U.S. railroad workers charged in $1 billion fraud

NEW YORK,  (Reuters) – U.S. prosecutors charged 11  people yesterday in connection with an alleged $1 billion  fraud involving hundreds of railroad workers filing false  disability claims.

In some cases, workers claimed they were unable to work  even while they played golf, shoveled snow or rode bikes, the  criminal complaint said.

Former Long Island Railroad workers, doctors and a federal  railroad agency employee are accused of participating in the  alleged scheme in which employees filed disability claims  shortly before they retired. The move allowed them to get  disability pay on top of their retirement pensions, prosecutors  said. In filing the claims, the railway workers allegedly paid  between $800 and $1,200 to hire one of several disability  doctors.

Those doctors would then conduct unnecessary tests and  concoct a medical issue that would allow the workers to go on  disability, prosecutors said.     Two have been charged and a third doctor has died.

The U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan said the scheme,  starting in 1998, had potentially cost the Railroad Retirement  Board more than $1 billion. The investigation developed after a  series of reports by The New York Times starting in 2008.

The Times said almost every longtime LIRR employee was  receiving disability payments, resulting in a disability rate  sharply higher than for other railroads.

In many cases, workers were far healthier than those claims  would indicate, according to prosecutors.

One defendant, a former engineering manager, receives  about $105,000 a year in pension and disability pay, based on  “severe pain when gripping and using simple hand tools and pain  in his knees, shoulder and back from bending or crouching,” the  complaint said.

An investigation found, however, he played tennis several  times a week and golfed regularly in his retirement.

 ‘NOT A FEEDING
 TROUGH’      

Another defendant was seen shoveling heavy snow and walking  with a baby stroller for 40 minutes, despite a disability claim  in which she claimed to be unable to stand for more than five  minutes without leg pain. She is paid at least $108,000 a year  by the railroad authority, prosecutors said. “Benefit programs … were designed to be a safety net for  the truly disabled, not a feeding trough for the truly  dishonest,” Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara told  reporters yesterday.

The eleven charged yesterday included two doctors and  their office manager who prosecutors say helped retirees create  false medical conditions in exchange for cash payments ranging  between $800 and $1,200.

Prosecutors said the seven retirees named in the complaint  were among hundreds of others who profited from the scheme.

All the accused face a 20-year maximum prison term if  convicted of conspiracy to commit healthcare and mail fraud  charges.