Accu Reference and other private NY/NJ lab

anonymous

Guest
These labs are participating in a plan to get specimens through the current representatives of Quest Diagnostic. They in some cases are not getting paid right now and will get the money as sign on bonuses. Others might be getting paid from other corporations that are owned by the current lab owners. The corporate leadership needs to pull all specimen and revenue reports going back to December 2017 and compare each representative (former Shiel Medical Laboratory Reps) thru present time. You will notice The reps who went to Sherman have most of their accounts with them.
Other reps were a little more sneaky, they are working with multiple labs so you may not catch on.
Obviously you know that through Civil court, you are able to use a subpoena with enough evidence to show judge so they grant that. This can and will Be easily done.

Don't let these individuals take advantage of a large publicly traded company.
 


















This is the medical practice that ultimately made Constantine Bas ( owner of Accuracies Reference) plead guilty. This place has "good bones" I guess.


Pain Management Physician Convicted On Charges Of Accepting Kickbacks And Submitting Fraudulent Bills For Anesthesia Services
Practice CFO, Diagnostic Testing Laboratory Owner and CEO, and Testing Lab Marketing Agent Previously Pled Guilty to Related Charges


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact ELIZABETH MORSE

www.justice.gov/usao/md at (410) 209-4855


Baltimore, Maryland – On October 27, 2017, following a thirteen-day trial, a federal jury convicted Atif Babar Malik, age 48, of Germantown, Maryland, on 26 felony counts arising from two criminal schemes that involved referring patients’ urine toxicology specimens to a New Jersey diagnostic testing lab in return for $1.376 million in kickbacks and fraudulently billing for anesthesia services provided in connection with spinal nerve block injections. Malik was convicted on one count of conspiracy to violate the federal Anti-Kickback Act and the Travel Act; 12 counts of violating the Anti-Kickback Act; three counts of violating the Travel Act; six counts of health care fraud; and three counts of making false entries in patients’ medical records.


Malik’s convictions were announced by Acting United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Stephen M. Schenning; Special Agent in Charge Gordon Johnson of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Baltimore Field Office; and Special Agent in Charge Nicholas DiGiulio, Office of Investigations, Office of Inspector General of the Department of Health and Human Services; Special Agent in Charge Kimberly Lappin of the Internal Revenue Service - Criminal Investigation, Washington, D.C. Field Office; Special Agent in Charge Robert E. Craig Jr. of the Defense Criminal Investigative Service - Mid-Atlantic Field Office; and Special Agent in Charge Drew Grimm of the Office of Personnel Management – Office of Inspector General.


Malik was one of six defendants who were charged in connection with the kickback or fraudulent billing schemes. His practice co-owner and co-defendant Sandeep Sherlekar, age 52, of Germantown, Maryland, was also charged with participating in the referrals-for-kickbacks conspiracy and the fraudulent anesthesia billing scheme, as well as with making false entries in patients’ medical records. Following the return of the original indictment in late June 2016, Sherlekar committed suicide shortly before his scheduled initial appearance and arraignment in early October 2016.


Konstantin Bas, age 41, of Brooklyn, New York, the former owner and Chief Executive Officer of a Linden, New Jersey-based diagnostic testing lab known as Accu Reference; Mubtagha Shah Syed, age 50, of Jersey City, New Jersey, who worked as a marketer for Accu Reference; and Vic Wadhwa, 39, of Frederick, Maryland, the Chief Financial Officer (CFO) of Malik’s and Sherlekar’s medical practice, all previously pled guilty to charges of conspiring to violate the Anti-Kickback Act or to an individual charge of violating the Anti-Kickback Act, and are currently awaiting sentencing. Muhammad Ahmad Khan, age 44, the Chief Administrative Officer of Drs. Malik’s and Sherlekar’s practice, who was also charged in connection with the kickbacks and Travel Act conspiracy, is a fugitive and is believed to be in Pakistan.



Dr. Malik is a physician trained in pain management and Dr. Sherlekar was trained in both pain management and in anesthesiology. The two merged their pain management practices in February 2009 to create Advanced Pain Management Services, LLC (APMS), which initially had three offices in Maryland and one in New Jersey, but that later expanded to as many as ten offices. In August 2010, APMS began doing business under the name of American Spine Center, LLC (APMS/ASC). Khan was the CEO of APMS/ASC and co-conspirator Vic Wadhwa was its CFO.


