
Using AI to go after health care fraud
The federal government is using artificial intelligence to crack down on health care fraud schemes.
The AI-powered crackdown provides the federal government with a tool to stay ahead of fraudsters and hasten the investigation process.
The effort, orchestrated by the Justice Department, the FBI and HHS's Office of the Inspector General, has led to criminal charges against 324 defendants, including 96 doctors, nurse practitioners, pharmacists and other medical professionals for alleged participation in health care fraud schemes.
Natalia Casella, a spokesperson for the HHS OIG, declined to say how exactly the agencies are using AI in investigations. 'We often do not share this type of information because we are aware that fraudsters are monitoring,' she said.
Cases in point: The DOJ charged an Arizona nurse practitioner with defrauding Medicare by billing elderly Medicare beneficiaries for medically unnecessary treatments, billing the federal health insurance program more than $209 million.
In another case, the DOJ charged a California man who received more than $2 million in kickbacks from treatment facilities for patient referrals for additional treatment. He also paid people to find patients to send to treatment centers.
Additionally, the agency also charged civilians and medical professionals as part of the 324 defendants accused of submitting fraudulent health care and disability claims and prescription opioid trafficking. This batch of fraud amounts to over $14.6 billion, the Justice Department said in a statement.
Why it matters: Health care scams can be a significant drain on the healthcare system, and the Trump administration has emphasized that it aims to go after this. The General Accountability Office estimates 10 percent of healthcare expenditures — or more than $100 billion — are fraud, waste and abuse.
'Health care fraud isn't just theft — it's trafficking in trust,' Robert Murphy, acting administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration, said in a statement. 'We're targeting the entire ecosystem of fraud — from pill mills in Texas to kickback clinics exploiting Native communities.'
WELCOME TO FUTURE PULSE
This is where we explore the ideas and innovators shaping health care.
Here's 454 clues that a chatbot wrote parts of scientific research papers, The New York Times reported. Those clues include certain key words these bots use more frequently than humans, including 'crucial,' 'delves' and 'important.'
Share any thoughts, news, tips and feedback with Danny Nguyen at dnguyen@politico.com, Carmen Paun at cpaun@politico.com, Ruth Reader at rreader@politico.com, or Erin Schumaker at eschumaker@politico.com.
Want to share a tip securely? Message us on Signal: Dannyn516.70, CarmenP.82, RuthReader.02 or ErinSchumaker.01.
A federal judge in Washington ordered the Trump administration to restore health data pages posted on Department of Health and Human Services websites, our Lauren Gardner reports.
About the lawsuit: The lawsuit, filed by a liberal-leaning medical advocacy group called Doctors for America, claimed the removal of websites that covered HIV prevention and student health deprived doctors and researchers 'of access to information that is necessary for treating patients' and created a 'dangerous gap in the scientific data for public health emergencies.'But the federal agencies sued — the Office of Personnel Management, the CDC, the FDA and HHS contended the takedown was part of a lawful review to comply with President Donald Trump's executive order to crack down on 'gender ideology and extremism.'
But U.S. District Judge John Bates, who was appointed by former President George W. Bush, characterized the agencies' missives as 'sweeping and poorly thought-through directives' and noted they were issued without public notice or comment.
'An executive order can do a lot, but it does not absolve agencies of their obligations to follow the law,' Bates said in his ruling.
Why it matters: This case, like many others filed against the Trump administration, underscores the power federal judges have as a check on the government's directives.
Bates instructed the plaintiffs to list all HHS webpages and datasets the Doctors for America group relied on by July 11 and ordered the government to restore the versions of the pages that existed as of midnight on Jan. 29 as soon as possible. He also ordered the agencies to file status reports starting July 18 and every following Friday until they've fully complied with the ruling.
'It is heartening to see that the court agrees with doctors, researchers, and patients that the government cannot unlawfully and without explanation remove crucial health information and datasets,' DFA board member Dr. Reshma Ramachandran said in a statement. 'With this ruling, we can provide care for our patients and protect public health based on evidence, rather than ideology.'
