- Georgia authorizes pharmacists to prescribe HIV prevention drugs
- From Adoption to Accountability: What AI Maturity Actually Demands of Hospital Leaders
- New hepatitis B drug shows cure potential
- Why physician groups are walking away from Medicare
- 10 hospitals, health systems seeking pharmacy leaders
- CVS reverses on Zepbound coverage amid lawsuit, patient backlash
- Children’s National names 4 leaders
- NYU Langone cuts nursing support staff turnover 40% in 8 months
- Samsung, Massachusetts General Hospital test wearable tech for GLP-1 patients
- Innovaccer acquires RCM company
- A sharp rise in CEO age: Study
- Gastroenterologists’ incentive bonus picture, a breakdown
- South Carolina enacts bill requiring in-person exams for orthodontic treatment
- The ASC land grab reaches a new ‘level of urgency’
- Plant-Based Diet May Cut Obesity Risk For Women In Menopause
- Qualitas Dental Partners increases credit facilities to fuel acquisitions
- CVS restores coverage of Eli Lilly obesity med Zepbound, adds new pill Foundayo
- CMS finalizes changes to No Surprises Act dispute resolution process
- Smartwatch App Accurately Detects Major Epileptic Seizures
- Racial Gap Exists For Asthma Inhaler Use
- New Colon Cancer Screening Guidelines Add Blood And At-Home Tests
- CVS expands partnership with Salesforce for greater call center personalization
- Wearable Ultrasound Patch Monitors High-Risk Pregnancies In Real Time
- Nurse Convicted In Patient's Death Turns Fatal Drug Error Into Cautionary Tale
- Listen to the Latest ‘KFF Health News Minute’
- In a Vaccine-Skeptical California County, a Potential Playbook To Contain Measles
- Teladoc Health inks partnership with Walmart to expand virtual care services
- PharmaEssentia taps Incyte alum Eric Vogel as it eyes Besremi expansion
- Kaléo speaks up on allergy awareness to amplify patient stories
- 40% of dentists quit AI tools within 90 days: Study
- Privacy and PetShops: Remarks at the Regulatory PETshop Series: Cryptographic Technologies and Financial Services Regulation
- The calm before the storm: 3 policies ASC leaders should be watching
- NYC Health + Hospitals adds 2nd behavioral health housing site
- 12 new cardiac catheterization labs in 2026
- Dental assistant employment hits 387,000: State-by-state breakdown
- AI-powered transcription: A simple entry point with real returns for ASCs
- Meet the CFOs of 10 specialty DSOs
- The ASC staffing mistake hiding in plain sight
- The new ASC president tasked with scaling a radical fixed-price surgery model
- ASCs’ strongest weapon against thin margins
- CMS’ Medicaid crackdown and what it means for ASCs: 9 notes
- Mindfulness isn’t a perk anymore — it’s a workforce strategy
- Pearl launches AI-powered dental RCM platform
- ‘Standardize what protects the patient’: The balancing act in behavioral healthcare operations
- Oregon college launches online dental hygiene program
- With Elahere building steam, AbbVie nets FDA nod for another ImmunoGen cancer asset
- Nebraska behavioral health workforce grew 49% since 2010: 4 notes
- Hospitals again ask FTC, DOJ for exemption from expanded premerger notification filings
- Coalition for Health AI unveils governance playbooks for responsible AI adoption
- 10 behavioral healthcare M&A deals in 2026
- Florida retail property with a Heartland Dental sells for $11M
- 15 notable DSO updates in May
- Maryland psychiatric hospitals strained at 95% capacity: 5 things to know
- Amazon taps Roy Schoenberg to lead healthcare business as Neil Lindsay plans to step down
- Viridian, awaiting FDA decision, taps WuXi Bio in eye drug supply deal
- How 4 dental professionals would fix insurance
- U.S. To Keep Ebola-Exposed Citizens In Kenya Under New Policy
- FDA clears 1st neuromodulation device for PTSD
- VA expands psychedelic therapy research
- CAT on a Hot Tin Roof
- GLP-1 Meds May Help Slow the Spread of Certain Obesity-Related Cancers
- GoodRx launches subscription program for low-cost generic medications, telehealth services
- George Washington University locks deal to hand off debt-ridden physician practice to UHS
- Humana invests $83M in new Florida pharmacy distribution center
- As J&J separates from its orthopedics business, it's laying off 56 employees in New Jersey
- ASCO preview: With expectations jacked up, Akeso's ivonescimab to face scrutiny in high-stakes plenary
- An insider’s look at LillyDirect
- GLP-1 manufacturer CordenPharma strikes deal for peptide CDMO, lining up new production sites in US and China
- Weight-Loss Program Helps Women Battling Breast Cancer
- Younger U.S. Women of Color Face Rising Breast Cancer Deaths
- High Fitness Doesn’t Raise A-fib Risk In Young Men, Study Finds
- Cheaper, Alternative Health Plans Are Having A Moment, But Critics Urge Caution