APMS/ASC physicians periodically required patients who were prescribed controlled substances as pain relief medications to submit urine specimens for testing as means of monitoring the levels of pain medication or other narcotics in their bodies. According to evidence presented at trial, in the late winter of 2011, Accu Reference’s marketing agent Mubtagha Syed proposed to Khan and Wadhwa that APMS/ASC discontinue using its current testing lab and start referring its patients’ urine toxicology specimens to Accu Reference in return for the payment of kickbacks. After Drs. Malik and Sherlekar approved the plan, which also came to include back braces from another Bas-controlled company, APMS/ASC began submitting all of its patients’ urine specimens to Accu Reference in April 2011.


Starting in the late spring of 2011 and continuing through the end of July 2012, APMS/ASC each month referred between 700 to as many as 1,300 patient urine specimens to Accu Reference for testing in return for the payment of kickbacks. Accu Reference submitted claims for performing diagnostic tests on these specimens to Medicare and various private insurers for reimbursement, receiving in return approximately $4.4 million in payments. After deducting its overhead expenses on the testing, Accu Reference split its profits 50/50 with Khan, Wadhwa, Sherlekar, and Malik. (Syed also received a share of Accu Reference’s profits.) From the time the kickback payments commenced in June 2011 until the end of the scheme in August 2012, Bas caused his companies to pay kickbacks totaling $1.376 million to Sherlekar, Malik, Khan and Wadhwa. Khan and Wadhwa deceived Drs. Sherlekar and Malik about the full amount of the kickback payments Accu Reference was paying, however, and thus were able to retain more than 60% of the kickback payments for themselves. Drs. Sherlekar and Malik each received approximately $240,000 in kickback funds before the scheme came to an end in the late summer of 2012.


Among the services APMS/ASC provided to its patients were diagnostic or therapeutic nerve blocks and injections in connection with spinal conditions, which were often provided in conjunction with anesthesia. If two physicians were present during a surgical procedure, with one performing the surgical procedure and the other administering the anesthesia, then the anesthesiologist could bill separately for the anesthesia service. However, if a single surgeon or anesthesiologist was alone in the procedure room and administered the anesthesia while also performing the surgical procedure, then the anesthesia service could not be billed as a separate charge, but was instead treated as included within the fee established for the surgical procedure.


According to evidence presented by the government at trial, during the period from January 2010 through the summer of 2012, it was relatively common for only one physician at APMS/ASC to both perform the spinal injection and administer the anesthesia. In a number of these cases, APMS/ASC then submitted bills to Medicare and private insurers using a billing code that represented that two separate physicians had respectively provided the nerve block and the anesthesia, and as a result received a higher level of reimbursement. For example, evidence presented by prosecutors demonstrated that on January 3, 2012, a date when Dr. Sherlekar alone provided both spinal injections and anesthesia to a large number of patients at APMS/ASC’s Frederick office, he advised Dr. Malik by text that “I am using your name today as surgeon as we have 34 procedures here [in Frederick] and 20 in Waldorf,” to which Malik responded “ok,” although he was seeing patients at his office in Hackettstown, New Jersey that day, more than 200 miles from Frederick.


In addition to the kickback-related and health care fraud and false medical records charges that were at issue in this trial, the Court has severed out for a separate trial another count of the indictment that charged Drs. Malik and Sherlekar with conspiring to defraud the IRS by not reporting as income cash payments received by APMS/ASC, and by filing false corporate tax returns that overstated the practice’s expenses and understated its revenues. This count is currently scheduled to go to trial in February 2018.


Malik faces potential maximum sentences of 10 years in prison for each of his six health care fraud convictions; five years in prison for conspiring to violate the Anti-Kickback Act and the Travel Act; five years in prison for each of the three Travel Act convictions and for the three counts of making false statements on patients’ medical records; and two years in prison for each of his 12 convictions on charges of soliciting and receiving health-care related kickbacks. His actual sentencing range will be calculated using the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, however, and the Court will have a wide range of discretion in imposing sentence.


