwide against criminal enforcement actions by HHS-OIG, the DOJ, the FBI, and the DEA.  Whether you’ve received a Medicare fraud inquiry from a UPIC auditor or healthcare fraud target letter from the DOJ’s Healthcare Fraud Strike Force, you can turn to Lowther | Walker for immediate intervention. Our industry-leading attorneys have successfully defended healthcare providers and business owners at every stage of healthcare fraud cases. We offer confidential free consultations and 24/7 defense services backed by 30 years of experience in complex white-collar criminal matters.

Lowther | Walker has proven experience in the federal courts defending healthcare fraud charges, including:

 

Our seasoned healthcare attorneys respond urgently to all enquiries. Schedule a call now to discuss your healthcare fraud matter with our team.

No-obligation. Fully confidential. 

Call Us Today: (404) 496-4052

Healthcare Fraud Attorneys with Decades of Experience

When you choose Lowther | Walker’s healthcare fraud defense lawyers, you’ll work exclusively with senior federal defense attorneys with proven experience defending cases nationwide.

Here’s what you can expect when you choose Lowther | Walker:

  • Immediate Intervention: We immediately stand between you and the OIG/DOJ, routing all agent healthcare fraud inquiries through our office to prevent you or your staff from making self-incriminating statements.

  • Shadow Investigation: Our health care fraud attorneys conduct a confidential, parallel forensic audit of your patient billing data to identify the exact scope of exposure and protect favorable evidence before the government can secure it.

  • Pre-Indictment Offense: We aggressively engage prosecutors early to present exculpatory evidence, aiming to downgrade criminal targets to civil administrative issues before charges are ever filed.

  • Intent Negation: We work to refute allegations of fraud by demonstrating that billing discrepancies resulted from ambiguous Medicare regulations, software flaws, or administrative errors rather than criminal intent.

  • Expert Counter-Attack: We deploy our network of independent medical and statistical experts to validate the medical necessity of your care and scientifically disprove the government’s flawed damage calculations.

Our Results Defending Healthcare Providers Nationwide

5-Star Rated Healthcare Fraud Defense Firm

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Why Do I Need an Experienced Healthcare Fraud Defense Lawyer?

Federal agencies and private insurers are aggressively targeting nationwide medical providers, utilizing advanced data analytics to uncover alleged billing discrepancies. The stakes in these cases extend far beyond simple repayment demands. An accusation of healthcare fraud threatens your professional license, your practice’s financial survival, and your personal liberty.

What often begins as a seemingly routine audit or a simple records request from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) or the Department of Justice (DOJ) can rapidly escalate into a full-scale criminal indictment. Government investigators possess immense resources and the ability to freeze assets, disrupt your operations, and pursue severe civil or criminal penalties under statutes like the False Claims Act or the Anti-Kickback Statute.

Attempting to navigate this highly specialized regulatory environment without experienced legal counsel is a critical mistake. The attorneys at Lowther | Walker possess a deep understanding of both complex healthcare regulations and aggressive criminal defense. We protect the rights of physicians, clinics, and healthcare executives, leveling the playing field against federal prosecutors and state investigative agencies.

What to Expect During a Healthcare Fraud Investigation

Anticipating the government’s next move is crucial for a successful defense. While every case is unique, federal and state healthcare fraud inquiries typically follow a predictable trajectory:

Data Mining and Algorithmic Flagging

Fraud investigations rarely begin with a knock on the door. Instead, federal algorithms constantly monitor billing codes, peer comparisons, and prescription volumes. Statistical outliers are quietly flagged for human review before you ever know you are under suspicion.

The Subpoena or Civil Investigative Demand (CID)

The covert phase ends when you receive a formal demand for patient files, financial ledgers, and corporate communications. This is a critical juncture; how you respond to a subpoena or CID dictates the trajectory of the entire case and requires immediate strategic oversight.

