Feds close Missouri charity that promised to pay medical bills

Feds close Missouri charity that promised to pay medical bills

Feds

A screenshot of the website for St. Joseph based health-sharing ministry Medical Cost Sharing Inc. taken in 2017. In January, a federal judge ordered the website be shuttered based on sufficient probable cause that the company was engaged in ongoing wire fraud..

A Missouri woman’s heart attack cost her $45,000 in medical bills. A Georgia man’s kidney stone treatment carried a $67,000 tab. A California woman was treated for a stroke and got a bill for $125,000.

All were depending on St. Joseph, Missouri-based nonprofit Medical Cost Sharing Inc. to pay the bulk of those costs. They were members, some paying monthly premiums upward of $750 per month, of a so-called healthcare sharing ministry. Such groups are essentially charities in which members united by religious beliefs agree to help each other cover unexpected medical expenses.

But, according to the FBI and attorneys for the Department of Justice, they were all victims of an elaborate fraud scheme that spanned the better part of a decade, reeled in with a sales pitch targeting “like-minded Christians.” And all the while, the authorities allege, the two men who started the nonprofit were motivated by self-enrichment.

Complaints against the group have been public for years — The Star reported in August 2017 that at least eight people said they had paid into the fund without receiving a dime for their medical treatments. Several of them had made complaints with then-Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley’s office, which said it was mediating between the organization and consumers.

But now, federal officials have closed down the organization as they have gathered information they say amounts to evidence of years of widespread fraud. And they have seized assets of the founders, namely their homes, saying the properties were the fruits of a wire fraud and money laundering conspiracy.

Among those who submitted formal complaints was Texas pastor Jeff Gore, who paid some $4,000 in membership fees into the fund but never received compensation for care.

“It’s ridiculous. I mean, it’s been five or six years now, and the feds are just now getting involved?” he told The Star during a recent phone interview. “I was not the first complaint. The Better Business Bureau had a file opened up already. The attorney general already had a file on these people when I contacted them.”

Since its creation in 2013, Medical Cost Sharing has — by the government’s estimates, based on access to its financial records — collected roughly $7.5 million in membership fees from members around the country. But over that time, an estimated $246,000 — or 3.5{c024931d10daf6b71b41321fa9ba9cd89123fb34a4039ac9f079a256e3c1e6e8} of money collected — actually went toward sharing the cost of health care bills, according to government estimates.

Medical cost sharing 3
Medical Cost Sharing’s plans included features that were like insurance, but health sharing ministries aren’t regulated by state insurance departments. Medical Cost Sharing’s co-founder, Craig A. Reynolds, is a former insurance agent who had his license revoked in Kansas and Missouri. Medicalcostsharing.com

While advertising its services through Christian-affiliated radio and social media, the federal government says, Medical Cost Sharing has engaged in a pattern of denying legitimate medical claims “based on a variety of specious reasons.”

Instead, founders James L. McGinnis and Craig A. Reynolds, both of St. Joseph, allegedly spent much of the charity’s money on a variety of things not related to health care. And they put at least $4 million into their own bank accounts, the federal government says — allegedly taking far greater compensation than was listed on the documents they submitted to the IRS on tax forms.

Reynolds was an insurance broker licensed to work in both Kansas and Missouri prior to the creation of Medical Cost Sharing. But in 2009, his license was revoked in both states amid allegations that he forged signatures on insurance applications.

McGinnis previously held a Missouri insurance license, but it expired in 2018. There is no record of an enforcement action against him listed by the Missouri Department of Insurance.

In early December, the FBI and IRS raided the homes of McGinnis and Reynolds along with an office space in St. Joseph in search of evidence to bolster their case alleging a wire fraud conspiracy built on empty promises and gross misrepresentations. Both homes were also seized under civil forfeiture law as they were allegedly the fruits of wire fraud and money laundering.

Neither McGinnis nor Reynolds has been criminally charged. They have retained the counsel of the Hensley Law Office, a Raymore firm that specializes in criminal defense.

Asked to address the government’s allegations, lawyers did not respond to The Star’s requests for comment. In a formal answer to the allegations, filed Feb. 3 in the Western District of Missouri, the defendants denied that McGinnis, Reynolds or Medical Cost Sharing were committing fraud.

But the allegations were enough for District Judge Greg Kays to issue a preliminary injunction against the charity.

In an order filed in January, Kays found sufficient probable cause of “ongoing fraudulent conduct in violation of the wire fraud statute.” His order effectively stopped Medical Cost Sharing from doing any business, including maintaining its website, until further notice.