Acting United States Attorney Stephen M. Schenning commended the FBI; the Department of Health and Human Services – Office of the Inspector General (HHS-OIG); the IRS - Criminal Investigation Division; and the Defense Criminal Investigative Service and the Office of Personnel Management – Office of the Inspector General (OPM-OIG) for their work on the investigation. Mr. Schenning also thanked Assistant U.S. Attorneys Jefferson M. Gray and Sean R. Delaney, who led the investigation and tried the case against Dr. Malik.
 












Officially a convicted felon. I guess maybe the next guy who takes it over might just find themselves facing problems.

CEO of Lab Testing Company and Marketing Representative Sentenced to Federal Prison in Pain Management Clinic Kickback Scheme
Baltimore, Maryland – Chief U.S. District Judge James K. Bredar sentenced Konstantin Bas, age 41, of Brooklyn, New York, and co-conspirator Mubtagha Shah Syed, age 49, of Jersey City, New Jersey, today to a year and a day, and three months in prison, respectively, each followed by three years of supervised release, for a scheme in which a Maryland pain management practice referred urine specimens to Bas’s testing lab in return for $1.37 million in kickbacks. Chief Judge Bredar also ordered Bas to forfeit $241,600 and to pay a fine of $5,000. Chief Judge Bredar ordered that Syed serve the first three months of his supervised release in home detention with electronic monitoring, and ordered that Syed forfeit $23,400 and pay a fine of $4,000.

The sentences were announced by United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Robert K. Hur; Special Agent in Charge Gordon Johnson of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Baltimore Field Office; Special Agent in Charge Maureen Dixon, Office of Investigations, Office of Inspector General of the Department of Health and Human Services; Acting Special Agent in Charge Kelly R. Jackson of the Internal Revenue Service - Criminal Investigation, Washington, D.C. Field Office; Special Agent in Charge Robert E. Craig, Jr. of the Defense Criminal Investigative Service - Mid-Atlantic Field Office; and Special Agent in Charge Bret D. Mastronardi, Investigative Operations, U.S. Office of Personnel Management Office of the Inspector General.

According to their plea agreements and other court documents, Bas was the owner and CEO of Accu Reference, a medical testing laboratory with corporate offices in New Jersey. In late 2010 or early 2011, Bas began using Mubtagha Shah Syed to market Accu Reference’s services. In February 2011, Syed had a meeting with Muhammad Ahmad Khan, the chief administrative officer (CAO) of a group of Maryland-based pain management medical clinics that were incorporated as Advanced Pain Management Services but that operated under the name of American Spine Center (APMS/ASC). The clinics were owned and operated by Drs. Atif Malik and Sandeep Sherlekar. APMS/ASC required patients who were prescribed pain relief medications to submit urine samples for testing in order to monitor the levels of pain medication or other narcotics in their bodies.

During their February 2011 meeting, Syed and Khan discussed the possibility of APMS/ASC referring its patients’ urine toxicology specimens to Accu Reference for testing in return for the payment of kickbacks. Khan discussed the plan with Malik and Sherlekar who assigned Vic Wadhwa, APMS/ASC’s Chief Financial Officer (CFO), to conduct additional discussions concerning the arrangement. Syed arranged for a meeting between Bas and Wadhwa during which they agreed that Accu Reference’s profits from the urine toxicology tests would be equally divided between Accu Reference and APMS/ASC personnel. In addition, Bas agreed to pay Syed a 5% share of the proceeds for his role in putting the transaction together. Unknown to Bas, Wadhwa told Malik and Sherlekar that he and Bas had agreed on a figure of $35 per specimen cup for the kickbacks, which was significantly lower than the amount of the kickbacks Bas would actually be paying under his agreement with Wadhwa. This allowed Wadhwa and Khan to skim off approximately 60% of the kickback payments for themselves. Starting in the spring of 2011, APMS/ASC also referred patients for back braces to another company that Bas operated, in exchange for kickbacks to APMS/ASC.

Each month from April 2011 through July 2012, APMS/ASC referred between 700 and 1,300 patient urine specimens to Accu Reference in return for kickbacks. Accu Reference received approximately $4.4 million in payments from claims submitted to Medicare and private insurers for testing the specimens submitted by APMS. Bas caused his companies to pay kickbacks totaling approximately $1.37 million to Wadhwa and his co-conspirators.

Co-Defendants:
Sandeep Sherlekar, age 52, of Germantown, Maryland, died before his scheduled initial
appearance and arraignment. The charges were dismissed after his death.

