Doctor Pleads Guilty to Obstructing Federal
Investigation
St. Louis, Missouri: Dr. Krishnarao Rednam
pled guilty to a federal felony charge of obstructing
a health care fraud investigation after he destroyed
medical records that were the subject of a federal
investigation’s subpoena, United States Attorney
Catherine L. Hanaway announced today.
“Both the Medicare program and Missouri’s
senior citizens expect health care providers to be
honest and have limited financial resources to spend
on health care,” said Hanaway. “We appreciate
that Rednam’s employer brought these issues to
the Government’s attention and will continue
to devote investigative and prosecutorial resources
to catch and successfully prosecute people who cheat
the health care system.”
In his plea agreement, Rednam admitted that in January
2007 his employer conducted an audit to determine
why the medical practice group’s revenues were
significantly higher than expected. The audit suggested
that group’s unexpectedly higher revenue was
caused by Rednam purchasing a relatively inexpensive
drug (Avastin®) while repeatedly billing it to
the Medicare program as a different and significantly
more expensive drug (Macugen®). The audit also
suggested that Rednam purchased single use vials of
Lucentis® but provided the drug to multiple patients.
All three of these drugs are injectable and are used
to treat macular degeneration in patients’ eyes.
After the audit, the medical practice group notified
Rednam that it would be making a voluntary disclosure
of the audit’s findings to the Government. When
the Government began an investigation, it served a
subpoena on the medical practice group, seeking, among
other documents, the medical files for various patients
receiving injections of the drugs discussed above.
In his plea agreement, Rednam admitted that from April
18, 2007 through May 31, 2007, he remained at his medical
office past regular business hours after all other
employees left. While alone in the office, Rednam reviewed
patients’ files that were responsive to the Government’s
subpoena and disposed of some of those records. During
this time frame, other clinic employees saw him leaving
the office with paper bags full of medical records,
which he disposed of instead of providing them to his
employer for eventual production to the Government.
He did this to obstruct the Government’s investigation
because these records contained information about Rednam’s
injections and corresponding claims to Medicare and
other payors.
Further, in his plea agreement, Rednam admits that
late at night in his office, he also retrieved the
files of multiple patients who had received injections
that were responsive to the Government’s subpoena.
Rednam reviewed these files to determine if they contained
any proof that suggested Medicare and other payors
had received claims for the wrong drug, specifically
Macugen® instead of Avastin®. He then removed
or destroyed patient files that supported the billing
for the more expensive drug while containing no proof
that the cheaper drug, Avastin®, was actually provided
to the patient.
Rednam also agreed to pay $304,225 to the United States
in a related civil settlement agreement and to be excluded
from participation in the Medicare program for a period
of five years.
Rednam’s former employer, the St. Louis Eye
Clinic, also agreed to pay $251,551 to the United States
in a separate civil settlement agreement regarding
Rednam’s claims to Medicare for the three drugs.
Both the employer and Rednam also agreed to repay the
patient’s co-insurance payments that they made
when receiving injections.
“The FBI will continue to vigorously investigate
health care fraud and those professionals that defraud
the system,” added John Gilles, Special Agent
in Charge, FBI St. Louis.
Rednam, 58, Des Peres, Missouri, pled guilty to one
felony count of obstruction of a federal health care
investigation. Rednam now faces a maximum penalty of
five years in prison and/or fines up to $250,000, when
he is sentenced April 11, 2008.
Hanaway commended the work on the case by the Federal
Bureau of Investigation and the Office of Inspector
General for the U.S Department of Health and Human
Services.
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