Interviews and Covert Surveillance

Agents from the FBI or OIG may approach your current or former employees at their homes or offices, seeking to secure statements before you can organize a legal defense. Securing representation immediately is vital to ensure your staff is not coerced and can assert their rights.

Audits and Expert Scrutiny

The government uses its own medical coders and subject-matter experts to scrutinize your clinical decisions. They will attempt to build a narrative that services were not medically necessary, were improperly supervised, or were intentionally upcoded.

Charging Decisions and Resolution

Following the evidence-gathering phase, prosecutors determine whether to pursue a criminal indictment, file a civil lawsuit, or seek an administrative settlement. A proactive defense strategy intercepts the process at this stage, showing the flaws in the government’s theory before charges are officially filed.

Why Choose Lowther | Walker’s Healthcare Fraud Defense Attorneys?

  • Former Federal Prosecutors

Our leadership team includes former DOJ prosecutors and experienced federal trial lawyers. We understand how the government builds fraud cases and how federal entities such as the Medicare Strike Force investigate and prosecute fraud.

  • Deep Healthcare Law Knowledge

With 30 years of federal defense experience, we possess an encyclopedic understanding of U.S. healthcare law, including the False Claims Act, the Anti-Kickback Statute, and the Stark Law. We speak the language of healthcare law compliance to challenge government assumptions.

  • Nationwide Representation in High-Stakes Fraud Cases

Federal healthcare regulations cross state lines, and so do we. We provide elite, coordinated defense for medical professionals and clinics nationwide facing multi-jurisdictional task force probes in all 50 states.

  • Federal Trial Readiness

While many firms push for quick settlements, our attorneys are formidable federal litigators. We prepare every case with the meticulous detail required to litigate against the DOJ, HHS-OIG, and state Medicaid Fraud Control Units in federal court.

What is Healthcare Fraud?

Under 18 U.S.C. § 1347, healthcare fraud is charged as knowingly and willfully executing, or attempting to execute, a scheme or artifice to:

  1. Defraud any healthcare benefit program; or
  2. Obtain, by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises, any money or property owned by, or under the custody or control of, any healthcare benefit program.

Americans spend $4.9 trillion on healthcare services annually. Healthcare spending is increasing 7.5% annually. The Government Accountability Office estimates that healthcare fraud, waste, and abuse account for 10 percent of all U.S. healthcare expenditures.

Healthcare fraud investigations involve allegations of fraud against government healthcare programs such as Medicare, Medicaid, or TRICARE, as well as private insurance companies. Medical professionals in a wide range of roles and industries can face healthcare fraud charges. Lowther | Walker has defended executives, healthcare providers, marketers, lab owners, rehabilitation facility owners, nursing facilities,  surgical centers, and pharmaceutical companies.

What Are the Penalties for Healthcare Fraud?

Since 2007, when the DOJ established the Healthcare Fraud Unit within the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section, more than 5,400 individuals have faced fraud charges, relating to over $27 billion in fraudulent healthcare claims

Penalties for healthcare fraud include millions of dollars in fines and lengthy prison sentences.

Incarceration 

  • Conviction for Healthcare Fraud: Up to 10 years in federal prison.
  • If Injury Occurs: If the fraud results in serious bodily injury to a patient, the potential sentence can increase to 20 years.
  • If Death Occurs: If the fraud results in the death of a patient, the penalty can be life imprisonment.

Financial Penalties

  • Restitution: You are required to return the full amount defrauded from the insurance company or government program (Medicare/Medicaid).
  • Criminal Fines: Courts can impose fines of up to $250,000 for individuals (or $500,000 for corporations) per offense.
  • Civil Damages (Treble Damages): Under the False Claims Act, the government can demand three times (3x) the actual damages sustained.
  • Per-Claim Penalties: You can be charged $13,000 to $27,000 (adjusted for inflation) for each false invoice or claim submitted, regardless of the invoice amount.