- Ultrafine Wildfire Smoke Particles May Pose Serious Health Risks
- Montana Hurries To Adopt Trump’s Medicaid Work Rules Amid Budget Woes
- Nurse Convicted in Patient’s Death Turns Fatal Drug Error Into a Cautionary Tale
- Readers Address Drugged Driving, Suicide Prevention, Worker Shortages
- Amid policy and pricing headwinds, US healthcare and life sci faces 'vast field of opportunity': survey
- Amid policy and pricing headwinds, US healthcare and life sci faces 'vast field of opportunity': survey
- Biogen investigated by Italian regulator over multiple sclerosis ‘market abuse’ claims
- FDA delays ruling on AstraZeneca’s breast cancer drug after negative adcomm vote
- Eli Lilly wins argument over Noom’s GLP-1 dosing claims
- Remarks at the Stanford Rock Center for Corporate Governance
- Eviction ban expirations tied to rise in psychiatric care use: Study
- 4 Medicaid autism care fraud charges, audit findings to know
- Smart ring maker Oura files confidentially for IPO as consumer demand propels revenue growth
- Outlook moves toward potential US nod for thrice-snubbed eye drug with FDA appeal win
- JD Power: Cost pressures worsen member experience with commercial plans
- Trinity Health credits pay rates, cost management for its steady 1% operating margin
- Trump Admin Bars Key U.S. Researchers From Global Virus Response Talk
- Listen to the Latest ‘KFF Health News Minute’
- CVS sues to challenge Tennessee's new PBM law
- As calls for COINS Act expansion grow, will new rules sweep up China biotech licensing?
- Radiopharmaceutical outfit Lantheus mulls potential $7B takeover by Curium: Bloomberg
- Everyone Has A Family Doc, But Can You Get An Appointment?
- Many U.S. College Students With Psychosis Are Not Receiving Treatment
- Antibiotics Won't Help Ease Asthma-Linked Wheezing in Kids
- Yoga Eases Insomnia And Anxiety In Cancer Survivors, Study Finds
- SK bioscience links up with Colombia to enable local production of varicella vaccine
- After prior FDA manufacturing snub, Gilead's hepatitis D med Hepcludex nabs US nod
- Dust Yields Clues to Viral Outbreaks, Study Finds
- 3 Medical Routines That Older People May Not Need
- Cheaper, Alternative Health Plans Are Having a Moment, but Critics Urge Caution
- Acadia boosts ‘More To Parkinson's’ campaign with Ryan Reynolds, Parkinson’s voices
- Niowave kicks off construction of $75M radiopharmaceutical isotope plant in Michigan
- Wheel, b.well partner to build turnkey infrastructure behind AI-native virtual care
- Journalists Distill News on Ebola, Licensing Midwives, and California’s Budget
- Trump Bought Stock in Eli Lilly as His Policies Gave the Drugmaker a Big Boost, Documents Show
- Acting NIAID Chief Steps Down Amid Ebola, Hantavirus Concerns
- Sunscreen Confusion Puts More Americans At Risk For Melanoma
- ACAP warns final ACA rule adds further uncertainty to a market in flux
- AbbVie plots 85 summer layoffs tied to Allergan unit in California
- Quorum Health transitioning to nonprofit for financial pickup
- Women's Health Capitol Hill Day: Advocates lobby to advance budget priorities
- Europe's CHMP gives thumbs up to AZ's breast cancer drug after thumbs down from FDA adcomm
- Swoop acquires prescription fulfillment platform Nimble to support independent pharmacies
- 1 In 10 U.S. Surgeons Quit Practice, Study Warns Of Shortage
- Video Game Can Detect Depression In Minutes, Study Says
- Quitting Smoking Might Lower Your Dementia Risk
- Severe Asthma Often Comes With Other Serious Health Problems
- Efforts To Understand The Nation's Drugged Driving Problem Stall Under Trump
- 3 Medical Routines That Older People May Not Need
- Innovaccer picks up CaduceusHealth to offer end-to-end revenue cycle management
- RFK Jr. Fires Two Leaders Of Major U.S. Health Task Force
- Ksana Health awarded $17.9M to build behavioral health foundation model
- Common Food Preservatives Linked to Major Heart Problems
- Migraine With Aura Linked To Middle-Age Stroke Risk
- Nicotine Vapes Triple Smokers' Odds Of Quitting Tobacco
- Fatty Liver Disease Increases Heart Attack Risk, Study Says
- Religious Anti-Abortion Center Finds Opportunity In Town Without OB-GYNs
- CPAP Insurance Rules Too Stringent, Deny Device Coverage To Sleep Apnea Patients Who Would Benefit
- Fixing Eligibility at the Point of Care: The Missing Link in Medical Device Reimbursement Integrity
- Fixing Eligibility at the Point of Care: The Missing Link in Medical Device Reimbursement Integrity
- The failure of the ‘usual suspects’ approach to life science recruitment
- The failure of the ‘usual suspects’ approach to life science recruitment
- Statement on Novel Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs)
- Value, Focus, and the Future of MedTech: M&A and Divestitures are Rewriting the Strategic Playbook.