Atif Babar Malik, age 48, of Germantown, Maryland, was sentenced to eight years in prison,
followed by three years of supervised release. The sentence was imposed for his trial
conviction on 26 counts arising from the $1.376 million kickbacks scheme and a fraudulent
billing scheme, as well as his guilty plea to a conspiracy to defraud the United States of more
than $2.1 million in taxes. Malik was also ordered to pay a fine of $75,000; to pay restitution
of $175,000; and to forfeit $241,976.

Vic Wadhwa, 41, of Frederick, Maryland, pleaded guilty to violating the Anti-Kickback Act.
Scheduled to be sentenced on September 26, 2018 at 4:00 p.m.

Muhammad Ahmad Khan, age 44, charged with the kickbacks conspiracy and conspiracy to
defraud the United States. He is a fugitive.

United States Attorney Robert K. Hur commended the FBI, the Department of Health and Human Services – OIG, IRS - Criminal Investigation, the Defense Criminal Investigative Service, and the Office of Personnel Management – OIG for their work in the investigation. Mr. Hur also thanked Assistant U.S. Attorneys Jefferson M. Gray and Sean Delaney, who prosecuted the case.
 
























  1. Officially a convicted felon. I guess maybe the next guy who takes it over might just find themselves facing problems.

    CEO of Lab Testing Company and Marketing Representative Sentenced to Federal Prison in Pain Management Clinic Kickback Scheme
    Baltimore, Maryland – Chief U.S. District Judge James K. Bredar sentenced Konstantin Bas, age 41, of Brooklyn, New York, and co-conspirator Mubtagha Shah Syed, age 49, of Jersey City, New Jersey, today to a year and a day, and three months in prison, respectively, each followed by three years of supervised release, for a scheme in which a Maryland pain management practice referred urine specimens to Bas’s testing lab in return for $1.37 million in kickbacks. Chief Judge Bredar also ordered Bas to forfeit $241,600 and to pay a fine of $5,000. Chief Judge Bredar ordered that Syed serve the first three months of his supervised release in home detention with electronic monitoring, and ordered that Syed forfeit $23,400 and pay a fine of $4,000.

    The sentences were announced by United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Robert K. Hur; Special Agent in Charge Gordon Johnson of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Baltimore Field Office; Special Agent in Charge Maureen Dixon, Office of Investigations, Office of Inspector General of the Department of Health and Human Services; Acting Special Agent in Charge Kelly R. Jackson of the Internal Revenue Service - Criminal Investigation, Washington, D.C. Field Office; Special Agent in Charge Robert E. Craig, Jr. of the Defense Criminal Investigative Service - Mid-Atlantic Field Office; and Special Agent in Charge Bret D. Mastronardi, Investigative Operations, U.S. Office of Personnel Management Office of the Inspector General.

    According to their plea agreements and other court documents, Bas was the owner and CEO of Accu Reference, a medical testing laboratory with corporate offices in New Jersey. In late 2010 or early 2011, Bas began using Mubtagha Shah Syed to market Accu Reference’s services. In February 2011, Syed had a meeting with Muhammad Ahmad Khan, the chief administrative officer (CAO) of a group of Maryland-based pain management medical clinics that were incorporated as Advanced Pain Management Services but that operated under the name of American Spine Center (APMS/ASC). The clinics were owned and operated by Drs. Atif Malik and Sandeep Sherlekar. APMS/ASC required patients who were prescribed pain relief medications to submit urine samples for testing in order to monitor the levels of pain medication or other narcotics in their bodies.

    During their February 2011 meeting, Syed and Khan discussed the possibility of APMS/ASC referring its patients’ urine toxicology specimens to Accu Reference for testing in return for the payment of kickbacks. Khan discussed the plan with Malik and Sherlekar who assigned Vic Wadhwa, APMS/ASC’s Chief Financial Officer (CFO), to conduct additional discussions concerning the arrangement. Syed arranged for a meeting between Bas and Wadhwa during which they agreed that Accu Reference’s profits from the urine toxicology tests would be equally divided between Accu Reference and APMS/ASC personnel. In addition, Bas agreed to pay Syed a 5% share of the proceeds for his role in putting the transaction together. Unknown to Bas, Wadhwa told Malik and Sherlekar that he and Bas had agreed on a figure of $35 per specimen cup for the kickbacks, which was significantly lower than the amount of the kickbacks Bas would actually be paying under his agreement with Wadhwa. This allowed Wadhwa and Khan to skim off approximately 60% of the kickback payments for themselves. Starting in the spring of 2011, APMS/ASC also referred patients for back braces to another company that Bas operated, in exchange for kickbacks to APMS/ASC.

