Two members of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU), Local 13, have been arrested on federal fraud charges that allege they caused two medical clinics to bill the union’s health care plan for chiropractic services that either were not provided or were not medically necessary.
Sergio Amador, 49, of Downey, and David Gomez, 52, of San Pedro, were arrested without incident by federal authorities. The two pleaded not guilty to mail fraud charges contained in an indictment that was returned by a federal grand jury. The indictment alleges that they received at least $225,000 from the fraudulent scheme and charges both defendants with 20 counts of mail fraud. If they are convicted, each would face a statutory maximum sentence of 20 years in federal prison for each count of mail fraud.
The ILWU represents dockworkers at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach. Members of the union receive benefits, including health care benefits, through the International Longshoremen’s and Warehousemen’s Union – Pacific Maritime Association Welfare Plan.
In 2009, Amador and Gomez opened a clinic in Long Beach operating under the name Port Medical that purported to provide general medical and chiropractic care. The next year, they opened a second clinic operating under the same name in San Pedro.
According to the indictment, Amador and Gomez also created medical management companies that they used to receive funds generated by the medical clinics, which were then used to pay themselves and to pay incentives to Welfare Plan members to use the Port Medical clinics and to encourage other Welfare Plan members to use them. The incentives allegedly included cash payments and sponsorships of sports teams.
The indictment alleges that when some Welfare Plan members went to the Port Medical clinics to receive chiropractic treatment, they were asked to sign their names on multiple sign-in stickers, while on other occasions Welfare Plan members’ signatures on sign-in stickers were forged. According to the indictment, Amador and Gomez then caused the sign-in stickers to be used to create chart entries that falsely indicated the Welfare Plan members had received chiropractic services on dates when no such services had been provided.
The indictment also alleges that Amador and Gomez encouraged Welfare Plan members to go to the Port Medical clinics to receive massages, heat and ice treatments and other services that were not medically necessary – while the patients’ medical charts falsely showed “that the services provided were medically necessary, addressed specific conditions of patients that had been properly diagnosed, and were used to support and facilitate chiropractic care.” Those services – and others never provided – then allegedly were billed to the Welfare Plan. Those bills also concealed that patients had been recruited through the use of cash payments or other incentives.