- Value, Focus, and the Future of MedTech: M&A and Divestitures are Rewriting the Strategic Playbook.
- Rollback of PFAS Drinking Water Standards Raises Safety Fears
- Designing an agentic, future‑ready tech roadmap for emerging pharma
- The Boston Children’s Experience: Hidden ICU Risk and AI-Driven De-escalation
- The Boston Children’s Experience: Hidden ICU Risk and AI-Driven De-escalation
- How specialty practices can get more out of technology investments
- Artivion Completes Endospan Acquisition, Expands Aortic Arch Portfolio With FDA-Approved NEXUS System
- Artivion Completes Endospan Acquisition, Expands Aortic Arch Portfolio With FDA-Approved NEXUS System
- Your Handwriting Could Be a Window Into Your Aging Brain
- Real-World Evidence in the AI Era: What You Can Unlock Depends on What You Build On
- How Do Caffeine, Alcohol, Weed, Nicotine Affect MS Symptoms?
- Once-A-Day Pill Effective In Treating Sleep Apnea Without CPAP, Clinical Trial Says
- Teens Turning To Creatine, Not Steroids, For 'Looksmaxxing'
- Childhood Trauma Tied to Higher Obesity Risk, But One Caring Adult Can Make A Difference
Notifications
Clear all
Topic starter
May 28, 2026 10:07 am
The U.S. Department of Justice Criminal Division released their summaries of Medicaid fraud cases filed in the District of Minnesota by the Midwest Strike Force during the first half of May 2026. The money laundering counts in the Shamso Ahmed Hassan case indicate some criminal proceeds were wired to Somalia. Defendants "charged by information" are in the process of filing a guilty plea after reaching an agreement with federal prosecutors. Indictments indicate a full blown criminal prosecution is anticipated:
2026 Minnesota Medicaid and Benefits Fraud Takedown
Cases Filed in the District of MinnesotaCases Filed in the District of Minnesota
U.S. v. Shamso Ahmed Hassan, et al.
- Shamso Ahmed Hassan, 55, of Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, and Hanaan Mursal Yusuf, 25, of Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, were charged by indictment with conspiracy to commit health care fraud, health care fraud, conspiracy to defraud the United States and to make false statements related to health care matters, and money laundering in connection with a $46.6 million scheme to defraud Minnesota Medicaid’s Early Intensive Developmental and Behavioral Intervention (EIDBI) Program, of which approximately $21.2 million was paid. As alleged in the indictment, Shamso Ahmed Hassan was a shareholder in two autism centers, Smart Therapy Center and Star Autism Center, although she did not disclose their ownership interests to the Minnesota Department of Human Services as required. Defendant Hanaan Mursal Yusuf worked as a Level II provider of EIDBI services for Smart Therapy Center and was involved in operation of the center, including submitting claims for Medicaid reimbursement. Defendants Shamso Ahmed Hassan and Hanaan Mursal Yusuf paid kickbacks to families to incentivize them to send their children to Smart Therapy Center and Star Autism Center so that those centers could bill for EIDBI services in their children’s names. In fact, both Centers billed Medicaid for services that were not rendered or were not reimbursable by Medicaid. The case is being prosecuted by Trial Attorneys Sara Porter and Benjamin Smith of the Gulf Coast and Texas Strike Forces, and by Assistant United States Attorney Rebecca Kline of the District of Minnesota.
