logo
Warner Robins woman charged with defrauding Georgia Medicaid program for more than $5.4 million

Warner Robins woman charged with defrauding Georgia Medicaid program for more than $5.4 million

Yahoo3 days ago
Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr's Office announced Monday that a 62-year-old woman from Warner Robins was charged with defrauding the state's Medicaid program more than $5.4 million.
The Attorney General's Office said Elizabeth Sue Ivester is accused of conspiracy to commit health care fraud, health care fraud and aggravated identity theft.
Officials said Ivester charged Medicaid for millions of dollars for durable medical equipment that was neither ordered nor supplied to Medicaid recipients.
In the indictment, the AG's office said Ivester, who owns and operates Liberty Medical, Inc., 'unlawfully used Medicaid recipients' identification numbers to submit fraudulent claims by falsely representing that one physician ordered 77,095 pieces of DME that were not ordered,' nor were they delivered to any patients.
[DOWNLOAD: Free WSB-TV News app for alerts as news breaks]
TRENDING STORIES:
83-year-old grandmother spent hours in jail for a crime she didn't commit, family says
Buckhead business owner says remote workers he trusted turned out to be North Koreans who stole $1M
What new GA laws are in effect as of July 1, 2025?
'The scale of today's takedown is unprecedented, and so is the harm we're confronting. Individuals who attempt to steal from the federal health care system and put vulnerable patients at risk will be held accountable,' HHS-OIG Acting Inspector General Juliet T. Hodgkins said.
Ivester was indicted by a federal grand jury on May 14 and was arraigned on June 17, according to state officials.
Carr's office said the indictment was part of the National Health Care Fraud Takedown initiative and was also part of the state's own Medicaid Fraud and Patient Protection Division's work in Georgia.
'Prosecuting Medicaid fraud is a top priority for our office, and we're proud to work with our federal partners in this effort,' Carr said. 'Defrauding Medicaid is the same as stealing taxpayer dollars, and we will hold violators accountable.'
[SIGN UP: WSB-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hunter Biden begged DNC to pay his legal fees for tax, gun cases: new tome
Hunter Biden begged DNC to pay his legal fees for tax, gun cases: new tome

New York Post

time2 hours ago

  • New York Post

Hunter Biden begged DNC to pay his legal fees for tax, gun cases: new tome

WASHINGTON — Then-first son Hunter Biden begged the Democratic National Committee to foot his mounting legal bills for the federal tax and gun charges he faced last year, according to an explosive new tell-all. The DNC was paying the legal fees for dad Joe Biden, who was still president at the time, over a separate federal probe into whether the commander in chief hoarded classified documents — but scoffed at also covering Hunter's extra legal costs, says the book '2024: How Trump Retook the White House and the Democrats Lost America.' By June 2024, Hunter's 'sugar brother' Kevin Morris had already paid off more than $2 million in tax delinquency related to one of then-first son's criminal cases and had been shelling out even more for his related legal bills. Advertisement 3 Then-first son Hunter Biden begged the Democratic National Committee to foot his mounting legal bills for federal tax and gun charges he faced last year. CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images Those bills included ongoing alimony payments to Hunter's ex-wife, Kathleen Buhle, and child-support checks to Lunden Roberts, the mother of his love-child Navy Joan, as set out in a June 2023 settlement. Hunter's legal tab as the presidential contest ramped up in January 2024 stood at around $5 million, Morris testified to House Republican investigators. Advertisement Morris' daughter later accused the troubled first son of 'taking advantage' of her father's largesse. 3 The seamy first son was convicted of three felony gun charges June 11, 2024. Last month, the law firm that represented Hunter also sued him for reneging on more than $50,000 in legal fees. Hunter was convicted of three felony gun charges June 11, 2024, and pleaded guilty to multiple tax felonies for evading $1.4 million in payments to the IRS in September. Advertisement His father months later pardoned him of all those charges as well as any related to potential crimes he may have committed between Jan. 1, 2014, and Dec. 1, 2024. 3 Former President Joe Biden handed his son a controversial sweeping pardon before leaving office. WireImage 'The only thing I care about is that my son is not convicted,' Biden told a close friend before Hunter's first conviction, according to journalists Josh Dawsey, Tyler Pager and Isaac Arnsdorf in their forthcoming book, which was excerpted Thursday in the Wall Street Journal. The president at one point considered forming a legal defense fund for his son to push back on the federal probe as well as the parallel congressional investigation into Hunter's foreign influence peddling that could potentially implicate him. Advertisement '2024: How Trump Retook the White House and the Democrats Lost America,' is being published by Penguin Press on July 8. Reps for the DNC and Hunter's former lawyer, Abbe Lowell, did not respond to Post requests for comment.