HHS didn't immediately comment on the ruling.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Los Angeles Times
an hour ago
- Los Angeles Times
Justice Dept. fires more prosecutors, support staff involved in Trump prosecutions, sources say
WASHINGTON — The Justice Department has fired additional lawyers and support staff who worked on special counsel Jack Smith's prosecutions of President Trump, according to two people familiar with the matter. The overall number of terminations was not immediately clear but they cut across both the classified documents and election interference prosecutions brought by Smith, and included a handful of prosecutors who were detailed to the probes as well as Justice Department support staff and other non-lawyer personnel who aided them, said the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss personnel moves that have not been publicly announced. The firings are part of a broader wave of terminations that have roiled the department for months and that have targeted staff who worked on cases involving Trump and his supporters. In January, the Justice Department said that it had fired more than a dozen prosecutors who worked on prosecutions of Trump, and last month fired at least three prosecutors involved in U.S. Capitol riot criminal cases. Days ago, Patty Hartman, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney's office in Washington, whose prosecutors handled the cases against the Trump supporters who stormed the Capitol, said in a social media post that she had been handed a letter signed by Atty. Gen. Pam Bondi informing her that she had been fired. Smith's team in 2023 brought separate indictments accusing Trump of hoarding classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida as well as conspiring to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election in the run-up to the Jan. 6, 2021 riot at the U.S. Capitol. Neither case reached trial. The Supreme Court significantly narrowed the election interference case in a ruling that said former presidents enjoyed broad immunity from prosecution for their official acts, and a Trump-appointed judge dismissed the classified documents case by holding that Smith's appointment as special counsel was illegal. Smith ultimately withdrew both cases in November 2024 after Trump's victory, citing a Justice Department legal opinion that protects sitting presidents from federal prosecution. Tucker and Richer write for the Associated Press.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Trump team defends ICE raid at California marijuana farm where children were allegedly found working
President Donald Trump's administration has defended violent immigration raids targeting cannabis farms in California, where masked federal agents discovered allegedly undocumented minors who are victims of 'exploitation' and 'potentially human trafficking or smuggling,' according to the Department of Homeland Security. The United Farm Workers union said several workers were critically injured during the raids, while other targeted workers, including a U.S. citizen, 'remain totally unaccounted for.' Agents are accused of chasing one worker who fell 30 feet from the top of a building. He was hospitalized and placed on life support, before dying from his injuries on Friday, according to the union. The raids — which sparked an intense standoff between heavily armed federal officers and dozens of protesters — were condemned by California Governor Gavin Newsom, whose office accused Trump's administration of wielding an anti-immigration agenda that has brought 'chaos, fear and terror' into communities. 'There's a real cost to these inhumane immigration actions on hardworking families and communities, including farmworker communities, across America,' his office said in a statement. Agents arrived on Thursday in military-style vehicles to execute 'criminal search warrants' inside facilities operated by Glass House Farms, according to Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin. The farms span 5.5 million square feet in California's Ventura County where it is legal for licensed operators to grow cannabis. Firefighters were dispatched around 12.15 p.m. to provide medical aid. Five people were hospitalized, and four others were treated at the farm, according to the Ventura County Fire Department. In a statement on social media, Glass House Farms said it 'fully complied with agent search warrants and will provide further updates if necessary.' Video showed agents firing tear gas and crowd control munitions into a crowd of protesters near a farm house in Camarillo. Agents were also raiding another farm site roughly 30 miles away. The FBI issued a $50,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of a demonstrator, who appeared to fire a pistol during the melee, according to federal prosecutors. Customs and Border Protection commissioner Rodney Scott said agents found 10 undocumented children at the facility, including eight who were unaccompanied. It is legal in California for minors as young as 12 to work on farms but only in non-hazardous jobs and outside of school hours. Administration officials shared photos on social media showing masked agents posing with the alleged children they discovered and accused Newsom of failing to stop 'child exploitation.' 