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Warwick Health Center Owners Charged for Health Care Fraud

[CREDIT: Rob Borkowski] The U.S. Court of Appeals upheld suspending 2020 RI mail vote witnesses on Aug. 7.

[CREDIT: Rob Borkowski] The U.S. Court of Appeals upheld suspending 2020 RI mail vote witnesses on Aug. 7.
[CREDIT: Rob Borkowski] The U.S. Court of Appeals upheld suspending 2020 RI mail vote witnesses on Aug. 7.
WARWICK, RI — The co-owners of a Warwick-based holistic health care center AIM Health have been charged in federal court with alleged health care fraud of federal and private health care insurance providers for $1.9 million via fraudulent claims for reimbursement for services not provided, United States Attorney Zachary A. Cunha announced.

 Brandon Nowak, 32, of Providence, and Jason Simmons, 32, of Foster, co-owners of Alternative Integrated Medicine, LLC (doing business as AIM Health), made initial appearances on Tuesday before a U.S. Magistrate Judge on charges of health care fraud conspiracy, health care fraud, and filing false claims. The defendants were released on unsecured bond.

 AIM Health is based in Warwick, with satellite offices located in Pawtucket, North Kingstown, and East Providence. Nowak serves as President and CEO, and. Simmons acts as the Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, and Compliance Officer of the company.

 It is alleged in charging documents that, at Nowak’s direction, and with Simmons’ knowledge, AIM Health electronically submitted for payment claims for services that did not occur or were not covered, including such treatment as infrared therapy, hot and cold therapy, therapeutic activity, and self-care/home management training, according to Cunha’s office.

 Additionally, it is alleged that AIM Health submitted reimbursement claims for acupuncture and evaluation and management office visits when the actual services provided were massages given by licensed massage therapists (a non-covered service); that the company billed for high complexity office visits without providing that level of service; that AIM modified codes on reimbursement forms to avoid triggering automatic denials for payment for services that were either not provided nor medically necessary; and that AIM billed for covered and non-covered services rendered by uncredentialed providers under the provider numbers of credentialed providers.

 As a result of this conduct, it is alleged that AIM Health fraudulently obtained $1,872,330 in payments from government and private insurers to which AIM was not entitled to receive.

The case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys John P. McAdams and Rachna Vyas.

The matter was investigated by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services-Office of Inspector General and the FBI, with assistance from the Defense Criminal Investigative Service and the Department of Veterans Affairs-Office of Inspector General.

 Editor’s note:  A federal criminal complaint is merely an accusation. A defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

Rob Borkowski
Author: Rob Borkowski

Rob has worked as reporter and editor for several publications, including The Kent County Daily Times and Coventry Courier, before working for Gatehouse in MA then moving home with Patch Media. Now he's publisher and editor of WarwickPost.com. Contact him at [email protected] with tips, press releases, advertising inquiries, and concerns.

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