A Brooklyn Park couple were charged Thursday with swindling the state's Medicaid program out of nearly $1 million by allegedly submitting false claims for home care and nursing services.
The criminal complaint alleges that Sole Provider Nursing Services billed the state's Personal Care Assistance program (PCA) between 2006 and 2008 for home care of patients who were in the hospital and submitted claims for workers it didn't employ.
The PCA program, designed to help frail and elderly people stay in their homes, more than doubled in size during the past decade and became ripe for billing irregularities, according to a 2009 report by the Office of the Legislative Auditor.
The charges against Sole Provider also says the agency submitted bills showing care aides working more than 24 hours in a single day and, in one case, 42 hours a day for a week straight.
In all, it alleges overbilling of $975,295. Named in the complaint were Anita Gayle Soledolu, 39, owner of Sole Provider Nursing Services, and her husband, Stephen Adewale Soledolu, 32. The couple could not be reached.
Legislative Auditor James Nobles found hundreds of cases in which care agencies billed the state claiming that employees worked more than 24 hours in a day.
The Human Services Department subsequently changed its billing rules and placed limits on the hours that personal care attendants can work -- though a 2010 Star Tribune investigation found periodic breakdowns in enforcement of that rule.
The state Department of Human Services discovered irregularities in billings by Sole Provider Nursing Services in 2008 and froze its payments that year.