'We prosecute criminals that break child labor laws,' Newsom replied. 'You make the kids pose for photos, tear gas them, and promote laws like this,' said the governor, sharing articles about Republican-led legislation to loosen child labor laws. The workers, which included citizens, were held by federal authorities for more than eight hours. The American citizens were only released from custody if they agreed to delete video of the operation from their phones, according to United Farm Workers. The union also is demanding the 'immediate facilitation' of legal representation for minors at the facility. 'Farm workers are excluded from basic child labor laws and it is unfortunately not uncommon for teenagers to work in the fields,' the group said. 'To be clear: detaining and deporting children is not a solution for child labor.' The Trump administration's 'violent and cruel federal actions terrorize American communities, disrupt the American food supply chain, threaten lives and separate families,' the union said. 'There is no city, state or federal district where it is legal to terrorize and detain people for being brown and working in agriculture. These raids must stop immediately.' The federal operation on Thursday was the latest in a series of immigration raids that have rocked communities across California and drawn federal lawsuits to stop them. Workplace raids spiked after the administration rescinded previous ICE policy that prohibited enforcement actions in sensitive locations such as places of worship, schools and hospitals. Under apparent pressure from the agricultural sector, which is made up of roughly 40 percent noncitizen workers, Trump has considered limiting enforcement actions on farms and developing a program for temporary work permits. But the president's border czar Tom Homan has said there will be 'no amnesty' for undocumented workers. The Trump administration has deployed officers across federal law enforcement agencies to focus on immigration enforcement, with a directive from the White House to make at least 3,000 daily arrests — a quota that immigration attorneys say will almost certainly result in 'collateral' arrests that could tear apart families and communities with mixed legal status. The president has also approved a record-breaking budget to hire more ICE officers and expand immigration detention center space across the country, making the agency one of the most expensive law enforcement agencies in the world, with a budget larger than most countries' militaries. More than 57,000 people are currently held in ICE custody, or roughly 140 percent more than its detention capacity. A vast majority of those immigrants do not have criminal records and 93 percent have not been convicted of any violent crime.


San Francisco Chronicle
an hour ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Justice Dept. fires more prosecutors, support staff involved in Trump prosecutions, AP sources say
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department has fired additional lawyers and support staff who worked on special counsel Jack Smith's prosecutions of President Donald Trump, according to two people familiar with the matter. The overall number of terminations was not immediately clear but they cut across both the classified documents and election interference prosecutions brought by Smith, and included a handful of prosecutors who were detailed to the probes as well as Justice Department support staff and other non-lawyer personnel who aided them, said the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss personnel moves that have not been publicly announced. The firings are part of a broader wave of terminations that have roiled the department for months and that have targeted staff who worked on cases involving Trump and his supporters. In January, the Justice Department said that it had fired more than a dozen prosecutors who worked on prosecutions of Trump, and last month fired at least three prosecutors involved in U.S. Capitol riot criminal cases. Days ago, Patty Hartman, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney's office in Washington, whose prosecutors handled the cases against the Trump supporters who stormed the Capitol, said in a social media post that she had been handed a letter signed by Attorney General Pam Bondi informing her that she had been fired. Smith's team in 2023 brought separate indictments accusing Trump of hoarding classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida as well as conspiring to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election in the run-up to the Jan. 6, 2021 riot at the U.S. Capitol. Neither case reached trial. The Supreme Court significantly narrowed the election interference case in a ruling that said former presidents enjoyed broad immunity from prosecution for their official acts, and a Trump-appointed judge dismissed the classified documents case by holding that Smith's appointment as special counsel was illegal. Smith ultimately withdrew both cases in November 2024 after Trump's victory, citing a Justice Department legal opinion that protects sitting presidents from federal prosecution.