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BioWorld - Monday, April 27, 2026
Home » Anti-Kickback Statute

Articles Tagged with ''Anti-Kickback Statute''

U.S. Capitol building, Washington D.C.

OIG OKs doc ownership in device firm up to 40%

Sep. 10, 2025
By Mark McCarty
Physician ownership of medical device manufacturers can be tricky stuff where the Anti-Kickback Statute is concerned, but the Office of Inspector General recently declared it had no problem with one such arrangement due to the physician’s ratio of ownership of the company.
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Gears with regulatory words

OIG won’t oppose drugmaker payment for companion diagnostic

July 11, 2025
By Mark McCarty
Companies in the life sciences must tread carefully when it comes to the Anti-Kickback Statute, but a recent advisory opinion by the Office of Inspector General lends little clarity on the point.
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Spinefrontier CEO enters guilty plea for false statement

May 20, 2025
By Mark McCarty
The U.S. Department of Justice said the CEO of Spinefrontier Inc., Kingsley Chin, entered a guilty plea in connection with allegations that he made false statements about payments made to surgeons for consulting work the physicians did not perform.
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U.S. flag on columned building

Davita to pay $34.5 million to settle allegations of violation of AKS

July 22, 2024
By Mark McCarty
Denver-based Davita Inc. agreed to pay more than $34 million to settle allegations that the company violated the Anti-Kickback Statute (AKS) by not collecting management fees from physicians to induce referrals to the company’s dialysis clinics.
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Architectural pillars

US court sees fines levied on Precision Lens as unconstitutional

Feb. 20, 2024
By Mark McCarty
The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) announced in May 2023 that it had obtained a judgment of more than $487 million against the parent company of Precision Lens for alleged violations of the False Claims Act (FCA), but the amount of that decision has been overturned. In a Feb. 8 decision, the U.S. District Court for the District of Minnesota decreed that the judgment be reduced to less than $217 million, an outcome which suggests that some of the more excessive fines levied against health care companies will be viewed with more skepticism upon appeal.
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Gavel with whistle

DOJ pursues cardiac PET scan company for induced referrals

Feb. 6, 2024
By Mark McCarty
Fraud on federal health programs often revolves around illicit billings for in vitro diagnostics, but the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has added mobile cardiac positron emission tomography (PET) to the list of technologies that have been used to violate the law.
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Architectural pillars

US enforcement in life sciences off to robust start in 2024

Jan. 22, 2024
By Mark McCarty
One of the more significant enforcement actions to date in 2024 is the $13 million hit taken by the owner of a clinical lab in New Jersey for allegations of payment of kickbacks for unnecessary testing, suggesting that this new year will be a robust one for federal fraud enforcement in the U.S.
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Gavel and scales

US-based distributor hit with $487M judgment in False Claims Act case

May 17, 2023
By Mark McCarty
The U.S. Department of Justice announced that a judgment of more than $487 million has been lodged against Cameron-Ehlen Group Inc., of Bloomington, Minn., for alleged violations of the False Claims Act (FCA) in connection with the company’s distribution of products used in cataract surgeries. That final amount is more than 10 times the amount alleged to have been billed illicitly to federal health programs, a clear signal that inducement of this sort will be met with severe penalties.
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Depuy Synthes agrees to nearly $10M hit over self-reported inducement

Jan. 24, 2023
By Mark McCarty
Depuy Synthes Inc., of Raynham, Mass., has agreed to pay $9.75 million to settle allegations that several members of its sales team had induced an orthopedic surgeon to use the company’s products in orthopedic procedures by offering free implants and surgical instruments. The fine comes under the guise of a False Claims Act violation but might have been substantially larger but for the fact that Depuy reported the issue to federal authorities.
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Letter blocks with the word fraud in red

DOJ slaps EHR vendor with $45M in fines as part of program to ‘root out fraud’

Nov. 2, 2022
By Mark McCarty
The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) reported that it has arrived at a settlement of $45 million with Boca Raton, Fla.-based Modernizing Medicine Inc., an electronic health record (EHR) vendor that was accused of inducing referrals to a clinical lab for pathology services. The department stated that this settlement was the fourth such action against EHR vendors and is part of a concerted DOJ effort to “root out fraud” in the field, a signal that more enforcement against these companies is in the works.
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