By Adrianne Appel2024-09-13T18:06:00
Former executives of Medly, an online pharmacy that is now shuttered, have been charged by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) with defrauding investors.
Former CEO Marg Patel, former Chief Financial Officer Robert Horowitz, and former Head of Pharmacy Operations Chintankumar Bhatt, were charged with violating the antifraud provisions of securities laws, according to a press release Thursday. Bhatt was also charged with aiding and abetting Patel and Horowitz to violate securities laws.
Starting at least in February 2021, Bhatt entered millions worth of fake prescriptions into Medly’s system, according to the complaint, filed in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York. Many of the fake prescriptions were for very high-cost medications.
2024-09-17T18:54:00Z By Aaron Nicodemus
Gatekeepers including chief financial officers and the chair of the audit committee have a responsibility to shareholders to report fraud wherever they find it–especially when that fraud involves an artificial intelligence tool meant to combat fraud.
2023-11-17T15:08:00Z By Kyle Brasseur
The chief compliance officer of a defunct pharmacy holding company was sentenced to 4 1/2 years in prison after being found guilty of conspiracy to commit healthcare fraud and wire fraud earlier this year.
2023-06-09T15:20:00Z By Jeff Dale
Steven King, the chief compliance officer of a defunct pharmacy holding company, was found guilty of conspiracy to commit healthcare fraud and wire fraud for unnecessarily billing Medicare for more than $50 million in medical supplies.
2025-07-09T18:02:00Z By Adrianne Appel
CVS has vowed to appeal $948.8 million in fines and damages imposed by a judge Tuesday on its Omnicare unit, for billing Medicare for tens of thousands of false claims.
2025-07-08T19:50:00Z By Aaron Nicodemus
Federal banking regulators have laid the blame for Discover Financial Services charging merchants $1 billion in excessive credit card fees over 17 years squarely at the feet of company executives.
2025-07-07T19:02:00Z By Aaron Nicodemus
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has dropped a $95 million enforcement action against Navy Federal Credit Union, the latest regulatory pullback by the agency under President Donald Trump.
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