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Federal Kickback Charges
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Federal Kickback Charges: Anti-Kickback Statute Defense
Kickback charges—especially in healthcare—are career-ending prosecutions. The federal Anti-Kickback Statute (AKS) under 42 USC 1320a-7b makes it a crime to pay for referrals in federal healthcare programs. Penalties include up to 10 years in federal prison, $100,000 fines per violation, and mandatory exclusion from Medicare/Medicaid. If your a healthcare provider, the exclusion alone destroys your practice.
What Is a Kickback?
Under the AKS, its illegal to:
Offer, pay, solicit, or receive anything of value
To induce or reward referrals of patients or business
For services payable by federal healthcare programs (Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, VA)
This applies to BOTH sides of the transaction—the person paying AND the person receiving.
Common Kickback Schemes
Physician referral payments – Paying doctors to refer patients
Laboratory arrangements – Free processing in exchange for referrals
DME supplier payments – Kickbacks for equipment orders
Pharmaceutical company payments – Payments to prescribers
Management fee arrangements – Disguised referral payments
Sham consulting agreements – Payments labeled as “consulting”
Safe Harbors
The AKS has “safe harbor” exceptions that protect certain payment arrangements:
Investment interests meeting specific requirements. Space and equipment rentals at fair market value. Personal services agreements with proper documentation. Employee compensation. Group purchasing organizations. Managed care arrangements.
If your arrangement fits a safe harbor, its legal regardless of referral patterns.
Penalties
Criminal: Up to 10 years per violation, $100,000 fine
Civil: False Claims Act liability (treble damages), civil monetary penalties up to $100,000 per item
Exclusion: Mandatory exclusion from federal healthcare programs
Collateral: Often charged with healthcare fraud (additional 10 years), wire fraud, mail fraud
Defense Strategies
Safe Harbor Compliance
If the arrangement fits a safe harbor—or substantially complies—thats a complete defense.
No Intent to Induce Referrals
AKS requires knowing and willful conduct. If payments were legitimate compensation for actual services—not intended to induce referrals—thats a defense.
Fair Market Value
Payments at fair market value for legitimate services are defensible. Expert valuation testimony can establish FMV.
Act Now
Kickback investigations often involve whistleblowers and qui tam lawsuits under the False Claims Act. Early intervention can sometimes resolve matters before criminal charges. Contact healthcare fraud defense counsel immediately.