Sec. 17b-99. (Formerly Sec. 17-83k). Vendor fraud penalties. Distribution of medical assistance program rules. Regulations. Audits of service providers.
Sec. 17b-99. (Formerly Sec. 17-83k). Vendor fraud penalties. Distribution of
medical assistance program rules. Regulations. Audits of service providers. (a) Any
vendor found guilty of vendor fraud under sections 53a-290 to 53a-296, inclusive, shall
be subject to forfeiture or suspension of any franchise or license held by such vendor
from the state in accordance with this subsection, after hearing in the manner provided
for in sections 4-176e to 4-180a, inclusive, and 4-181a. Any vendor convicted of vendor
fraud under sections 53a-290 to 53a-296, inclusive, shall have such license or franchise
revoked. Nothing in this subsection shall preclude any board or commission established
under chapters 369 to 376, inclusive, 378 to 381, inclusive, and 383 to 388, inclusive,
and the Department of Public Health with respect to professions under its jurisdiction
which have no board or commission from taking any action authorized in section 19a-17. Any vendor who is convicted in any state or federal court of a crime involving fraud
in the Medicare program or Medicaid program or aid to families with dependent children
program or state-administered general assistance program or temporary family assistance program or state supplement to the federal Supplemental Security Income Program
or any federal or state energy assistance program or general assistance program or state-funded child care program or the refugee program shall be terminated from such programs, effective upon conviction, except that the Commissioner of Social Services may
delay termination for a period he deems sufficient to protect the health and well-being
of beneficiaries receiving services from such vendor. A vendor who is ineligible for
federal financial participation shall be ineligible for participation in such programs. No
vendor shall be eligible for reimbursement for any goods provided or services performed
by a person convicted of a crime involving fraud in such programs. The convicted person
may request a hearing concerning such ineligibility for reimbursement pursuant to sections 4-176e to 4-180a, inclusive, and 4-181a provided such request is filed in writing
with the Commissioner of Social Services within ten days of the date of written notice
by the commissioner to the person of such ineligibility. The commissioner shall give
notice of such ineligibility to such vendors by means of publication in the Connecticut
Law Journal following the expiration of said ten-day hearing request period, if no timely
request has been filed, or following the decision on the hearing. The Commissioner of
Social Services may take such steps as necessary to inform the public of the conviction
and ineligibility for reimbursement. No vendor or person so terminated or denied reimbursement shall be readmitted to or be eligible for reimbursement in such programs.
Any sums paid as a result of vendor fraud under sections 53a-290 to 53a-296, inclusive,
may be recovered in an action brought by the state against such person.
(b) For the purpose of determining compliance with subsection (a) of this section,
all vendors shall notify the commissioner within thirty days after the date of employment
or conviction, whichever is later, of the identity, interest and extent of services performed
by any person convicted of a crime involving fraud in the Medicare program or Medicaid
program or aid to families with dependent children program or state-administered general assistance program or temporary family assistance program or state supplement
to the federal Supplemental Security Income Program or any federal or state energy
assistance program or general assistance program or state-funded child care program
or the refugee program. Prior to the commissioner's acceptance of a provider agreement
or at any time upon written request by the commissioner, the vendor shall furnish the
commissioner with the identity of any person convicted of a crime involving fraud in
such programs who has an ownership or control interest in the vendor or who is an agent
or managing employee. The commissioner shall terminate, refuse to enter into or renew
an agreement with a vendor, except a vendor providing room and board and services
pursuant to section 17b-340, if such convicted person has such interest or is such agent
or employee. In the case of a vendor providing room and board and services pursuant
to said section 17b-340, the commissioner may terminate, refuse to enter into or renew
an agreement after consideration of any adverse impact on beneficiaries of such termination or refusal.
(c) The Department of Social Services shall distribute to all vendors who are providers in the medical assistance program a copy of the rules, regulations, standards and
laws governing the program. The Commissioner of Social Services shall adopt by regulation in the manner provided for in sections 4-166 to 4-176, inclusive, administrative
sanctions against providers in the Medicare program or Medicaid program or aid to
families with dependent children program or state-funded child care program or state-administered general assistance program or temporary family assistance program or
state supplement to the federal Supplemental Security Income Program including suspension from the program, for any violations of the rules, regulations, standards or law.
The commissioner may adopt regulations in accordance with the provisions of chapter
54 to provide for the withholding of payments currently due in order to offset money
previously obtained as the result of error or fraud. The department shall notify the proper
professional society and licensing agency of any violations of this section.