The organization was further ordered to keep all records related to its business, stop enrolling members to the program or soliciting others, and prohibited from taking any money from its current members.

After the landmark Affordable Care Act — commonly known as Obamacare — was passed, healthcare premiums increased for most Americans as insurers were required to cover certain preventative care and not discriminate against pre-existing conditions.

The law, though, contained a carve-out for health-care sharing ministries, which were explicitly exempt from ACA requirements, allowing them to offer monthly dues lower than typical insurance premiums, especially for people who accept less coverage and more personal risk.

It also exempted members of those ministries from tax penalties imposed on the uninsured as an incentive to get insurance. While the organizations can provide coverage for major expenses, they don’t face the same regulations as traditional insurers.

During its investigation of MCS, the FBI spoke to at least seven people — four from Missouri, three others from Georgia, California and Texas — who claimed they were duped by the charity and wound up with major health care bills as a result.

They signed up for plans that they said promised to cover all pre-existing conditions in exchange for monthly membership fees, like premiums. But when they complained about astronomical charges from hospitals, they said, Medical Cost Sharing told them the members were responsible for negotiating with hospitals and accused them of not being truthful about their health history.

For example, the Georgia man who sought kidney stone treatment at the hospital did so one day after waking with severe back pain. Through a family plan, at $784 per month with a $1,000 “personal responsibility,” he and his wife had contributed nearly $12,000 to the health-sharing ministry by that time.

Eight months later, when the $67,000-bill came in the mail from the medical provider, he says MCS denied they would “share” the cost because he had a “pre-existing condition” of a kidney stone from 12 years earlier.

In other cases: Two women, one in Missouri and another in Texas, gave birth to children in 2020 with the expectation that MCS would share hospital costs associated with the deliveries. But they were denied based on a finding by MCS that their pregnancies were pre-existing conditions to membership.

Of the seven interviewed by the FBI, some reported receiving partial breaks from the hospitals on their bills after negotiating with the health care providers themselves . A few said they received some type of restitution after pursuing consumer complaints with the offices of state attorneys general or hiring private attorneys — but all wound up short-changed, according to the FBI.

The Missouri woman who had the heart attack, and previously was enrolled in an MCS “Platinum” plan at $233 per month, still owes health care providers $36,000 and is on a scheduled repayment plan of $533 monthly.

Medical cost sharing 2
Medical Cost Sharing advertised itself as a health care sharing ministry exempt from the Affordable Care Act. But it lost the IRS nonprofit status that such ministries are required to have. Medicalcostsharing.com

At least four of those interviewed by the FBI filed complaints with the Missouri attorney general’s office dating back to 2018, a year after the office had already been investigating several other complaints.

The Star asked the attorney general’s office to provide details of its investigations into MCS, including the total number of complaints made and actions taken against the charity since the creation of MCS in 2013. The office would not answer specific questions, but said it is still in active mediation between consumers and MCS, though some complaints have been resolved over the years.

“We encourage any Missouri consumers who feel they’ve been defrauded by this company to reach out to our office and we’d be happy to look into their specific complaints,” said Madeline Sieren, spokeswoman for Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey.

Gore, the Texas minister featured in The Star’s 2017 story, said he has not been involved in the federal government’s investigation into MCS.

Several years ago, he ended up in a doctor’s office. After an MRI, he was diagnosed with a torn meniscus. Despite paying for about five months of MCS membership fees, he said the organization never paid either of the medical providers.

“I wanted them to pay me my premiums back because they were fraudulent,” said Gore, who is now 60. “It was a scam.”

Gore was lured by the pictures of crosses, praying hands and Bible verses that dotted nearly every page of the Medical Cost Sharing website. A “cowboy minister” who travels to rural churches preaching the Gospel and playing music, Gore liked what he saw and signed up. “Their website said all the right things,” he told The Star in 2017.

After going through the attorney general’s mediation process, the organization ended up paying his medical expenses.

He’s glad the federal government has shut the organization down, but is frustrated that it stayed open for so many years.

“I think the fact that the scam is over is good,” he said. “I wish they’d go to jail and a lot of that money could be recouped for the people who spent it…White collar crime never seems to get the book thrown at it. If they’d have punched somebody in the face in a bar they’d probably get more time.”

Gore and his wife have been uninsured for years. He said they can’t afford traditional health insurance and their experience with MCS spooked them from joining other healthcare sharing ministries.

“They’re not regulated by the government the same way insurance companies are. So they can do about whatever they want to do, they can write their own rules and regulations and make it be whatever they want it to be,” he said. “You can make a ton of money off of people paying you for insurance if you’re not ever going to cover anything.