Administrative & Professional Penalties

  • OIG Exclusion: The Office of Inspector General can ban you from billing Medicare, Medicaid, or any federal healthcare program. You cannot be employed by any entity that accepts federal funding.
    • Mandatory Exclusion: Minimum of 5 years.
  • Loss of Medical License: State medical boards often revoke or suspend the professional licenses of providers convicted of fraud.
  • Loss of DEA Registration: Providers may lose their authority to prescribe controlled substances.

A medical provider convicted of fraud may also face probation, which limits their ability to practice, instead of jail time. Probation terms for a healthcare fraud conviction in federal court could last from 12 months to three years.

Proactive Fraud Defense for Healthcare Professionals

Medical providers and practice owners facing healthcare fraud charges must respond to government agencies, such as the FBI, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and the Department of Health and Human Services. These federal agencies have countless resources to pursue criminal prosecutions.

The Lowther | Walker attorneys protect provider reputations and defend their healthcare practices against prosecutors. Our firm’s experience in healthcare fraud matters includes intervening during audits, handling criminal inquiries from Medicaid and Medicare fraud investigators, responding to target letters for healthcare providers, and representing you in a grand jury hearing. .

Healthcare Audits

Healthcare fraud allegations often follow mishandled Medicare and Medicaid audits.  Federal investigators follow up on auditor findings of improper coding, inaccurate billing, and inadequate documentation.

Lowther | Walker’s healthcare audit defense lawyers represent your practice under audit. From the moment you receive notice of a healthcare audit, to the auditors’ visit, to your appeal of their audit findings, we will communicate with auditors and manage documentation requests to mitigate a potential criminal referral for healthcare fraud.

When Healthcare Audits Escalate to Potential Fraud Allegations, We’re Ready to Defend You

If an audit reveals patterns that trigger a referral to the Office of Inspector General (OIG), Lowther | Walker shifts from administrative defense to federal criminal health care fraud defense. Our team, which includes former federal prosecutors, prepares a pre-indictment defense strategy. We negotiate directly with federal government agents and prosecutors to explain discrepancies as administrative errors rather than intentional fraud, to prevent criminal charges or license revocation.

Our healthcare defense lawyers have years of experience representing providers in the following healthcare audits:

Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs) process Medicare claims and conduct routine audits to prevent improper payments. They review billing, coding, and medical necessity to ensure compliance with strict Medicare rules. While primarily educational in intent, MAC audits can lead to demands for refunding overpayments or prepayment reviews.

Unified Program Integrity Contractors (UPICs), which replaced ZPICs, specifically investigate suspected fraud, waste, and abuse across Medicare and Medicaid. These audits investigate intentional misconduct. Outcomes can be severe, including payment suspensions, exclusion from federal healthcare programs, and referrals to law enforcement for civil or criminal prosecution.

Administered by state agencies or their contracted entities, Medicaid audits ensure providers comply with state-specific regulations when billing for low-income patients. Medicaid Integrity Coordinators scrutinize claims for medical necessity, documentation, and accurate coding. Non-compliance with federal and state laws can lead to overpayment recoupment, civil monetary penalties, or corrective action plans for the healthcare provider.

Recovery Audit Contractors (RACs) conduct post-payment reviews to identify and correct improper payments under Medicare and Medicaid, including both underpayments and overpayments. Unlike other auditors, RACs operate on a contingency fee basis, earning a percentage of the funds they recover. They primarily use automated data mining and complex medical reviews.

The Steps to Take If You’re Facing a Healthcare Fraud Investigation

Step 1: Stop Answering Investigator Questions Without a Lawyer

Do not answer questions without a lawyer, even off the record. Anything you say can be used against you in court.

Step 2: Protect Your Records

Never delete emails, shred documents, or alter files. Destroying evidence is a separate federal crime (obstruction of justice) carrying up to 20 years in prison.

