Tag: organization
How Trump Promoted A Multi-Billion Dollar Medicare Fraud

How Trump Promoted A Multi-Billion Dollar Medicare Fraud

One of the largest Medicare fraud schemes in program history began to unravel several years ago when accountable care organizations created under the Affordable Care Act began noticing most of their savings, which they share with taxpayers, were vanishing due to the exorbitant cost of a single product — wound care bandages made mostly from dried placenta cells.

By April 2024, the National Association of Accountable Care Organizations (NAACOS) had enough data to notify the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) about the outlandish sums being paid to physicians using “skin substitute” bandages for wound care instead of traditional bandages. The physicians, who purchased the skin substitutes at a steep discount from manufacturers, were billing ACOs at the list price and pocketing the difference.

Some patients were racking up millions of dollars for the skin substitutes used to cover their diabetic sores and other hard-to-heal wounds. According to a letter NAACOS sent to a Medicare payment contractor in June 2024, “the skin substitutes have been provided to patients who are poor candidates for specialty wound care, including hospice patients receiving significant wound care in the last three days of life, patients with inability to off-load pressure or transport without force, and patients who are unable to maintain adequate nutrition.”

This lucrative scheme for physicians was providing even larger profits for their manufacturers, almost all of which are privately-owned. Using loopholes in the law, they began charging an average of more than $6,000 per square inch for skin substitute bandages. Some products reaching over $21,000, according to a New York Times investigation in April.

Five years ago, the highest priced skin substitute bandages on the market was only $1,045 per square inch. Medicare spending on skin substitute bandages soared from about $250 million in 2019 to more than $10 billion in 2024, according to CMS.

The Biden rule

After NAACOS alerted CMS to the alleged fraud, the Biden administration began crafting a new rule that would sharply lower the maximum price paid the firms selling the expensive bandages. It also limited payments to physicians who used skin substitute bandages purchased from firms that had generated medical evidence showing they improved wound care better than much cheaper standard bandages. Many firms in the field produce no such studies since the bandages do not require FDA approval beyond meeting sterility standards. The rule was slated to go into effect this past February.

That when the Trump regime sprang into action. The rule was delayed until April 13 as part of its blanket regulatory freeze. Then, in March, Trump issued a post on his Truth Social site claiming: “‘Crooked Joe’ rammed through a policy that would create more suffering and death for diabetic patients on Medicare” — an echo of the industry’s false claims.

How did Trump know anything about an issue that at that point still had not appeared on the mainstream media’s radar screen? Last fall, when the Biden rule was in the works, San Antonio-based Extremity Care, one of the largest firms in the skin substitute field, donated $2 million to MAGA Inc., the super PAC supporting Trump’s election campaign. In February, according to post this week by journalist Judd Legum on the substack Popular Information, Extremity Care donated another $5 million to MAGA Inc.

In April, the day after publication of the Times exposé, Dr. Mehmet Oz's CMS postponed enactment of the new rule until 2026. This allowed companies to continue selling at high prices for at least another eight months.

Then, three weeks ago, the Trump regime reversed field and included a price limit for skin substitutes in the physician payment rule for 2026. The proposal sets a maximum price of $806 per square inch. “We’re making it easier for seniors to access preventive services, incentivizing health care providers to deliver real results and cracking down on abuse that drives up costs,” Oz said in a statement.

What Texans do when they’re not gerrymandering

However, nothing the Trump regime says should be taken at face value. As Legum reported, the new rule does not limit limit coverage to products that are scientifically proven to be effective. Moreover, the $806 price is higher than what many reputable firms in the industry charge.

The two biggest abusers of the loopholes in the law are based in Texas: Extreme Care and Ft. Worth-based Legacy Medical Products. Both are privately held and neither has tested their products against traditional bandages to determine if they generate superior outcomes.

And they’re not done fighting. They’ve formed the Mass Coalition to fight the new rule. They’ve also paid $320,000 a year to Brian Ballard, a Trump fundraiser who is widely regarded as the lobbyist with the most influence with the Trump administration, according to Legum. Susie Wiles, who is Trump's chief of staff, worked for Ballard. Many of the early commenters on the proposed rule are using identical cut-and-paste letters to protest the proposal, the kind of ginned up outrage that inside-the-Beltway lobbyists are expert at generating.

ACO-employed clinicians are worried that even this limited rule will be deep-sixed by the transactional Trump regime. In its July story announcing the rule’s reintroduction, the Times quoted Alex Binder, the vice president of the Parker Advanced Care Institute, a nonprofit medical practice belong to an ACO that treats older patients with chronic or terminal illnesses in New Jersey.

“There has been pushback in the past,” Binder said. “Will there be pushback again?”

Reprinted with permission from Gooz News.

Trump's Anemic Field Organization Is Frightening Top Republicans

Trump's Anemic Field Organization Is Frightening Top Republicans

Donald Trump's presidential campaign is trying to sell donors on the idea that less is more when it comes to his flagging ground game in critical battleground states.

