Health CareHealth Care Fraud

Steven Rawlins Guilty of $8 Million Health Care Fraud

By February 9, 2016 One Comment

STEVEN RAWLINS, a former Chief Financial Officer to two healthcare services companies based outside Nashville, Tennessee, was found guilty today of engaging in a scheme to defraud that yielded over $8 million in ill-gotten gains.   This is health care fraud at it most basic. Following an 11-day trial a jury found that RAWLINS, as the acting Chief Financial Officer for both privately-held healthcare companies, abused his Health Care Fraudauthority to withdraw company funds for payment of legitimate business expenses and tax obligations by, among other things, using such funds to pay personal expenses incurred by RAWLINS, his family, and his associates.

Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said: “As a unanimous jury has found, Steven Rawlins abused his position of trust to steal from the companies whose finances he was entrusted to manage.  He siphoned off more than $8 million of company money and spent it lavishly on himself, his family, and his friends, paying for a 12,000-square-foot home, Tiffany jewelry, sports cars and Yankees luxury suites.  Now he stands convicted by a jury of federal crimes.”  Health Care Fraud is serious and Rawlin’s crimes are both evidence of Health Care Fraud and Accounting Fraud.

According to the Criminal Information filed on June 16, 2015, other court documents, and the evidence presented at trial:

In or around 2005, RAWLINS was retained as an outside consultant by a private healthcare services company, which is headquartered in Tennessee (“Company-1”), to assist with financing and accounting matters.  RAWLINS’s responsibilities included securing financing for Company-1 and facilitating tax payments.  During that time period, RAWLINS was retained by another private healthcare services company, which at the time had operations in Florida and New York (“Company-2”), to perform a similar role.  As part of his responsibilities, RAWLINS was authorized to bill both Company-1 and Company-2 for legitimate business expenses incurred in connection with his services.  By 2009, RAWLINS had been appointed as acting Chief Financial Officer for both companies.

RAWLINS abused his authority to withdraw company funds and ultimately misappropriated more than $8 million, which he used to pay personal expenses incurred by himself, his family, and his associates.  For instance, as part of his responsibilities as a consultant to Company-1, RAWLINS represented that he would make the necessary tax payments owed by Company-1 to the State of Tennessee.  From 2011 to 2012, RAWLINS withdrew approximately $850,000 from Company-1’s bank accounts, purportedly in order to pay Company-1’s outstanding tax liabilities to Tennessee.  In reality, during that time period, Company-1 owed less than $85,000 in applicable Tennessee state taxes; RAWLINS converted the vast majority of the funds to his own use.  Moreover, from 2011 to 2013, RAWLINS caused approximately $4 million to be withdrawn from a Company-1 bank account in order to pay bills associated with RAWLINS’s American Express credit card accounts.  Those American Express accounts were in turn used to pay for numerous personal expenses incurred by RAWLINS, or those associated with him, including payments to a real estate development company that built RAWLINS a 12,000-square-foot home; payments for luxury suite access for the Tennessee Titans, Nashville Predators, and New York Yankees; payments for Tiffany jewelry; and payments to car dealerships including Ferrari, Porsche, Maserati, and Mercedes.

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RAWLINS, 58, of Brentwood, Tennessee, was convicted of one count of wire fraud, the sole count in the Information.  He faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison, a maximum term of three years of supervised release, and a fine of the greatest of $250,000, or twice the gross pecuniary gain derived from the offense or twice the gross pecuniary loss to the victim.  The maximum potential sentence in this case is prescribed by Congress and is provided here for informational purposes only, as any sentencing of the defendant will be determined by the judge.  RAWLINS is scheduled to be sentenced on March 18, 2016.

 

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  • Brian Ashmore says:

    Did you ever bother doing your own investigation or are you just a copy and paste journalist who pawns off someones else’s words as his own?

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