Step 3: Document Everything

Write down: agent names and badge numbers, exact questions asked, documents seized, witnesses present, and date/time of contact.

Step 4: Schedule your free healthcare fraud consultation with Lowther | Walker’s federal defense attorneys.

We’ll take over all communication with investigators and protect your rights. Lowther | Walker’s healthcare fraud attorneys are available 24/7 for a free and confidential consultation.

What Are The Common Healthcare Fraud Charges?

Lowther | Walker’s federal criminal defense team has broad experience in healthcare fraud cases and can defend you throughout the entire legal process, from investigation to trial.

Our healthcare fraud defense team travels the country defending medical professionals on the following charges:

Medical Billing Fraud

Medical billing fraud refers to charging patients for unnecessary tests, procedures, or treatments, or billing for services not provided. CMS hires UPIC contractors to analyze billing data and find outliers, then refers cases to the OIG. The OIG investigates potential fraud, raids practices, and can exclude doctors from federal programs. Whistleblower complaints (Qui Tam Lawsuits) are a leading source of medical billing fraud charges.

Providers facing billing audits or overpayment investigations should seek immediate counsel to prevent criminal actions against their practice.

Medicare Fraud

Medicare fraud can include unbundling, phantom billing, double-billing, and upcoding. Investigations are typically handled by the Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Office of Inspector General (OIG).

Convictions for Medicare fraud may result in prison time, exclusion from federal programs, and substantial fines under the False Claims Act. Legal representation is essential early in the process to challenge the data analytics or audit findings that underlie the fraud allegations.

Medicaid Fraud

Medicaid fraud charges may include kickbacks, unbundling, and personal use of Medicaid funds. Medicaid fraud cases can involve both state and federal agencies, including Medicaid Fraud Control Units (MFCUs).

State and federal Medicaid investigations may result in civil or criminal penalties depending on the nature of the alleged scheme. Experienced counsel can help providers navigate audits, subpoenas, and interviews to reduce the risk of criminal referral.

Stark Law Violations

Stark law violations occur when a physician refers Medicare or Medicaid patients to a healthcare business with which they have a financial relationship.

Even inadvertent Stark Law violations can trigger False Claims Act liability and expose providers to treble damages. These cases often hinge on technical details within financial agreements or physician compensation structures.

An experienced Stark Law attorney will review compliance protocols and negotiate with regulators before they file criminal charges.

Phantom Billing for Medicare and Medicaid Services

Phantom billing is one of the most common forms of healthcare fraud. This includes billing for “ghost patients” and billing for services completed at another facility.

Prosecutions rely on billing discrepancies, patient interviews, and documentation. Investigators may allege a provider billed for non-existent patients or services performed elsewhere.

Upcoding

Upcoding refers to submitting claims to a federal healthcare program for more expensive services than the patient received.

Federal prosecutors may view upcoding as intentional inflation of reimbursements. However, coding disputes can stem from subjective medical judgment or ambiguous documentation. Your healthcare fraud defense lawyers can challenge these allegations by consulting expert coders and demonstrating compliance with the CPT coding guidelines established by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).

Unlicensed Services

Providing or billing for medical services without an active medical license is a serious violation of federal law. Charges may involve allegations of impersonation, fraudulent credentialing, or supervision failures. Healthcare provider defense attorneys typically focus on demonstrating a lack of criminal intent, administrative confusion, or reliance on staff representations to mitigate penalties.

Submitting False Claims

You may face duplicate medical billing charges if you submit multiple claims for a patient undergoing the same healthcare service on the same date of service.

Duplicate claim allegations often arise from administrative or billing software errors, especially in large medical practices. Federal fraud investigators may treat repeated submissions as evidence of intentional fraud. Our attorneys audit claim histories, identify system malfunctions, and seek civil settlements before criminal prosecution begins.

Misrepresenting Diagnosis or Procedure

Providers who overstate the nature of a patient’s diagnosis to secure a higher payment from a government healthcare program face substantial fraud charges.