“We’re focused on quality over quantity. I mean, how novel a concept,” chief Trump campaign strategist Chris LaCivita told a crowd of mega donors on May 4 at Mar-a-Lago.

But here's how that leaner field organization looks on the ground to many GOP state strategists: “There is no sign of life,” said Kim Owens, a Republican operative in Arizona.

“Especially in a state that Trump lost so closely last time," Owens continued, "you’d expect to have more of a presence. I would think, ‘Let’s step it up.’ I think it’s a terrible mistake.”

These accounts come from an absolutely wild piece of reporting by four reporters at The Washington Post: Michael Sherer, Josh Dawsey, Maeve Reston, and Yvonne Wingett Sanchez. The reporting, which relates to the structural aspects of the contest, also comes at a moment when fresh New York Times/Siena polling suggests Trump is ahead of Biden in a handful of key battleground states.

Arizona's GOP operatives aren't alone in feeling mystified by the Trump campaign’s lack of presence—they are joined by those in Michigan, Georgia, and others as well.

The reason for Trump's flagging operation isn't exactly clear. To be sure, the Trump campaign is cash strapped, particularly when compared to the Biden campaign's war chest. Trump also recently took over the Republican National Committee, and the new leadership, which includes his daughter-in-law Lara Trump, reportedly scrapped the organizational plans drawn up by the old leadership under the direction of Ronna Romney McDaniel.

Under the original plan, in Georgia, the RNC was supposed to hire 12 regional field directors and 40 field organizers by the end of May, topped off by 20 field offices down the road. Instead, the RNC currently has one consultant, according to Cody Hall, a senior aide to Republican Gov. Brian Kemp, who has a tense relationship with Trump. Hall said he has "seen no evidence" that the Trump campaign has the field operation necessary to win the Peach State.

A similar story is playing out in Arizona, where the RNC planned to open seven field offices and hire six regional field directors overseeing 23 organizers by the end of May. That plan appears to be dead on arrival with nothing to take its place.

An RNC presence is also missing in action in other battleground states, including Michigan, where several unnamed operatives were concerned.

Additionally, the Bank Your Vote effort, an early voting operation the RNC had launched at the beginning of the year, has gone dark with its website entirely offline for an indefinite amount of time.

Yet Trump campaign staffers and allies appear to be gaslighting their way through the deficit.

Asked about the Bank Your Vote operation by the Post, James Blair, the national political director for both the Trump campaign and the RNC, said, "It is full speed ahead. Stay tuned for more on the program.”

Blair's response was par for the course in the piece, which makes it difficult to pinpoint exactly what is happening with the RNC and the Trump campaign, which effectively appears to be a joint operation at this point. But among Republican operatives in these states—who are usually instrumental to implementing a statewide strategy—everyone is in the dark.

Perhaps most concerning is that Trump directed the RNC leadership to focus their efforts on election security rather than field operations and turnout. According to the reporting, Trump is plenty sure of his own ability to turn out his voters.

But here's another way to read that: Trump has no earthly idea if he can turn out enough people to win on the front end, so he's training the campaign's resources on ways to cause trouble on the back end. They’ll do this by questioning the integrity of the vote and, therefore, the election's results.

“Focus on the cheating,” the Post reported Trump told McDaniel and others when she was still leading the organization.

So as its GOTV operation flails, the RNC is planning a massive "election integrity" operation with "tens of thousands of volunteers who will monitor precincts and vote counting across the country," according to the reporting.

Reprinted with permission from Daily Kos.

Matt Schlapp

'Normalizing' Nazis: CPAC Chief Enraged Over Report On White Nationalists

Critics are blasting CPAC, the Conservative Political Action Conference, as the embattled head of the organization that puts together and hosts the event, Matt Schlapp, is attacking NBC News over its report that states: “Nazis mingle openly at CPAC, spreading antisemitic conspiracy theories and finding allies.”

“Nazis appeared to find a friendly reception at the Conservative Political Action Conference this year,” writes Ben Goggin, NBC News Digital deputy editor for technology. “Throughout the conference, racist extremists, some of whom had secured official CPAC badges, openly mingled with conference attendees and espoused antisemitic conspiracy theories.”

“The presence of these individuals has been a persistent issue at CPAC. In previous years, conference organizers have ejected well-known Nazis and white supremacists such as Nick Fuentes,” NBC News also reported. “But this year, racist conspiracy theorists didn’t meet any perceptible resistance at the conference where Donald Trump has been the keynote speaker since 2017.”

Schlapp is the head of the American Conservative Union. He and his wife Mercedes Schlapp were once described as the “Trump-Era ‘It Couple’.” Now he is facing a $9 million lawsuit over alleged sexual assault, including “aggressive fondling,” after Republican strategist Carlton Huffman, a staffer at the time for the failed Herschel Walker senatorial campaign, says Matt Schlapp groped him in January of 2023.