    Each month from April 2011 through July 2012, APMS/ASC referred between 700 and 1,300 patient urine specimens to Accu Reference in return for kickbacks. Accu Reference received approximately $4.4 million in payments from claims submitted to Medicare and private insurers for testing the specimens submitted by APMS. Bas caused his companies to pay kickbacks totaling approximately $1.37 million to Wadhwa and his co-conspirators.

    Co-Defendants:
    Sandeep Sherlekar, age 52, of Germantown, Maryland, died before his scheduled initial
    appearance and arraignment. The charges were dismissed after his death.

    Atif Babar Malik, age 48, of Germantown, Maryland, was sentenced to eight years in prison,
    followed by three years of supervised release. The sentence was imposed for his trial
    conviction on 26 counts arising from the $1.376 million kickbacks scheme and a fraudulent
    billing scheme, as well as his guilty plea to a conspiracy to defraud the United States of more
    than $2.1 million in taxes. Malik was also ordered to pay a fine of $75,000; to pay restitution
    of $175,000; and to forfeit $241,976.

    Vic Wadhwa, 41, of Frederick, Maryland, pleaded guilty to violating the Anti-Kickback Act.
    Scheduled to be sentenced on September 26, 2018 at 4:00 p.m.

    Muhammad Ahmad Khan, age 44, charged with the kickbacks conspiracy and conspiracy to
    defraud the United States. He is a fugitive.

    United States Attorney Robert K. Hur commended the FBI, the Department of Health and Human Services – OIG, IRS - Criminal Investigation, the Defense Criminal Investigative Service, and the Office of Personnel Management – OIG for their work in the investigation. Mr. Hur also thanked Assistant U.S. Attorneys Jefferson M. Gray and Sean Delaney, who prosecuted the case.

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  2. #7Nov 12, 2018 at 9:38 PM
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  3. #8Nov 15, 2018 at 11:40 AM
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  4. #9Nov 15, 2018 at 6:49 PM
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If the shoe fits wear it!

Old Tappan will Be Pres while the convict is away

Bring the Ferrari President and the poet for business

The Port Washington asst. to keep up with the paperwork

The IT crew making sure the physicians are all smiles

The New jersey crew is family they know to much so we bring them along

PERFECTO
 


















If the shoe fits wear it!

Old Tappan will Be Pres while the convict is away

Bring the Ferrari President and the poet for business

The Port Washington asst. to keep up with the paperwork

The IT crew making sure the physicians are all smiles

The New jersey crew is family they know to much so we bring them along

PERFECTO
 












That maybe true but they have plenty of money behind them.The lab industry is not what it once was.The burger business will always be great.The entire medical industry is not what it once was. There is no more money to be made that is why all the activities that the labs are doing is questionable.The fries are still making money. Hope this helps
 






























Does everyone remember this one? Absolutely hilarious, I guess you are going to one of those "crooked labs" Will the grass be greener?
You are complete phony and will pay dearly for that!!!

Constantine Bas pleaded guilty to paying off physicians for lab specimens, FACT!! Now you are leaving Quest for the same type of company you originally worked for and the new one, Accureference.

You phony fool!!!!!!




Disgruntled much??? You bash the director of IT!!! You assholes. Do you think it is hard to crack an IP address and see who is posting all of this bullshit? Didn't think of that one did you! You all can be fired for posting confidential company information.
Are things so bad at Shiel...really? Shiel has the might of a $32B company behind you, on par with all the insurances (about 90% of them), never have a rep quit and have the ability to never lose an account. Maybe I should go hit on some of your accounts since you guys are so disgruntled. With all the time you are posting on this stupid forum, you cannot possibly be seeing your accounts. Maybe you guys need the backing of a crooked lab that puts phlebs in offices in NY and provides EMRs for free. Go see if the grass is greener. I dare you.

And some of you shouldn't be posting here unless you have > $3mil in business. Only then do you have the right to complain.