U.S. v. Charles Healey and Larsen-Guthmiller
- Charles Wayne Healey, 61, of Blue Earth, Minnesota, and Katherin Suzan Larsen-Guthmiller, 66, of Blue Earth, Minnesota, were charged by indictment with conspiracy to commit health care fraud and money laundering. Defendants Charles Healey and Katherin Larsen-Guthmiller operated Healey Homes. From 2021 until Healey Homes was closed by the Minnesota Department of Human Services in 2025, the defendants received $22.7 million in Medicaid reimbursements for supposedly providing Individualized Home Supports (IHS) services to vulnerable adults. But IHS services are intended to support recipients living in their own homes and are explicitly disallowed in provider-controlled settings. Despite their knowledge of this requirement, Healey and Larsen-Guthmiller owned and controlled the residences where they were purportedly providing services to Medicaid recipients. They charged recipients below-market rent in exchange for agreeing to be used to bill Minnesota Medicaid. The case is being prosecuted by Trial Attorneys Sara Woodward and Sara Porter of the Midwest and Gulf Coast Strike Forces, and by Assistant United States Attorneys Rebecca Kline and Matt Evans of the District of Minnesota.
U.S. v. Deborah Hodges
- Deborah Hodges, 59, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was charged by indictment with one count of conspiracy to commit health care fraud and four counts of health care fraud, in connection with a scheme to submit $5.3 million in fraudulent claims to the Housing Stabilization Services (HSS) Program of Minnesota Medicaid, of which approximately $5.2 million was paid. As alleged in the indictment, Hodges used House of Heroes, Inc. (HOH), an HSS provider, to bill for in-person services that were never actually provided. In one egregious example, she billed Medicaid for in-person services provided while the Medicaid recipient was at an in-patient drug treatment program and falsified case notes to justify the claim. The case is being prosecuted by Trial Attorney Brant Cook and Assistant Chief Shankar Ramamurthy of the Midwest Strike Force, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Murphy of the District of Minnesota.
U.S. v. Ahmed Othman Kadar
- Ahmed Kadar, 22, of Rosemount, Minnesota, was charged by indictment with three counts of health care fraud and two counts of money laundering in connection with a scheme to defraud Minnesota Medicaid by billing for Integrated Community Services (ICS) that were not actually provided. As alleged in the indictment, Kadar operated Ultimate Home Health LLC, which was supposed to help people with disabilities live independently in the community rather than in an institutionalized setting such as a group home or assisted living facility. Instead, Kadar caused Ultimate to submit claims to Minnesota Medicaid that were not provided or inflated the number of hours of ICS services actually provided and resulted in Medicaid recipients failing to receive needed medical care. Specifically, Kadar failed to respond to complaints from Medicaid recipients that power had been shut off in their units, forcing them to live without heat during the winter. Kadar also billed Medicaid for ICS services purportedly provided to a recipient who was supposed to be receiving 24-hour care the day before that recipient was found deceased when, in fact, the services were not provided. In total, Kadar submitted approximately $1.4 million in ICS claims to Medicaid and was paid approximately the same amount. He then transferred $400,000 of those funds in violation of Money Laundering statutes. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant Chief Shankar Ramamurthy of the Midwest Strike Force and Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Murphy of the District of Minnesota.
U.S. v. Sharmaine Meadows
- Sharmaine Meadows, 45, of Lake Elmo, Minnesota, was charged by indictment with three counts of health care fraud in connection with a scheme to submit over $4.3 million in fraudulent claims to the Housing Stabilization Services (HSS) Program of Minnesota Medicaid, of which nearly $3.7 million was paid. As alleged in the indictment, Meadows, owner and operator of Cradle of Love, LLC, caused the submission of false and fraudulent claims to Minnesota Medicaid for HSS services, directing her employees to bill Medicaid assigned hours per client week after week, regardless of whether services were actually provided, up to maximum available hours under the HSS program. The case is being prosecuted by Trial Attorney Jody King of the Florida Strike Force and Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Murphy of the District of Minnesota.