CPAC’s list of speakers last week included the far-right ultra-conservative president of Argentina, Javier Milei, who “gave Donald Trump on Saturday an ecstatic hug,” the AP reported. Donald Trump, calling himself a “proud political dissident,” delivered the keynote address at CPAC on Saturday. CNN described it as “lie-filled.”

Schlapp was both furious and dismissive of NBC News’ report.

“NBC’s claim that there was a Nazi presence at CPAC 2024 is false, misleading, and grossly manipulative—especially coming from a writer who has carried the water for Hamas in much of his reporting on the Israel-Gaza war,” Schlapp wrote in a statement posted by CPAC to X. “When we come across someone at CPAC peddling any kind of anti-semitism, we deal with them immediately. Knowing this, NBC weaved together lies and fabrications to create a false perception, and we won’t stand by idly while NBC engages in willful misinformation.”

In a separate post, Schlapp also wrote:

“Yawn. This is a tired old cliche. The Neo-Nazis in our midst are the ones controlling our college campuses and major institutions and grossly populate the newsrooms of corporate media, calling for an Israeli surrender.”

NBC’s Goggin responded:

“The Nazis introduced themselves to me at a mixer and said they were national socialists, started talking about skull measurements and pushing the conspiracy theory that all races were being controlled Jewish people. They were posting about their presence at CPAC online.”

He also provided photos and video:READ MORE: Democrats Discredit GOP Claims on IVF as Republicans Try to Regain Ground After Fallout

CPAC’s list of speakers last week included the far-right ultra-conservative president of Argentina, Javier Milei, who “gave Donald Trump on Saturday an ecstatic hug,” the AP reported. Donald Trump, calling himself a “proud political dissident,” delivered the keynote address at CPAC on Saturday. CNN described it as “lie-filled.”

Schlapp was both furious and dismissive of NBC News’ report.

“NBC’s claim that there was a Nazi presence at CPAC 2024 is false, misleading, and grossly manipulative—especially coming from a writer who has carried the water for Hamas in much of his reporting on the Israel-Gaza war,” Schlapp wrote in a statement posted by CPAC to X. “When we come across someone at CPAC peddling any kind of anti-semitism, we deal with them immediately. Knowing this, NBC weaved together lies and fabrications to create a false perception, and we won’t stand by idly while NBC engages in willful misinformation.”

In a separate post, Schlapp also wrote:

“Yawn. This is a tired old cliche. The Neo-Nazis in our midst are the ones controlling our college campuses and major institutions and grossly populate the newsrooms of corporate media, calling for an Israeli surrender.”

NBC’s Goggin responded:

“The Nazis introduced themselves to me at a mixer and said they were national socialists, started talking about skull measurements and pushing the conspiracy theory that all races were being controlled Jewish people. They were posting about their presence at CPAC online.”

He also provided photos and video:

“Either CPAC is lying about having no idea about this, or they simply don’t have a grasp on who they approved to come to their conference…,” Goggin added.

“Nazis, antisemitism, the great replacement theory, [white supremacist Nick] Fuentes, have become so common among conservatives that I think attendees, even journalists, didn’t think too deeply about them being at CPAC. There was very much an ‘oh them’ attitude about the nazis.”

“It really illustrated how successfully extremists have shifted the Overton window. This year, they were expected, and their presence was tolerated,” he added.

Critics blasted CPAC.

“At CPAC, avowed Nazis mingled openly & spread antisemitic conspiracy theories, as speakers welcomed the ‘end of democracy.’ They are all saying the quiet part out loud. And most GOP lawmakers are silent (or cheering). This is how extremism is normalized,” warned Amy Spitalnick, CEO of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs. Spitalnick “led a group that won a $25 million judgment against the neo-Nazis who organized the deadly 2017 Charlottesville march in Virginia,” The Times of Israel reported in 2022.

“Seriously, read this @BenjaminGoggin piece and tell me those of us ringing the alarm bells on increasingly mainstreamed Nazism are being hyperbolic,” Spitalnick added.

“CPAC denies the presence of Nazis at their conference this year, but when I reported that @cpac was teeming with white nationalists in 2022 there wasn’t a peep from Matt Schlapp about it,” wrote Texas Observer special investigative correspondent Steven Monacelli.

Former Rep. Mondaire Jones (D-NY), currently a candidate for Congress running to unseat U.S. Rep. Mike Lawler (R-NY), said: “I am appalled that Nazis were allowed to attend CPAC—an event Donald Trump headlined again this year. Make no mistake: the Republican Party and Trump have empowered white nationalists for years.”

Responding to the NBC News article, former U.S. government official Mike Walker wrote on X: “This is not Munich, 1933. This is Washington, DC, 2024.”

Reprinted with permission from Alternet.

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