Department of Justice
Congressman Andy Biggs (R-AZ) is drawing attention to what he calls a staggering level of fraud in the country's healthcare system, and a recent federal sweep has given him plenty to point to.
Speaking in a recent interview with KTAR, Biggs cited figures suggesting as much as $2.5 billion a year in Medicaid fraud in Arizona alone, referencing estimates he attributed to Attorney General Kris Mayes (D-AZ).
He also highlighted a sweeping federal enforcement action that resulted in hundreds of arrests, with one of the largest fraud rings traced directly back to Arizona.
"The biggest ring came right out of Arizona," Biggs said, noting the scheme involved billions of dollars and details that were hard to believe. "I want to say it was like over $2 billion. And the mention of Maseratis and fancy vacations and stuff for a group of physicians."
This comes amid federal action by the Department of Justice's 2026 National Health Care Fraud Takedown, announced in June by U.S. Attorney Timothy Courchaine.
The operation resulted in charges against 455 defendants across 56 federal districts, including doctors and other licensed medical professionals, for alleged participation in fraud schemes involving more than $6.5 billion in false claims.
Furthermore, federal agents seized over $182 million in cash, luxury vehicles, jewelry, and other assets as part of the sweep.
Four defendants were charged specifically in the District of Arizona. Among the most significant Arizona cases was a Phoenix-based addiction treatment clinic operator accused of billing Arizona's Medicaid program more than $44 million for services that were either never provided or so substandard they served no treatment purpose.
The alleged victims included vulnerable Native American patients enrolled in a fee-for-service Medicaid program. Another case involved a $1.2 billion wound care scheme in which elderly and terminally ill patients, some in hospice care, were allegedly subjected to unnecessary medical procedures to generate fraudulent Medicare billing.
For Biggs, the takedown underscores a problem he believes demands sustained attention. "Most of what we were trying to really attack is the fraud and waste," he said, adding that significant work remains to be done in Arizona.
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