“It was such a frustrating time. And then besides that, you just get embarrassed. Like, how can I be so stupid and gullible, you know?”

Related stories from Kansas City Star

Profile Image of Bill Lukitsch

Bill Lukitsch covers breaking news for The Star. Before joining The Star, he covered politics and local government for the Quad-City Times.

Profile Image of Kevin Hardy

Kevin Hardy covers business for The Kansas City Star. He previously covered business and politics at The Des Moines Register.

Hamburg Inn No. 2 in Iowa City may close

Hamburg Inn No. 2 in Iowa City may close

Hamburg Inn No. 2, the historic Iowa City diner recognized for its “Coffee Bean Caucus” and visits from politicians and presidents, may well close, at minimum temporarily, right after serving buyers in Iowa Metropolis for many years, a longtime worker reported.

Hamburg Inn’s manager, Robert “Ajax” Ehl confirmed the restaurant’s closure to the Press-Citizen on Friday. Jan. 8, 2023, will be its previous day serving clients, he stated. Ehl said the enterprise is not making sufficient money to go over its expenses.

Ehl said it is “up to the proprietor” no matter if the closure is lasting or temporary. Michael Lee owns each the creating at 214 N Linn Road and the business enterprise itself right after he procured it from the Panther family in 2016.

“The base line is I cannot remain open up if I can’t pay out my workforce and I am not likely to request them to function for totally free,” explained Ehl, who began as a dishwasher 18 many years ago and turned manager 9 months back.

Police close I-71/75 in Covington after a semi-truck crash

Police close I-71/75 in Covington after a semi-truck crash

Law enforcement near I-71/75 in Covington just after semi-truck crash



[CAPTIONING MADE POSSIBLE BY WLWT-TV] >> — THE RAIN Little by little SPREADING Over THE Overall VIEWING Location. HIGHLAND COUNTY, CLINTON COUNTY OR ADAMS COUNTY, JUST NOT THERE. Again INTO THE 275 LOOP, YOU CAN SEE WEST SIDERS About Toward EDISON CLEVES, CHEVIOT Seeing Moderate DOWNPOURS ON THE 275 LOOP. Identical Through Portions OF NORTHERN KENTUCKY. Even further NORTH INTO BUTLER COUNTY , Continual RAIN CROSSING Over I-75 , SHOWERS Building AND By way of WARREN COUNTY, LEBANON TOMORROW Via MAYVILLE. THE Leading EDGES ON 68 IN BROWN COUNTY AND NO Make any difference The place YOU ARE IN NORTHERN KENTUCKY, Chances ARE Excellent YOU ARE Seeing THE RAIN. FLORENCE AND INDEPENDENCE Ideal NOW, HARRISON Seeing THE RAINFALL Level Bounce UP Above THE Very last 15 MINUTES OR SO. THIS IS Heading TO BE WITH US FOR ABOUT 24 Hours, BY THIS TIME TOMORROW Early morning I WILL BE Monitoring THE Past STRAGGLER SHOWERS OUT OF THE Process. TEMPERATURES THIS Morning, 39, 40 Levels AT THE RAIN STAINS — Remain Steady AS Very well. IN THE AFTERNOON, CHAPTERS IN THE Upper 40’S. Gown FOR THE 40’S EVEN However THE HIGHS IN THE 50’S, WE WILL Discuss ABOUT THE RAIN IMPACTING YOUR COMMUTE TOMORROW. KELLY: Getting A Glance AT WHAT YOU WILL Encounter AS YOU HEAD OUT. THIS IS 75, THE WINDSHIELD WIPER’S ARE Going, IT IS Heading TO BE Wet AND THAT IS SLOWING All people DOWN SO Put together FOR Extra TIME ON YOUR Morning COMMUTE AS WE Continue to keep A Near EYE ON THE Roads FOR YOU. WE HAVE NOT Had ANY Major Challenges Yet THIS Morning BUT WE WANT YOU TO GET In which YOU ARE Heading Safely. 471 AT U.S. 27, THERE WAS AN Before CRASH Reported Close to ALEXANDRIA PIKE, NOT Seeing DELAYS All around THIS WHICH IS Great Information BUT WE WILL Hold A Close EYE TO SEE IF Those people Begin TO Make AS People Hit THE Highway. THIS Early morning, CINCINNATI Law enforcement INVESTIGATING A Fatal Shooting WITH Three Distinctive Criminal offense SCENES. STEVEN: IT WAS A CHAOTIC Night time FOR Law enforcement, TWO Persons KILLED, AND AT Least One particular OTHER CRITICALLY Damage. WLWT Information 5’S MEREDITH STUTZ JOINS US THIS Morning, MEREDITH, Law enforcement ARE Stating THESE Criminal offense SCENES ARE ALL Connected. MEREDITH: YEAH, THERE ARE A lot of Issues Continue to UNANSWERED THIS Morning. THIS ALL Commenced Previous Night time, WITH A Capturing IN ROSELAWN. Law enforcement SAY THE VICTIMS FROM THAT Taking pictures TOOK OFF IN TWO Independent Cars and trucks, One particular ENDING UP IN BOND HILL, THE OTHER IN NORWOOD. THE Shooting Took place AT THE INTERSECTION OF JOYCE LANE AND EAST SEYMOUR AVENUE, Close to AN Condominium Sophisticated. THE People today Associated Left THE SCENE, LIKE I Reported BUT Did not MAKE IT TO A Healthcare facility. INVESTIGATORS WITH Both NORWOOD AND CINCINNATI Police Put in Hrs Collecting Evidence ON MONTGOMERY Road Around THE NORWOOD LATERAL. TWO Shooting VICTIMS Were Identified THERE. Police Targeted ON A SILVER SEDAN STOPPED IN THE Street. AND About ON Reading Highway IN BOND HILL OFFICERS Uncovered A WHITE SUV In the vicinity of A Cafe, AND A further Sufferer Inside THE Motor vehicle. INVESTIGATORS ARE Looking FOR WITNESSES AND Safety Online video THAT May possibly Exhibit HOW THE Taking pictures UNFOLDED. Police Explain to US THEY DID Find GUNS AT 1 OF THE Areas, Leading THEM TO Believe that SOME OF Those Wounded OR KILLED May possibly HAVE ALSO BEEN Shooting. — Included IN THE Shooting. MEREDITH STUTZ WLWT News 5. KELLY: THIS Early morning, A Enormous TIE UP ON 275 AT U.S. 50 IN LAWRENCEBURG HAS CLEARED UP. THIS IS Great Information In advance OF THE Early morning COMMUTE. BUT THIS WAS THE SCENE FROM Just one OF OUR Targeted visitors CAMERAS Final Night time. THE Freeway WAS SHUT DOWN Following WHAT APPEARED TO BE A SEMI TRUCK CAUGHT Fireplace. NEIGHBORS Were being Calling US Expressing ALL THEY COULD SEE Were FLAMES. WE’RE Still Waiting around FOR Law enforcement TO Verify WHAT Happened, AND IF Everyone IS Alright, BUT THE Freeway IS Back again Open THIS MORNIN