North Korean civilian crosses heavily fortified DMZ into South
North Korean civilian crosses heavily fortified DMZ into South

Miami Herald

time9 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

North Korean civilian crosses heavily fortified DMZ into South

A North Korean man who identified himself as a civilian crossed the heavily fortified military demarcation line between the two Koreas and was taken into custody, the South's military said Friday. The individual was picked up by the South Korean military on Thursday night, the Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a text message to reporters. No motive was immediately given for his crossing. 'The military identified the individual in the MDL area, tracked and monitored him, conducted a normal induction operation and secured the individual,' the JCS said. 'The relevant organizations will investigate the details of the southward movement.' 'There have been no unusual movements by the North Korean military as of now,' the message added. In a background briefing with reporters, a JCS official said the North Korean man was first detected by a military monitoring device on the South Korean side of the border around 3 a.m. Thursday. The operation to secure and guide the individual out of the demilitarized zone took 20 hours total, the official said. The two Koreas are separated by the 2.5-mile-wide DMZ, which is one of the most heavily fortified and mined borders on earth. A North Korean soldier defected across the DMZ in August, but direct land crossings have been historically rare. Most escapees traverse the northern border with China. Over 34,000 North Koreans have fled to the South to escape dire economic conditions and the country's brutally repressive regime. However, arrivals plummeted after Pyongyang sealed its borders and ramped up security in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The number of North Korean defectors who arrived in South Korea reached 236 in 2024, up 20% from the previous year, according to data from the South's Unification Ministry. South Korean President Lee Jae Myung was briefed on the crossing, spokesperson Kang Yu-jun told reporters Friday. Lee has moved to lower tensions in the border area during his first month in office and recently ordered the suspension of propaganda loudspeaker broadcasts at the DMZ. Copyright 2025 UPI News Corporation. All Rights Reserved.

Congratulations, America, you're 249 years old! But this last one has been rough
Congratulations, America, you're 249 years old! But this last one has been rough

Los Angeles Times

time14 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Congratulations, America, you're 249 years old! But this last one has been rough

Happy Birthday, America! Today, you turn 249 and, honestly, you don't look a day over 248. (Ha ha.) Seriously, it's perfectly understandable why there's more gray on your scalp and deeper worry lines on your face. This last year has been challenging, to say the least. A convicted felon and adjudicated sex abuser was elected president — history made! — and ever since has worked tirelessly and diligently to establish himself as the nation's first monarch, and a fabulously remunerated one at that. Federal troops are occupying the nation's second-largest city, over the objection of the state's leaders, as masked agents scoop people off the streets of Southern California for the temerity of venturing out with brown skin and an accent. Our social safety net is being shredded, the country is pulling back from its international leadership in the arts and science, and we've squandered our global standing as a beacon of hope and compassion. But that's not all. Political violence is becoming about as familiar and normalized as schoolyard shootings. In roughly the last 12 months we've witnessed two attempts on Trump's life and the assassination of a Minnesota lawmaker and her husband. Medicaid, the program that serves millions of the needy, elderly and disabled, is on the chopping block. The Federal Emergency Management Agency, which helps Americans weather the worst times after natural disaster, has been drastically depleted just as we're heading into the fire and hurricane seasons. As for the loyal opposition, Democrats are in bad odor with voters and even many of their own partisans after Joe Biden's handlers gaslighted the public on the frailty and declining faculties of the octogenarian president. Only after a cataclysmically bad debate performance, which revealed his infirmities for all to see, did Biden grudgingly stand aside in favor of his anointed successor, Vice President Kamala Harris. Once more, Democrats are wandering the wilderness, wearing a familiar groove in their desolate pathway as they debate — again — whether to veer left or hug the center. That's quite the catalog. But no one ever said this representative democracy thing was going to be easy, or endlessly uplifting. America, you're a big, boisterous nation of more than 342 million people, with all sorts of competing impulses and interests, and no end of certitude to go around. In our last presidential election, we split nearly evenly, with Trump squeaking past Harris in the popular vote 49.8% to 48.3%. It was one of the narrowest margins of victory in the last century, though you wouldn't know it from Trump's radical actions and the servility of the Republican-run Congress. But our differences go even deeper than the now-familiar gulf between red and blue America. In a recently completed deep dive on the state of our democracy, researchers at UC Berkeley found an almost even divide over how to measure our political system's success. Slightly more than half of those surveyed said a successful democracy is one that's adaptable and has the capacity for change, while nearly half said success stems from adherence to long-standing principles. With that kind of stark disagreement on such a fundamental question, is it any wonder we struggle to find consensus on so much else? But, heck, if it's any consolation on this star-spangled holiday, the country has been through worse. Much worse. And you, America, have not only survived but also in many ways grown stronger by facing down your flaws and overcoming some knee-buckling challenges. Slavery. Civil war. Racist exclusionary laws. Two worldwide conflicts. Depression. Financial crises. And too many deadly natural disasters — floods, fires, earthquakes, hurricanes — to possibly count. Your treatment of some Americans, it should be said, hasn't always been fair and just. People are despairing over the Supreme Court and its deference to the president. But it's worth noting that earlier court majorities held that Black Americans — 'beings of an inferior order,' in the words of the notorious Dred Scott decision — could be denied citizenship, that racial segregation was constitutional and that compulsory sterilization based on eugenics was perfectly legal. That sordid history won't necessarily make anyone feel better about the current state of affairs, nor should it. But it does give some perspective. All of that said, today's a day to celebrate the good things and the bright, shining place you aspire to be, with liberty and justice for all. So, chin up, America! Have another slice of birthday cake, and don't worry about the calories — you really do look terrific for 249! Meantime, it's up to us, your citizens, to keep working toward that more perfect union. Whatever ails you, America, the remedy resides with we the people and the power we hold, particularly at the ballot box. Unhappy with the wrecking crew that's chain-sawing federal programs and allowing Trump to blowtorch the Constitution and rule of law? Vote 'em out, starting with the 2026 midterm election. Don't give up hope or the belief that, as dark and difficult as things seem right now, better days lie ahead. That abiding faith is what makes America great.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store