Between 2017 and 2022, the government paid Paul Mansour's pharmacy between $600,000 and $1 million based off fake claims.
Paul Mansour pleaded guilty to one count offraud Wednesday. Mansour was a pharmacist who worked at and co-owned Best Buy Drugs in Sierra Madre.
According to court documents, would create fake patient profiles in the pharmacy's filing system, and used those to add phony prescriptions to their profiles, which duplicated prescriptions for real patients. He would then submit false claims for the drugs in the fake files, and billed Medicare for the fake prescriptions in the names of the real pharmacy patients.
After his guilty plea Wednesday, Mansour is expected to be sentenced on June 28, and faces a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison.that I have read and agree
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