Law enforcement close I-71/75 in Covington after semi-truck crash

UPDATE: Covington Law enforcement have declared that northbound I-71/75 will be shut from 12th Street on while Cincinnati law enforcement function on clearing the crash from the Brent Spence Bridge.A crash is blocking the ramp from northbound I-71/75 from Kentucky to northbound I-71 to Ohio, Wednesday early morning.Click the video clip participant earlier mentioned to observe other morning headlines from WLWT News 5The Ohio Office of Transportation documented the crash at 8:22 a.m. on the entrance ramp.Traffic is backed up perfectly into Kentucky, with several men and women stopped on the Brent Spence Bridge. No accidents have been reported with this incident.Alternate routes are encouraged as there is no timetable to when the crash will be cleared. For live targeted traffic updates, click on listed here.Do you have shots or movie of this incident? If so, add them to https://www.wlwt.com/add. Be positive to incorporate your title and any added specifics so we can give you correct credit rating online and on Television set.

UPDATE:

Covington Police have introduced that northbound I-71/75 will be closed from 12th Street on although Cincinnati law enforcement do the job on clearing the crash from the Brent Spence Bridge.

This material is imported from Facebook.
You may possibly be in a position to locate the similar information in another format, or you could be in a position to discover extra facts, at their internet web page.


A crash is blocking the ramp from northbound I-71/75 from Kentucky to northbound I-71 to Ohio, Wednesday early morning.

Simply click the video participant higher than to observe other morning headlines from WLWT Information 5

The Ohio Department of Transportation noted the crash at 8:22 a.m. on the entrance ramp.

Visitors is backed up well into Kentucky, with numerous folks stopped on the Brent Spence Bridge.

No injuries have been claimed with this incident.

Alternate routes are suggested as there is no timetable to when the crash will be cleared.

For are living traffic updates, click on here.

Do you have shots or video clip of this incident? If so, upload them to https://www.wlwt.com/add. Be certain to include your title and any supplemental facts so we can give you correct credit on the internet and on Tv.

