Michael Mirando, 40, previously a resident of Aliso Viejo, CA, was found guilty in May of 2017 on 15 counts of health care fraud. It took a federal jury less than half an hour to reach a verdict following the trial. At the end of October, Mirando was sentenced to eight years in prison and $3 million in restitution. Mirando’s current home in Portland is also being forfeited to the authorities since he admitted it was purchased by the financial proceeds of the fraud.
Medical Facility Owner Submits False Bills
Mirando owned Holter Labs, which offered patients cardiac monitoring services using what was called a Holter monitor. It is an ambulatory electrocardiography device, also known as an EKG device that can be used while a patient walks and performs normal activities. Holter Labs would provide these devices to physicians who then prescribed the devices to patients in order to monitor their heart rates for 24 to 48 hours. Mirando would bill the patients’ insurance companies for the day or two of use of the device. However, at the same time, he would tack on additional services that were not ordered or provided, like 30-day EKG tests, brain scans, and oxygen studies.
Healthcare Fraud Lawyer Blog


The Department of Justice (DOJ) for the Eastern District of California announced in October that two individuals pleaded guilty to health care fraud charges. These announcements continue to prove that the DOJ is focused on prosecuting all forms of health care fraud throughout the state and federal levels.
The California Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC) announced new suspensions twice in October. It
In early October, a California federal judge
On Sept. 22, the U.S. Department of Justice announced that drug manufacturer, Aegerion Pharmaceuticals Inc., a subsidiary of Novelion Therapeutics Inc., has agreed to
There is a misconception that the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) is mainly interested in health care fraud and violations of the False Claim Act (FCA) from large corporations like major insurers or pharmaceutical manufacturers. However, this is not true. The DOJ is on a mission to uncover health care fraud at all levels of care, including with individual physicians, local hospitals, regional insurers, and multi-national businesses. This is evidence by two recent DOJ announcements regarding settlements with a family practice chain in South Carolina and a hospital operator in New York.
In early September, the U.S. Department of Justice announced that Galena (Galena) Biopharma Inc. will pay more than $7.55 million in a False Claims Act (FCA) settlement. The U.S. alleges that Galena paid various types of kickbacks to encourage physicians to prescribe Abstral, which is a fentanyl-based drug, also known as an opioid.