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(by William La Jeunesse, Fox News) – Ghost patients, sham companies, offshore owners and corrupt doctors. Auditors and prosecutors say hospice fraud in Los Angeles is off the charts, with providers scamming billions from taxpayers for patients that don’t exist, poor care and no care.
“Hospice is crazy here,” says Dr. Mehmet Oz, head of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
“You’ve got hospice that’s grown seven-fold in the last five years. They represent about three and a half billion dollars of fraud, we believe, just in LA County.”
Backing him up was California Attorney General Rob Bonta, a Democrat, who said last year, “Hospice fraud has become an epidemic in California, specifically in the greater Los Angeles area.”
Bonta says fraudulent providers submit false claims for unnecessary services, and recruiters get kickbacks for signing up seniors, whether they’re sick or not. Hospices also enroll patients who don’t even know they’ve been scammed until they seek out medical care.
“As a hospice owner, I could sign up everybody in this room for hospice,” an LA hospice owner told us.
A whistleblower told us there’s no limit on the number of hospices an individual can own, and applicants can live abroad.
“It’s all just paperwork. I could fill [an application] out in Kazakhstan if I want, and get a hospice license.”
He explained how the scam works:
- Recruiters go to shopping centers and senior centers to sign up patients, promising them walkers, a month’s supply of nutritional drinks, cash and weekly visits in exchange for a Medicare number.
- Recruiters then sell that “benny” or beneficiary’s Medicare number to a provider for a $1,000 to $3,000 and receive a cut for every month the senior stays on their rolls.
- Hospice enrollees are supposed to have a terminal illness or life expectancy of six months or less. But frequently hospice owners treat patients like trading cards, moving them from one provider to another if they stay too long, which raises a red flag with auditors.
- In the U.S., more than 50% of hospice patients die within 18 days or less. In LA, the average length of stay is more than three months, and, in many hospices, patients never die, with court records showing hospices billing the federal government for 18 months and more.
- In LA, a hospice is paid by the federal government $260 a day for each day a senior is under its care.
- Hospices can fraudulently obtain more money by “upcoding” and “unbundling” procedures to inflate invoices.
“A Medicare MIB number is more lucrative than a credit card,” says Sheila Clark, president of the California Hospice and Palliative Care Association, referring to the 11 character code each Medicare recipient has that allows federal reimbursement. “They’re human traffickers. They’re trafficking beneficiaries in and out of hospices, home health.”
LA County alone has 1,923 hospice providers. That’s more than 36 states combined and 33 times more than either Florida’s 58 cents or New York’s 40, even though LA has hundreds of thousands of fewer seniors.
“Eighteen percent of the whole country’s home health care billing is coming out of Los Angeles County,” says Oz. “How is that possible?”
The epicenter of LA’s fraud happens in the San Fernando Valley, specifically the Van Nuys neighborhood where state auditors found 210 hospice agencies within a square mile. One commercial building — without any signage indicating hospice services were located inside — received state licenses for 112 hospices. Fox News went to those addresses and did not see a single person.
At other locations in the valley, hospices operated inside strip malls alongside burrito stands, nail salons, dance studios, tax preparers and even an auto parts store and wrecking yard.
“These are Russian, Armenian gangs, mafia that are leading a lot of these efforts, we believe, have been able to corrupt, and work with doctors who are willing to lie,” says Oz.
Oz was referring to the dozens of defendants of Armenian American descent prosecuted for Medicare fraud at both the federal and state level.
Investigators first uncovered the international organized crime connection about 10 years ago when federal prosecutors charged 73 members and associates throughout the U.S. and Armenia of stealing $100 million from Medicare by using a series of phantom clinics to bill for thousands of unnecessary medical treatments.
Known as the Mirzoyan-Terdjanian crime ring, defendants received one- to three-year sentences for racketeering, health care fraud and money laundering. Since then, many other Armenian American hospice owners have been prosecuted in California.
California imposed a moratorium on new hospice licenses until it can clean up the industry. Problem is, hundreds of fraudulent providers remain in business, says Clark. And when seniors actually need care, they can’t get it because the hospice “owns” their Medicare numbers, prohibiting legitimate doctors and hospitals from providing care.
