America’s $100 Billion
Healthcare Fraud Crisis
From fake PPO plans to telehealth billing scams — the schemes targeting your health coverage are more sophisticated than ever. Here’s everything you need to know right now.
The FTC Just Shut Down a Nationwide Fake Insurance Scheme
Source: Federal Trade Commission (Public Domain)
Millions Paid for Coverage That Never Existed
In April 2026, a U.S. district court in Florida — acting at the FTC’s request — temporarily halted a nationwide operation that allegedly impersonated both the federal government and major insurance carriers to sell consumers fake “comprehensive PPO plans.”
The scheme, operating under names including Innovative Partners and American Collective, allegedly targeted both uninsured consumers and existing policyholders. Telemarketers would call insured individuals, falsely claiming their current coverage would lapse without an immediate renewal payment.
What was actually being sold? An assortment of medical discount cards, ancillary products, and capped payouts for specific events — with some plans excluding hospital care entirely. Not a single product was suitable for listing on any state or federal marketplace, despite being marketed as “state-issued” PPO plans with no deductibles.
The operation allegedly dates to early 2023. The FTC’s complaint, filed against Ahmed Ibrahim Shokry, Amani Ibrahim Shokry, and their affiliated entities, followed the March 2026 launch of an FTC Healthcare Task Force under Chairman Andrew N. Ferguson.
Affected consumers who paid thousands annually in “premiums” discovered their plans were worthless only when they tried to use them — sometimes while facing serious medical bills.
Read official FTC press release →Recent Arrests, Pleas & Sentences
Federal prosecutors across the country have been busy. Here are the most significant healthcare fraud actions from the past six weeks.
Former Pharmacy President Sentenced for Fraudulent Medication Scheme
A former pharmacy president was sentenced to 24 months in federal prison after defrauding health insurance programs by billing for medications that were never dispensed to patients, using forged prescriptions to mask the scheme.
New York Doctor Pleads Guilty to Multimillion-Dollar COVID Fraud
A New York physician entered a guilty plea to participating in a multimillion-dollar insurance fraud scheme related to COVID-19, exploiting the pandemic’s billing complexity to submit fraudulent claims to multiple insurers.
Florida Nursing Assistant Sentenced to 9 Years for $11.4M Medicare Fraud
A Florida nursing assistant was sentenced to nine years in federal prison for orchestrating an $11.4 million scheme that fraudulently billed Medicare on behalf of elderly and disabled beneficiaries who received little to no actual care.
DOJ Targets Telehealth Company for “Runaway Campaign” of Illegal Billing
The Department of Justice has opened a major enforcement action against a telehealth company accused of systematically billing federal programs for services never provided, exploiting the dramatic expansion of telehealth infrastructure post-pandemic.
Missouri Doctor Arrested for Fraudulent Billing and Illegal Drug Prescribing
A Missouri physician was arrested on charges of fraudulent billing and illegally prescribing controlled substances, adding to a wave of DOJ actions targeting medical professionals who have weaponized their prescribing authority for financial gain.
Major Opioid Manufacturer Sentenced for Fraud and Kickback Conspiracies
In late April 2026, a prominent opioid manufacturer was sentenced following convictions for fraud and illegal kickback conspiracies — a rare corporate-level prosecution targeting the systemic ties between pharmaceutical sales practices and healthcare billing fraud.
Two Wound Clinic Owners Sentenced to Combined 29.5 Years for $1.2B Scheme
In one of the largest recent healthcare fraud convictions, two wound graft company owners in Arizona pleaded guilty and received 15.5 and 14-year sentences respectively. The government seized $126 million in assets including cash, luxury vehicles, and gold bars.
California Wound Clinic Charged with $46.6M in Fraudulent Medicare Claims
Expert Wound Care PC in Pasadena saw approximately $2 million seized by federal authorities after allegedly submitting over $46.6 million in Medicare claims between September 2025 and April 2026 — billing for skin graft procedures that never occurred.
Top Healthcare Options Halted for Tens of Millions in Consumer Harm
In a January 2026 action preceding the April FTC case, a Florida court halted Top Healthcare Options and 11 related defendants for deceiving consumers into buying fake comprehensive health plans via deceptive internet advertising and aggressive telemarketing.
The DOJ Launches a West Coast Strike Force
A New Era of Coordinated Federal Prosecution
On April 30, 2026, the Justice Department’s National Fraud Enforcement Division announced the formation of the West Coast Health Care Fraud Strike Force — a multi-district enforcement initiative uniting the DOJ’s Health Care Fraud Section with U.S. Attorney’s Offices in Arizona, Nevada, and Northern California.
The initiative was driven by data showing a significant and accelerating increase in healthcare fraud across all three districts — including technology-driven Medicare schemes rooted in Silicon Valley, large-scale Medicaid wound care fraud in Arizona, and emerging hybrid scams migrating into Nevada.
At least 10 dedicated prosecutors from the Fraud Division will embed alongside local offices as a force multiplier. The Strike Force joins a national network responsible for charging over 6,200 defendants who collectively billed more than $45 billion from federal healthcare programs since 2007.