(d) The Commissioner of Social Services, or any entity with whom the commissioner contracts, for the purpose of conducting an audit of a service provider that participates as provider of services in a program operated or administered by the department
pursuant to this chapter or chapter 319t, 319v, 319y or 319ff, shall conduct any such
audit in accordance with the provisions of this subsection. For purposes of this subsection
"provider" means a person, public agency, private agency or proprietary agency that
is licensed, certified or otherwise approved by the commissioner to supply services
authorized by the programs set forth in said chapters.
(1) Not less than thirty days prior to the commencement of any such audit, the
commissioner, or any entity with whom the commissioner contracts to conduct an audit
of a participating provider, shall provide written notification of the audit to such provider,
unless the commissioner, or any entity with whom the commissioner contracts to conduct
an audit of a participating provider makes a good faith determination that (A) the health
or safety of a recipient of services is at risk; or (B) the provider is engaging in vendor
fraud.
(2) Any clerical error, including, but not limited to, recordkeeping, typographical,
scrivener's or computer error, discovered in a record or document produced for any
such audit, shall not of itself constitute a wilful violation of program rules unless proof
of intent to commit fraud or otherwise violate program rules is established.
(3) A finding of overpayment or underpayment to a provider in a program operated
or administered by the department pursuant to this chapter or chapter 319t, 319v, 319y
or 319ff, shall not be based on extrapolated projections unless (A) there is a sustained
or high level of payment error involving the provider, (B) documented educational intervention has failed to correct the level of payment error, or (C) the value of the claims
in aggregate exceeds one hundred fifty thousand dollars on an annual basis.
(4) A provider, in complying with the requirements of any such audit, shall be
allowed not less than thirty days to provide documentation in connection with any discrepancy discovered and brought to the attention of such provider in the course of any
such audit.
(5) The commissioner, or any entity with whom the commissioner contracts, for
the purpose of conducting an audit of a provider of any of the programs operated or
administered by the department pursuant to this chapter or chapter 319t, 319v, 319y or
319ff, shall produce a preliminary written report concerning any audit conducted pursuant to this subsection, and such preliminary report shall be provided to the provider that
was the subject of the audit, not more than sixty days after the conclusion of such audit.
(6) The commissioner, or any entity with whom the commissioner contracts, for
the purpose of conducting an audit of a provider of any of the programs operated or
administered by the department pursuant to this chapter or chapter 319t, 319v, 319y or
319ff, shall, following the issuance of the preliminary report pursuant to subdivision
(5) of this subsection, hold an exit conference with any provider that was the subject of
any audit pursuant to this subsection for the purpose of discussing the preliminary report.
(7) The commissioner, or any entity with which the commissioner contracts, for
the purpose of conducting an audit of a service provider, shall produce a final written
report concerning any audit conducted pursuant to this subsection. Such final written
report shall be provided to the provider that was the subject of the audit not more than
sixty days after the date of the exit conference conducted pursuant to subdivision (6) of
this subsection, unless the commissioner, or any entity with which the commissioner
contracts, for the purpose of conducting an audit of a service provider, agrees to a later
date or there are other referrals or investigations pending concerning the provider.
(8) Any provider aggrieved by a decision contained in a final written report issued
pursuant to subdivision (7) of this subsection, may, not later than thirty days after the
receipt of the final report, request, in writing, a review on all items of aggrievement.
Such request shall contain a detailed written description of each specific item of aggrievement. The designee of the commissioner who presides over the review shall be
impartial and shall not be an employee of the Department of Social Services Office of
Quality Assurance or an employee of an entity with whom the commissioner contracts
for the purpose of conducting an audit of a service provider.
(9) The provisions of this subsection shall not apply to any audit conducted by the
Medicaid Fraud Control Unit established within the Office of the Chief State's Attorney.
(P.A. 75-420, S. 4, 6; 75-558, S. 2; P.A. 76-242, S. 1, 2; P.A. 77-614, S. 587, 608, 610; P.A. 78-221, S. 1-3; 78-303,
S. 85, 136; P.A. 81-41, S. 1, 2; P.A. 82-190, S. 1, 2; P.A. 83-179; P.A. 84-235, S. 1, 2; P.A. 85-324; P.A. 88-176; 88-317,
S. 71, 107; P.A. 93-262, S. 1, 87; 93-381, S. 9, 39; P.A. 95-257, S. 12, 21, 58; P.A. 96-169, S. 2; June 18 Sp. Sess. P.A.
97-2, S. 45, 165; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 00-2, S. 22, 53; P.A. 05-195, S. 1; P.A. 06-196, S. 131; P.A. 07-217, S. 73.)