“They call the hospice, there’s no working phone number. There’s nobody there. I’ve had [medicare recipients] bang on the door. There is nobody there. What do they do? They say, ‘I didn’t enroll in this hospice.’ They need the care but can’t get it,” says Clark.
“We need to listen to these people when they say, ‘I’ve been scammed.'”
Published at Fox News on Jan. 30, 2026. Reprinted here for educational purposes only. May not be reproduced on other websites without permission.
Questions
NOTE TO STUDENTS: Before answering the questions, read the “Background” and watch the videos under “Resources.”
1. What is hospice (who uses it/for what purpose is it used?)
2. How much has hospice grown in the last five years in Los Angeles County? – How much of this is estimated to be fraud?
3. a) How did Democratic Attorney General Rob Bonta describe the hospice fraud in the greater Los Angeles area?
b) What do the fraudsters do?
4. a) According to a whistleblower, what two allowances are given to hospice owners that enable them to more easily commit fraud?
b) Do you think federal and every state should immediately end these allowances? Explain your answer.
5. a) How does the hospice fraud work?
b) What specific harm does this fraud cause to the seniors it deceptively signs up for hospice?
6. List the following statistics provided in the article or in the 1st news report (video) under “Resources”:
a) Number of hospice agencies in the Van Nuys neighborhood of the San Fernando Valley in Los Angeles County
b) The number of state licenses for hospice companies in one commercial building in Van Nuys
c) the number of hospice agencies in LA County compared to 36 other states combined
d) the number of hospice agencies in LA County compared to either Florida or New York. Why is this discrepancy significant?
e) the percent of home healthcare billing nationwide that is coming from Los Angeles County
f) Amount of government funding (taxpayer dollars) one doctor received in one year; and the number of patients he claimed to have overseen in that year
7. a) When was Medicare fraud by an Armenian international organized crime ring first discovered in the U.S.?
b) Why do you think this fraud is still so massive in California?
8. Following Dr. Oz’s revelation on the ongoing fraud, in which he stated, “These are Russian, Armenian gangs, mafia that are leading a lot of these efforts…,” California Gov. Gavin Newsom filed a civil rights complaint against Dr. Oz for “unfairly targeting the Armenian community.”
In his Fox News report, William La Jeunesse noted,
“The governor’s own auditor, state and federal prosecutors say Armenian-American organized crime is behind much of the fraud here and in 2022 auditors told the governor that weak state controls, a lack of guardrails and poor licensing created the situation causing the state to put a moratorium on new hospices and since then they have revoked about 280 licenses.”
a) How would you describe Gov. Newsom’s civil rights complaint against Dr. Oz? – sincere, helpful, self-serving, disingenuous, pandering… Explain your answer.
b) Gov. Newsom has been in office for over 7 years. Four years ago, auditors told the governor that the state’s policies had created the situation in which such widespread fraud was able to take place. Part of a governor’s job is to oversee state agencies. Should this fraud have been eliminated by now? Explain your answer.
9. Virtually all states require regular inspections of food-handling businesses (restaurants, grocery stores, food trucks, etc.) by state or local health department inspectors to enforce food safety codes.
If a state is going to give taxpayer dollars to a government program, it should insure there is no fraud.
a) For any state program that pays for services for people, what type of oversight should be required?
b) Do you think a state should ensure regular inspections are done for any social services programs that receive taxpayer dollars to fund the programs? Explain your answer.
Background
Medicare.gov warns seniors of fraud.
The most chilling aspect of the scam: the moment a senior is fraudulently enrolled in hospice, the medical system essentially “red-flags” them as someone who has opted out of all life-saving interventions (including emergency room treatment as well as routine doctor visits and most prescription medications). Because hospice is legally defined as “palliative” (comfort-only) care, the paperwork triggers a total freeze on Medicare coverage for anything else.
Why the Emergency Room or Doctor’s Office Can’t Just “Fix It”
The tragedy of this scam is that “dis-enrolling” from hospice isn’t as simple as making a phone call. It often takes days or weeks of administrative battling to prove the enrollment was fraudulent. During that window, the senior is effectively unable to receive any medical care that isn’t provided by the scammers themselves.
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