U.S. v. Muhammad Omar and Ibrahim Abdi
- Muhammad Abdulqadir Omar, 32, of Roseville, Minnesota, and Ibrahim Bashir Abdi, 25, of Minneapolis, Minnesota, were charged by indictment with one count of conspiracy to commit health care fraud and four counts of health care fraud in connection with a scheme to submit $3.3 million in fraudulent claims to the Housing Stabilization Services (HSS) Program of Minnesota Medicaid, of which approximately $3.2 million was paid. As alleged in the indictment, Omar and Abdi co-owned and operated North Home Health Care LLC (NHHC) and Omar individually owned South Home Health Care LLC (SHHC). Omar and Abdi, through NHHC and SHHC, submitted claims to the HSS Program for services that they did not provide and for more services than were actually provided to Medicaid recipients. Omar and Abdi then created records falsifying the services that they claimed to have provided to Medicaid recipients and provided those records to insurers to justify their fraudulent claims. The case is being prosecuted by Trial Attorney Matthew Belz of the Los Angeles Strike Force and Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Murphy of the District of Minnesota.
U.S. v. Jillaine Ann Mertens
- Jillaine Ann Mertens, 42, of Hamel, Minnesota, was charged by information with one count of wire fraud in connection with a scheme to submit fraudulent claims to the Minnesota Department of Children, Youth, and Families (DCYF), for which she was paid approximately $425,000. As alleged in the indictment, Mertens owned three childcare centers through which she submitted monthly applications to the Great Start Compensation Support Payment Program (GSCSPP) for reimbursement of in-classroom services that were never actually provided, for individuals who were not actually employed by the childcare centers. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant Chief Shankar Ramamurthy of the Midwest Strike Force, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Murphy of the District of Minnesota.
U.S. v. Candice Langley and U.S. v. Cynthia Allen
- Cynthia Allen, 62, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and Candice Langley 46, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, were charged by separate informations with health care fraud conspiracy. Allen and Langley operated Cynthia Allen Servicing Company, LLC, and Candice Carene, Inc., respectively. Allen and Langley, who are Philadelphia, PA, residents, traveled to Minnesota in 2022 where they registered as Housing Stabilizations Services Program (HSS) providers, and they operated into the summer of 2025. Allen and Langley, along with other associates from the Philadelphia area, opened and operated their putatively separate companies together, including sharing office space, employees, and seeking out clients. Though they provided some services, both Langley and Allen substantially inflated their hours worked and otherwise falsified claims and supporting documentation in their submissions for payment from Minnesota Medicaid. Combined, those two companies claimed to provide HSS to almost 350 Medicaid beneficiaries for which Cynthia Allen billed approximately $2,516,025 and Candice Langley billed approximately $988,282, of which approximately $3,504,307 was paid. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant Chief Shankar Ramamurthy and Trial Attorney Brant Cook of the Midwest Strike Force, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Murphy of the District of Minnesota.
U.S. v. Abdulbasit Ibrahim and Mustafa Dayib
- Mustafa Dayib, 22, and Abdulbasit Ibrahim, 22, of Minneapolis, Minnesota, were charged by Information with health care fraud conspiracy. Together, Dayib and Ibrahim operated Vitality Health Services, LLC (Vitality). They enrolled Vitality in the HSS program and, between January 2023 and July 2025, submitted claims for services that were not rendered. For these false and fraudulent claims, they were paid approximately $975,000. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant Chief Shankar Ramamurthy of the Midwest Strike Force and Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Murphy of the District of Minnesota.
U.S. v. Fahima Mahamud
- Fahima Mahamud, 50, of Minneapolis, Minnesota, was charged by Information with one count of wire fraud and one count of conspiracy to defraud the United States, in connection with two schemes that resulted in the theft of $5,480,329 in Federal funds. As alleged in the Information, Mahamud owned Future Leaders Early Learning Center (Future Leaders), a childcare center and Federal Child Nutrition Program food site responsible for serving food to children. As alleged in the indictment, Mahamud submitted inflated reimbursement claims to Feeding Our Future for meals purportedly served to children at Future Leaders. Through these claims, Future Leaders obtained approximately $854,000 in Federal Child Nutrition Program funds. However, Mahamud only used a fraction of the reimbursements to purchase food. Instead, she diverted the funds to buy real estate. Separately, Future Leaders also submitted claims to the federally funded Child Care Assistance Program for reimbursement of childcare expenses. She repeatedly certified that she was collecting statutorily mandated co-payments, meant to ensure that families were paying their fair share of childcare expenses, but failed to do so. As a result, Future Leaders received approximately $4.6 million to which it was not entitled. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant Chief Shankar Ramamurthy of the Midwest Strike Force and Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Murphy of the District of Minnesota.
Get MHF Insights
News and tips for your healthcare freedom.
We never spam you. One-step unsubscribe.















