AUGUSTA, GA (WFXG) -
Jeffrey Sponseller, 47, of Augusta, Georgia pleaded
guilty today before United States District Court Judge J. Randal Hall to
submitting over $800,000 in fraudulent claims to Medicare.
Evidence presented at today's guilty plea hearing showed that Sponseller, an
optometrist and an owner of Eye Care One, located at 3152 Washington Road in
Augusta, Georgia, submitted claims to Medicare for payment for eye examinations
of nursing home patients. Instead of billing Medicare for the actual
service he was providing at the nursing homes, Sponseller claimed that he was
conducting the most expensive type of eye examination which typically lasts 45
minutes. An example of this health care fraud presented at today's guilty
plea hearing involved a July 27, 2009 visit by Sponseller to a nursing home in
Americus, Georgia where Sponseller billed Medicare for 177 patients that he
claimed to have examined individually for 45 minutes each during that one-day
visit. As a result this type of fraudulent billing, Medicare paid Sponseller for that type of eye exam more than any other doctor in the United
States in 2009.
United States Attorney Edward J. Tarver said, "Health care fraud is a cancer on
the financial health of our nation. In many cases, such as with this
Defendant, it is committed by professionals who are well educated and highly
regarded. Whether that fraud is perpetrated by an optometrist
willing to claim that he worked the equivalent of 5½ days during a one-day
visit to a nursing home – like this defendant did – or a medical equipment
supplier that bills Medicare without authorization, the ultimate injury is to
the American taxpayer. The United States Attorney's Office and it's law
enforcement partners will actively pursue those who abuse our country's health
care programs for financial gain."
Derrick L. Jackson, Special Agent in Charge of the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services, Office of Inspector General for the Atlanta region, said,
"Any time false claims are submitted for payment, our nation's health insurance
programs and beneficiaries suffer. Protecting precious Medicare funds
remains a top priority for the Inspector General and our law enforcement
partners."
Sponseller faces a maximum penalty of five years imprisonment and a fine of up
to $250,000, in addition to paying restitution. The date for SPONSELLER's
sentencing hearing has not yet been scheduled.
FBI Special Agents Paul Kubala and Jason Gustin, U.S. Attorney's Office
Investigator Kimberly Reinken, HHS-OIG Special Agent David Graupner, and IRS
Special Agents Roger Garland and Jeffrey Hale participated in the investigation
of this case. Assistant United States Attorney David Stewart is
prosecuting in this case.