“Silicon Valley has become ground zero for technology-driven health care fraud schemes that seek to cheat taxpayer-funded programs like Medicare. The Health Care Strike Force announced today is a powerful partnership that brings together the resources and expertise needed to detect and dismantle even the most sophisticated fraud schemes.”
— Craig H. Missakian, U.S. Attorney, Northern District of California- Districts covered: Arizona · Nevada · Northern California
- Partner agencies: HHS-OIG, FBI, DEA, CMS
- Staff commitment: Minimum 10 dedicated DOJ prosecutors
- Key focus areas: Wound care fraud, tech-driven Medicare scams, substance abuse clinic exploitation, pharmacy billing schemes
- Arizona Medicaid threat: A single indictment targets alleged $650 million fraud across 41 substance abuse clinics
- Corporate enforcement: New DOJ-wide policy creates incentives for voluntary self-disclosure
- Public tip line: Wrongdoing reports actively encouraged to DOJ and HHS-OIG
Official DOJ announcement →
How the FBI Investigates Healthcare Fraud
White-Collar Crime Division’s Biggest Target
The FBI’s White Collar Crime unit treats healthcare fraud as a top-tier investigative priority — because unlike many financial crimes, healthcare fraud directly endangers lives by diverting resources from legitimate patient care, corrupting provider decision-making, and flooding emergency systems with fraudulent claims.
FBI investigations focus on four core fraud vectors: billing fraud (claims for services never rendered), prescription fraud (unnecessary or falsified prescriptions), identity fraud (using stolen patient identities to file false claims), and kickback schemes between providers and pharmaceutical or device companies.
FBI Healthcare Fraud resources →
How Scammers Operate in 2026
Modern healthcare fraud is sophisticated, layered, and often looks completely legitimate. These are the most active tactics federal investigators are tracking right now.
Telehealth Exploitation
Fraudulent companies set up telehealth platforms that bill for consultations, tests, and prescriptions that never actually occur — exploiting the billing latitude created during post-COVID regulatory relaxation.
Fake Clinics & Ghost Providers
Scammers register shell clinics and fake provider numbers, then submit bulk claims to Medicare and Medicaid. Some operations have billed tens of millions before investigators detect the pattern.
Government Impersonation Calls
Telemarketers claim to be from “the government” or well-known insurers, telling insured consumers their existing coverage will lapse unless they pay immediately. High-pressure tactics and urgency are defining features.
Fraudulent Pain Management
Clinics and pharmacies bill for controlled substance prescriptions that were never written or filled, while sometimes also distributing real opioids to traffickers for cash — a dual fraud that compounds the public health damage.
Upcoding & Phantom Billing
Providers submit claims for more expensive procedures than were performed (upcoding), or for services never rendered at all. This is especially common in wound care, DME (durable medical equipment), and lab testing.
Social Media Lead Generation
Nearly 30% of fraud victims in 2025 reported their loss began on social media. Fraudsters buy targeted ads to collect consumer data, then sell leads to telemarketing operations that pitch fake plans.
10 Red Flags Your Health Plan May Be a Scam
The FTC and state insurance commissioners have identified these warning signs consistently across enforcement actions. If you encounter more than two of these, stop, research, and verify before paying anything.
Verified Resources & Recent Coverage
The following links connect you directly to official government enforcement actions, FBI resources, and reliable news coverage of healthcare fraud in 2026.
FTC Sues to Stop Deceptive Health Care Scheme (Innovative Partners / American Collective)
Official press release ↗FTC Shuts Down Alleged Health Insurance Fraud Scheme Involving Sale of Low-Quality Plans
Read article ↗FBI White Collar Crime: Healthcare Fraud — Investigation Methods and Reporting
FBI resource page ↗DOJ Fraud Division Launches West Coast Health Care Fraud Strike Force (AZ, NV, NorCal)
DOJ announcement ↗This Week in Fraud: DOJ Announces Numerous Enforcement Actions and New West Coast Strike Force
Weekly fraud roundup ↗Court Halts Operations of Deceptive Health Care Telemarketers — Top Healthcare Options (Tens of Millions in Harm)
FTC action ↗Spot Health Insurance Scams: Official FTC Consumer Guidance on Verifying Coverage
Consumer guide ↗How to Avoid Health Insurance Scams During Open Enrollment Season
Seasonal guide ↗FTC Health Page: All Active Healthcare Enforcement Cases, Refunds, and Consumer Actions
Browse all FTC health cases ↗DOJ Pharmacy Technician Pleads Guilty to $5.6M Fraud and Illegal Oxycodone Distribution
Case details ↗Report Healthcare Fraud Directly to the FTC — Online Fraud Reporting Portal
File a report ↗HHS Office of Inspector General: Fraud Hotline, Case Results, and Medicare Fraud Alerts
HHS-OIG fraud center ↗Verify Your Health Plan: Check Whether a Plan is ACA-Compliant and Listed on the Marketplace
Verify your plan ↗Don’t Let Fraudsters
Steal Your Coverage
If you believe you’ve been targeted by a fraudulent health insurance scheme — or want to report suspected healthcare fraud — federal agencies have multiple reporting channels available to you. Acting quickly protects both you and others.