History: P.A. 75-420 allowed substitution of department of social services for welfare department in P.A. 75-558 which
created the section; P.A. 76-242 included vendors providing services to recipients under Title XIX of Social Security Act
in prohibitions of Subsec. (a), added reference to hearing in Subsec. (b) and added Subsec. (c) re adoption of regulations
and distribution of rules to vendors; P.A. 77-614 and P.A. 78-303 replaced commissioner and department of social services
with commissioner and department of income maintenance; P.A. 78-221 prohibited presenting false claim for payment
with intent to defraud and added prohibition against accepting payments in excess of amounts due in Subsec. (a) and added
Subsec. (d) imposing five-year limitation on prosecution; P.A. 81-41 added the requirement in Subsec. (b) that vendors
convicted of medical assistance fraud be terminated from the program and provided the procedure for their readmission,
and in Subsec. (c) empowered commissioner to adopt regulations re withholding of payments due to offset money previously
obtained through error or fraud; P.A. 82-190 extended applicability of Subsec. (b) to include vendors convicted of a crime
involving fraud in the aid to families with dependent children program, the state supplement to the Federal Supplemental
Security Income Program or any federal or state energy assistance program or general assistance program; P.A. 83-179
defined the term "vendor," added the exception from termination upon conviction to protect the health and well-being of
beneficiaries, added the provisions re ineligibility for reimbursement for goods or services performed by a person convicted
of a crime involving fraud in assistance programs and inserted Subsec. (c) re notice of the identity, interest and services
performed by such convicted person, relettering remaining Subsecs. accordingly; P.A. 84-235 added the language in
Subsec. (b) concerning the suspension or revocation of a franchise or license based on the number of convictions for larceny
and amended Subsec. (d) by listing the programs for which administrative sanctions are required; P.A. 85-324 amended
Subsec. (b) to clarify the authority of the boards and commissions and the commissioner of health services to take action
under Sec. 19a-17 in vendor fraud actions; P.A. 88-176 added the refugee program to Subsecs. (b) and (c), added a provision
re the effect of vendor ineligibility for federal financial participation and reduced to one year the time in which a vendor
may apply for readmission to the programs in Subsec. (b); P.A. 88-317 amended references to Secs. 4-177 to 4-180 in
Subsec. (b) and amended reference to Secs. 4-166 to 4-176 and Ch. 54 in Subsec. (d), to include new sections added to
Ch. 54, effective July 1, 1989, and applicable to all agency proceedings commencing on or after that date; P.A. 93-262
authorized substitution of commissioner and department of social services for commissioner and department of income
maintenance, effective July 1, 1993; P.A. 93-381 replaced department of health services with department of public health
and addiction services, effective July 1, 1993; Sec. 17-83k transferred to Sec. 17b-99 in 1995; P.A. 95-257 replaced
Commissioner and Department of Public Health and Addiction Services with Commissioner and Department of Public
Health, effective July 1, 1995; P.A. 96-169 deleted Subsec. (a) defining vendor fraud, relettering Subsecs. (b) to (d) as (a)
to (c), respectively, amended Subsec. (a) to replace reference to larceny with vendor fraud, to delete suspension penalties
for vendors convicted of vendor fraud and make revocation of license or franchise the penalty for the first conviction of
vendor fraud and to make termination or denial of reimbursement permanent, replacing a one-year period and deleted
Subsec. (c) re limits on prosecution; June 18 Sp. Sess. P.A. 97-2 added the state-administered general assistance program
and the temporary family assistance program to the provisions of this section, effective July 1, 1997; June Sp. Sess. P.A.
00-2 added provisions re a vendor who is convicted of a crime involving fraud in a state-funded child care program and
made technical changes in Subsec. (a) for the purpose of gender neutrality, effective July 1, 2000; P.A. 05-195 added new
Subsec. (d) re audits of service providers by the Department of Social Services, effective July 1, 2005; P.A. 06-196 made
technical changes in Subsec. (d)(7), effective June 7, 2006; P.A. 07-217 made a technical change in Subsec. (b), effective
July 12, 2007.
Annotation to former section 17-83k:
Cited. 14 CA 256.
Annotations to present section:
Subsec. (c):
The fact that Department of Social Services had terminated a provider agreement does not protect the provider from
sanctions; in order to be sanctioned, the provider must have been acting as a provider at the time of the alleged violations
of Medicaid rules and regulations. 288 C. 790. Department of Social Services has the authority to sanction individuals
because term "provider", as defined in the regulations adopted pursuant to this section, clearly and unambiguously includes
both an institutional entity and an individual. Id. Although regulations adopted pursuant to this section require a valid and
fully completed certification for Medicaid reimbursement, nothing in federal or state law precludes commissioner from
examining other relevant evidence to ensure that the certifications are valid. Id.