A sharpened focus on remediation in federal investigations

Precious M. Gittens (pmgittens@health-law.com) is Partner and co-chair of the Fraud and Abuse Practice Group in the Washington DC offices of Hooper, Lundy & Bookman, PC. Brett Moodie (bmoodie@health-law.com) is an attorney in the Los Angeles offices of Hooper, Lundy & Bookman, PC.

Today, compliance and ethics programs are an integral part of the operations of many healthcare organizations. These organizations aim to prevent, detect, correct, and in some cases even self-disclose potential fraud and abuse before any misconduct is discovered by government agencies. Sometimes these laudable goals are simply unattainable, and organizations learn about potential misconduct only afterthe government has detected the wrongdoing and initiated an investigation.

In their investigations of corporate misconduct, federal prosecutors, state and local investigators, and private pay auditors all routinely focus on an organization’s preexisting compliance program, along with the organization’s remediation and compliance actions after it learned of the allegations of misconduct (i.e., after the organization is served with a qui tam action, or receives a Civil Investigative Demand, subpoena, or proffer request related to an investigation). Unfortunately, some organizations neglect to do the same, and they tend to look only to the general risks and historical failures, rather than exercising real-time and forward-looking compliance efforts that are focused on remediating the alleged misconduct at hand.

Failure to engage in remedial actions, including modification of a compliance program that did not detect the allegations that are the subject of a government investigation, can be dangerous. Additionally, an organization that fails to thoroughly, credibly, and promptly investigate and remediate actual misconduct, including misconduct that first comes to the organization’s attention as a result of a government investigation, may completely disqualify itself from later seeking any cooperation credit from prosecutors in federal civil or criminal investigations and enforcement actions.

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