This is not just a typical white-collar case
Posted by Patti on October 30th, 2006 / Print This Post
A nursing home owners pleads for mercy.
Pleading for mercy in a shaking voice, Martha F. Bell testified that she was ultimately responsible for conditions at the nursing home she once ran and would accept whatever sentence a federal judge imposed on her.An hour later, after U.S. District Judge Terrence F. McVerry ordered her to serve five years in prison and pay $50,000 in fines, Mrs. Bell insisted that she’d provided good care to residents and did not deserve jail time.
As she’s done since her conviction for defrauding Medicare and Medicaid and on other charges last year, she contended yesterday that she did not receive a fair trial because the court did not permit her to introduce records and evidence. She said she would appeal.
It’s pretty hard to defend a case against fraud- since those acts are pretty easy to fact check.
She also blamed former employees for providing shoddy care and faking medical records, saying they duped her into believing they were carrying out her dream of operating a model facility for people with Alzheimer’s disease.“I don’t believe I did anything wrong. I believe I trusted people and asked them to tell me the truth,” said Mrs. Bell, 60, of West Mifflin. “Those people all knew how much I wanted them [to do] for the patients. They have to sleep with their consciences.”
She tries to pass the buck, but it doesn’t stand because she is responsible. That’s what being the boss is all about. She knew what she wanted and had a vision; she should have made sure it was happening instead of depending upon the words of others.
Mrs. Bell was convicted in August 2005 of one count of health care fraud and eight counts of making false statements for her actions as founder and administrator of the defunct Ronald Reagan Atrium I Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Robinson. The state closed the facility in 2004.
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Weeping on the witness stand, Mrs. Bell told Judge McVerry she never meant to hurt anyone and feared developing Alzheimer’s disease or a reoccurrence of breast cancer in prison. But the judge noted that she’d shown no remorse and denied her request to remain free on bail during her appeal.
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Prosecutors accused Mrs. Bell and Atrium of defrauding Medicare and Medicaid of more than $7 million and making false statements to hide that fraud between 1999 and 2003. They charged that Mrs. Bell and Atrium accepted and spent money from the health care programs, then faked thousands of medical and financial records to conceal failure to provide appropriate care as required.Mrs. Bell also was accused of diverting funds from Atrium to other nonprofit organizations that she headed to supplement her salary, which reached nearly $1 million between 1999 and 2002.
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“This was a scheme that dramatically impacted people’s lives,” Ms. Buchanan said, noting testimony about how Atrium residents endured injuries, medication errors and lack of adequate food and treatments.Mrs. Bell ran up thousands of dollars in restaurant meals and personal expenses on corporate credit cards while seeking to cut Atrium’s food budget to less than $3 a person per week, Assistant U.S. Attorney Leo Dillon said. He acknowledged defense attorneys’ arguments that Mrs. Bell had built a “beautiful facility” but said greed destroyed it and harmed vulnerable residents.
“This is not just a typical white-collar case,” he said. “People were hurt.”
We have to many loopholes in the system and although this owner was caught, how many others are doing these same things that no one is aware of? How many residents and patients are still being harmed because of malicious act ivies like this?