Bill passed by the state legislature looks to close condo “loophole,” what’s next?

Bill passed by the state legislature looks to close condo “loophole,” what’s next?

This factor of assets law has been used by builders and homeowners for many years because in New York State condos are taxed at a lessen charge.

ERIE COUNTY, N.Y. — The days of an unofficial house tax discount for particular new develop condos could be numbered as Governor Hochul weighs signing legislation that would prevent some entire-sizing homes from qualifying.

This factor of house regulation has been used by builders and householders for many years for the reason that in New York State condos are taxed at a lower price even when their valuations are a large amount bigger than other homes. And relying on who you ask, there are some less than stellar thoughts.

The majority in the condition legislature have identified as it a “loophole” and handed a bill in June to cease it from remaining awarded. Governor Hochul on the other hand has yet to signal it.

“It can be a loophole that is currently being exploited wherever people who are quite rich who can find the money for to spend their share of property taxes, are obtaining a way to not do that,” explained Lancaster Assemblymember Monica Wallace (D).

Wallace has co-sponsored monthly bill A3491B that if signed into regulation would avert new houses posing as condos from getting regarded as for the tax status. It would not be retroactive, even so.

Information display that a 2,7000 sq. foot rental in Clarence that marketed for $880,000 was assessed at $514,000. A different in the similar spot offered for $733,000 but was assessed at $486,000 and taxed as these kinds of.

In Lancaster, a residence valued at $540,000 previous yr Wallace mentioned was assessed at $327,000.

“I you should not blame the people who buy these residences…most people would like to reduce their house tax burden but it is not good that only some people get to do it, mainly because they have the indicates to get into these extravagant communities,” Wallace reported.

Rental standing was developed in the 1960s as a way to protect New York Town apartment owners but in Western New York it truly is led to improvement that Wallace believes has “unfairly shifted the price tag on to people who are fewer capable to afford it.”

Builders use for condo tax position by creating a condominium association with the county clerk’s place of work typically prior to selling any house. Paperwork is also submitted with the New York Condition Attorney General’s Place of work.

Condominium status is normally part of the advertising and marketing applied to attract probable consumers simply because of the tax savings. These homeowners then may well pay back an HOA (Homeowner’s Affiliation) payment for products and services like snow plowing of the non-public road on which their new house is developed.

“When you you should not have any improve in density. Common large amount sizes that you look at to a ordinary one-loved ones household web page and you receive condo position, we do sense which is an unfair gain,” stated Phil Nanula, President & CEO of Essex Houses.

Nanula who is a aspect of the Buffalo Niagara Builders Association (BNBA) claimed the group recognizes that some earlier tasks, even though finished to the “letter of the regulation” had been unfair but they also worry that the laws getting viewed as paints the challenge with much too wide a brush. His company has several patio property developments all around Western New York, which are a form of condominium status home but not like the households posing as condos, the patio tons are substantially more compact and the households are 10 ft apart.

Nanula and the BNBA would like to see certain pointers for patio properties for example carved out and dread an “extremely destructive” influence on progress locally if they are not.

“The sort of possession that has been developed by this legislation has authorized us to make mostly what is vacant nester merchandise,” Nanula explained.

Nanula mentioned some apartment status properties like patio properties have aided retain people in Western New York, like people on a preset earnings or snowbirds who normally would not look at keeping a second property domestically. He included that smaller plenty may perhaps also increase a town’s tax foundation mainly because rather of just one taxpayer on what would usually be a buildable whole lot, there would be various.

The legislation would give municipalities the skill to independently choose to keep on condominium tax standing or not.

With the legislation in limbo builders like Henry Jurek III, Vice President of Jurek Customized Builders stated he has delayed plans to utilize for condominium status for Phase 8 of their Spaulding Eco-friendly growth in Clarence not figuring out what the long term retains.

“My supreme hope is it stays the way it is but if it can’t which is fantastic I see both of those sides of the tale so if it is a square footage requirement or a little something that is fairer to all people,” Jurek reported.

In a statement, Warren Wheeler of the New York Condition Assessors Affiliation which has been eager to shut the loophole stated:

“The NYS Assessors Association supports the monthly bill that will be submitted to the governor’s office this bill goes a prolonged way towards rectifying what we simply call the apartment loophole. It presents municipalities the selection of evaluating condos at entire sector worth rather of as rental homes.”

Governor Hochul is mentioned to be examining the laws. No other timeline or information and facts was supplied.

https://www.youtube.com/check out?v=iRu1Gs1uY10