Alexandra Gehrke and Jeffrey King face up to 20 years in prison each for defrauding Medicare in a wound-care scheme.
Arizona's Medicaid program is called the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System, or AHCCCS (pronounced "access"). It is ...
GlaxoSmithKline "deliberately" discontinued a widely-used asthma medication in order to reap profits and families suffered, ...
The state’s top lawyer accused a British multinational drug company of “deceptive and unfair practices” that endangered lives and exploited American taxpayers.
Arizona officials acknowledged that a fraud scheme targeting Indigenous people with addictions cost taxpayers $2.5 billion.
Ms. Mayes is seeking a declaration that the company violated the Arizona Consumer Fraud Act, which prohibits companies from selling a new drug at artificially inflated prices, and maximum statutory ...
A dozen attorneys general, including Arizona’s Kris Mayes, are warning federal employees across the country to be wary of the ...
In one of the largest healthcare fraud cases in U.S. history, an Arizona couple has admitted to orchestrating a scheme that ...
Two owner-operators of three Arizona medical companies have pleaded guilty to billing more than $1.2 billion in false and ...
Federal employees who resign can stop working and keep their pay and benefits until Sept. 30, the Trump administration said.
New Freedom works with recently released prison inmates, and its founders initially projected $900K in monthly profits, ...
Alexandra Gehrke and Jeffrey King, both from Phoenix, are accused of scamming health insurance plans of over $1 billion.