Accusations of misrepresenting diagnoses or procedures often involve upcoding, falsified records, or improper documentation. Federal authorities take these cases seriously because they can demonstrate a pattern of intent to deceive payors. Legal defense strategies typically focus on expert review of medical necessity, documentation accuracy, and the physician’s clinical rationale for the coding decisions.

Unbundling 

Unbundling is the process of separating charges for procedures covered by a government healthcare program to increase payment.

This practice effectively fragments one billable service into multiple codes to maximize reimbursement. CMS guidelines prohibit unbundling. However, unbundling is often the result of automated billing software errors or an employee misunderstanding CPT code bundles rather than a malicious scheme. Our experienced unbundling attorneys will coordinate with certified coding experts to prove your actions stem from administrative mistakes, not fraud, and protect you from heavy fines and criminal liability.

Receiving Kickbacks

The Anti-Kickback Statute prohibits knowingly and willfully offering, paying, soliciting, or receiving remuneration to induce or reward patient referrals or generate business payable by federal healthcare programs such as Medicare and Medicaid. Violations are felonies, punishable by up to 10 years in prison, fines over $100,000, and exclusion from federal programs.

Even indirect payments or consulting fees can trigger liability if they are linked to referrals. Defense of Anti-Kickback Statute violations often hinges on proving legitimate business arrangements, showing fair market compensation, and the absence of intent to induce referrals.

Drug Diversion

Under federal law, drug diversion is defined as the illegal distribution or transfer of any controlled substance from its legally authorized channel of distribution or use into an illegal or unauthorized channel. This concept is central to the Controlled Substances Act (CSA), which establishes a “closed system” of distribution requiring that every step—from manufacturing and wholesaling to prescribing and dispensing—be strictly monitored by DEA-registered entities.

Drug diversion allegations often stem from prescription monitoring discrepancies or data from Medicare Part D audits. Prosecutors may claim a provider billed for medications never dispensed or used prescriptions to profit unlawfully. Our Medicare fraud defense attorneys help challenge prescription data, prove inventory accuracy, and assert legitimate medical purpose defenses.

Call Lowther | Walker’s Federal Defense Attorneys for an Urgent Response to Federal Medical Fraud Charges

Lowther | Walker’s federal criminal defense team brings extensive, nationwide experience to defending medical professionals against complex government allegations. Whether you are dealing with a Medicaid billing audit, an OIG investigation, or formal charges for Medicare fraud, our team is equipped to protect you. We understand that many fraud allegations stem from administrative confusion or errors in complex billing software rather than malicious intent.

By intervening early in the legal process, we can challenge data analytics, consult with certified coding experts, negotiate with federal regulators, and build a robust defense strategy to shield you from fines, exclusion from federal healthcare programs, and criminal liability.

Speak to a Healthcare Fraud Attorney Today

Lowther | Walker defends healthcare providers in all 50 states. Our health care fraud defense lawyers are available 24/7 to respond to your urgent legal questions. Call (877) 208-7146 or schedule a free consultation online.

No-obligation. Fully confidential. 

Call Us Today: (404) 496-4052

Frequently Asked Questions About Healthcare Fraud Defense

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What is the difference between a billing error and healthcare fraud?

The primary difference is intent. A billing error is a mistake, such as a typo or a misunderstanding of a complex coding rule. Fraud implies that you knowingly and willfully executed a scheme to defraud a healthcare benefit program, such as Medicare or Medicaid. However, the government may view a pattern of “reckless disregard” for the rules as fraud, even without direct proof of malicious intent.

What are the most common triggers for a healthcare fraud investigation?

Healthcare fraud investigations are often triggered by:

  • Whistleblowers (Qui Tam actions): Often disgruntled employees or competitors filing a suit under the False Claims Act.

