Former Nursing Home Executive Sentenced to Six
Years in Federal Prison and Ordered to Pay More
Than $11 Million Restitution
Last Defendant Sentenced in Case in Which All Defendants Were
Convicted of Various Offenses Related to Operation of Nursing Homes
FORT
WORTH, TX—Gary Trebert, 51, of Frisco, Texas,
a licensed attorney who pled guilty to various offenses
related to his operation of nursing homes in Texas
and elsewhere, was sentenced yesterday by U.S. District
Judge Terry R. Means to six years in prison, announced
U.S. Attorney Richard B. Roper of the Northern District
of Texas. In addition, Judge Means ordered that Trebert
pay approximately $11,650,000 in restitution. Trebert
was ordered to surrender to the Bureau of Prisons
on September 25, 2008.
Trebert pled guilty in February 2008 to conspiracy to defraud the government by obstructing and impeding lawful government functions of the IRS and HHS and tax evasion and aiding and abetting. He admitted that in April 2004, he attempted to evade and defeat the assessment and payment of more than $4,113,000 in withholding taxes taken out of employees' pay at 42 nursing homes he and his coconspirators controlled.
Trebert's
co-defendants, Stephen Michael Ewing and Larry Gordon
May, have been convicted and sentenced. A jury convicted
Stephen Michael Ewing, 60, of Bedford, Texas, in
March on one count of conspiracy, seven counts of
tax evasion, five counts of mail fraud, seven counts
of making false statements to government agencies,
and seven counts of making false statements regarding
health care. He was sentenced on July 30 to 10 years
and ordered to pay approximately $11 million restitution.
Larry Gordon May, 49, of Hurst, Texas, pled guilty
to his role in the conspiracy in October 2007 and
was sentenced in April to 48 months in prison and
is currently serving that sentence.
From
August 1999 to mid-May 2004, Trebert, along with
his co-defendants Ewing and May, conspired together,
and with others, to defraud the U.S. by impeding,
impairing, obstructing, and defeating the lawful
government functions of the Internal Revenue Service
(IRS) in the ascertainment, computation, assessment,
and collection of the revenue, that is, nursing facility
employees' withheld income taxes, social security
taxes, and Medicare taxes, and the Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS) in the administration
of the Social Security Act and the Medicare and Medicaid
programs.
Trebert
and his coconspirators, using the names of sham corporate
entities, obtained control of 70 licensed nursing
facilities with thousands of patient beds and thousands
of employees. In order to acquire control of these
facilities, Trebert, Ewing, and May used false statements
and false and fraudulent documents, including Applications
for Nursing Facility License and Medicaid Contracts,
Medicare Federal Provider Enrollment applications,
ownership documents, IRS Employer Identification
Number applications, Health Insurance Benefit Agreements,
and Electronic Fund Transfer forms. Their falsifications
included falsely identifying relatives as owners,
operators, and managers of the nursing homes on the
applications; failing to disclose staffing/payroll
companies on nursing home applications; failing to
disclose Ewing and May as the true owner/operators
of nursing homes; and forging names of individuals
on filed documents to divert responsibility away
from the three defendants. They used the false statements
and documents to hide from HHS, state licensing and
Medicaid agencies, and the IRS, the true control
and management of the nursing facilities, their responsibility
for more than $200 million in money derived from
the nursing homes, and their responsibility for the
nursing facilities' residents.
Both Trebert and May testified against Ewing at his trial. Trebert testified that he and Ewing repeatedly discussed the creation and the overseas payroll companies to interfere with IRS efforts to collect the payroll taxes. Trebert also testified that Ewing once boasted about having previously operated nursing homes without having to pay the payroll taxes. Larry May testified that Trebert and Ewing made him president of the company, even though he told them he was not qualified.
May
further testified that during some of the periods
covered by the Indictment he was making $10,000
to $25,000 per month for doing little more than signing
documents, including tax returns, and taking tax
returns to England to mail back to the IRS in the
U.S. More than 150 sham staffing/payroll entities,
many with foreign business addresses at drop boxes
in England and Austria, were created to file Form
941 employer withholding tax returns with the IRS,
preventing the IRS from assessing and attempting
to collect more than $34 million of unpaid payroll
tax liabilities from Trebert, Ewing, and May, and
creating the appearance that these sham staffing/payroll
entities employed more than 4500 nursing facility
employees, when they did not.
The defendants diverted to themselves and their personal activities substantial sums of money derived from their nursing home operations and from the non-payment of employees' withheld payroll taxes. At trial, the government presented evidence that, during the period covered by the Indictment, Ewing spent more than $2.5 million in money derived from the nursing home operations on his personal expenses. The total expenditures included more than $200,000 at department stores such as Saks Fifth Avenue, and more than $250,000 on automobiles.
U.S.
Attorney Roper praised the investigative efforts
by federal and state agencies including, IRS - Criminal
Investigation, HHS - Office of Inspector General,
FBI, U.S. Postal Inspection Service, Texas Office
of the Attorney General - Medicaid Fraud Control
Unit, and state agencies from Kansas, Iowa, Oklahoma,
and Virginia. The case was prosecuted by Assistant
U.S. Attorneys Ron Eddins and Alan Buie.
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