  • Data Mining: CMS (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services) uses algorithms to identify providers who are statistical outliers in billing (e.g., billing the highest-level evaluation codes significantly more than peers).

  • RAC Audits: Recovery Audit Contractors can identify patterns of overpayments that get flagged for OIG (Office of Inspector General) investigation. 

Do You Represent Individual Practitioners or Only Large Healthcare Organizations?

We represent the full spectrum of healthcare providers, including individual practitioners, group practices, hospitals, home health agencies, DME suppliers, pharmacies, laboratories, and other healthcare businesses of all sizes.

How does a Compliance Program help my defense?

If you are investigated, having a robust, pre-existing compliance program is one of your best defenses. It demonstrates that you were trying to follow the law and that any errors were inadvertent. If the government sees you have a compliance officer, regular training, and internal auditing, they are more likely to view discrepancies as mistakes rather than intentional fraud.

I didn't personally submit the claims; my billing company did. Can I still be liable?

Yes. Under federal law, you are responsible for claims submitted under your NPI (National Provider Identifier). You cannot delegate liability. If you signed the charts or the orders that generated the claims, the government argues you “caused” the false claim to be presented. “Blaming the biller” is rarely a successful defense unless you can prove active deception by the billing company against you.

I received a "Target Letter" from the DOJ. What does this mean?

In a healthcare fraud context, target letters indicate federal prosecutors have substantial evidence implicating you in crimes such as Medicare billing fraud schemes, illegal kickbacks, or Medicaid fraud. The OIG target letter signals you are a primary suspect, not merely a witness, and that a grand jury indictment is likely imminent

What is the difference between a RAC audit and a UPIC audit?

  • RAC (Recovery Audit Contractor) audits generally look for overpayments to recover money on a contingency basis.

  • UPIC (Unified Program Integrity Contractor) audits specifically look for fraud. If a UPIC requests your records, they are likely already suspicious. They are the primary bridge between a routine audit and a referral to the FBI or OIG for criminal prosecution.

Can the government freeze my bank accounts before I am convicted of healthcare fraud?

Yes. Through a “pre-indictment restraining order” or civil forfeiture seizure warrants, the government can freeze assets it believes are “traceable” to the healthcare fraud. This is a strategic move to cut off your ability to hire high-quality private counsel.

What Allegations Do Your Healthcare Fraud Defense Lawyers Defend Against?

We defend against all healthcare fraud allegations, including Medicare fraud and Medicaid fraud. We represent doctors and other healthcare providers, as well as healthcare business owners on the following charges:

  • Submitting false or inflated claims
  • Performing unnecessary services
  • Misrepresenting patient diagnoses
  • Engaging in kickbacks or referral schemes
  • Falsifying documentation
  • Unbundling
  • Upcoding
  • Phantom Billing
  • Waiving Co-pays
  • Drug Diversion
  • DME Fraud
  • Hospice Fraud
  • Double Billing
  • Medical Identity Theft
  • Time Padding

Does the routine waiving of patient copays or deductibles constitute a violation of the Anti-Kickback Statute?

Routinely waiving copays or deductibles can be viewed by federal prosecutors as an illegal inducement to entice patients to use your services, violating the Anti-Kickback Statute and the False Claims Act. Exceptions exist only if the waiver is not advertised, is not routine, and is based on a documented, good-faith assessment of the patient’s financial hardship, or if reasonable collection efforts have failed.

Our Healthcare Fraud Defense Services

Our federal attorneys represent medical providers and healthcare business owners nationwide in Medicare fraud cases. Our experience covers all stages of Medicare fraud defense, from initial audits to appealing Medicare fraud convictions.

Lowther | Walker holds decades of experience managing Medicare audits, Medicaid audits, and follow-ups for healthcare providers nationwide.

Prompt, proactive responses to a healthcare fraud investigation can help mitigate potential charges. Lowther | Walker intervenes during FBI, OIG, and DEA investigations.

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