Case 1:19-cv-00475-CFC Document 10 Filed 06/26/19 Page 1 of 160 PageID #: 328
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                  FOR THE DISTRICT OF DELAWARE
   UNITED STATES OF AMERICA and               §
   THE STATE OF DELAWARE, ex rel.             §
   MALIKA SPRUILL and DOUGLAS                 §
   SPRUILL,                                   §
                                              §   C.A. No. 19-cv-475-CFC
                         Plaintiffs,          §
                                              §   FILED UNDER SEAL
          v.                                  §   PURSUANT TO
                                              §   The False Claims Act
   CONNECTIONS COMMUNITY                      §   31 U.S.C. § 3730(b)(2), and the
   SUPPORT PROGRAMS, INC. and                 §   Delaware False Claims and
   CATHY DEVANEY MCKAY,                       §   Reporting Act, 6 Del. C.
                                              §   § 1201 et seq.
                         Defendants.          §
                                              §   TRIAL BY JURY OF TWELVE
                                              §   (12) DEMANDED pursuant to
                                              §   F.R.C.P. Rule 38(b) and
                                              §   D. Del. LR 38.1
                     FIRST AMENDED COMPLAINT
   OF COUNSEL:                                      Kyle J. McGee (# 5558)
                                                    Laina M. Herbert (# 4717)
   Brian Mahany (WI 1065623)                        GRANT & EISENHOFER P.A.
   Tim Granitz (WI 1088934)                         123 Justison Street
   MAHANYLAW                                        Wilmington, DE 19801
   8112 West Bluemound Road                         Tel: 302-622-7000
     Suite 101
   Wauwatosa, WI 53213                              Attorneys for Plaintiff-Relators
   Tel: (414) 258-2375                              Malika Spruill and Douglas
   Facsimile: (414) 777-0776                        Spruill
   Date: June 21, 2019
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                                    TABLE OF CONTENTS
   SUMMARY OF THE ACTION ................................................................................ 1 
   I.              JURISDICTION AND VENUE ......................................................... 19 
   II.             THE PARTIES .................................................................................... 21 
   III.            FACTUAL BACKGROUND ............................................................. 28 
           A.      Connections’ Bill-To Pattern and Practice. ......... 28 
           B.      Malika Spruill....................................................... 36 
           C.      Dr. Akinlawon Olugbenga Ayeni. ....................... 52 
           D.      Fabrication of Medical Records. .......................... 54 
           E.      Medically Unnecessary Intake Sessions. ............. 64 
           F.      Manipulation of Length of Services Provided to
                   Meet Arbitrary Billing Targets. ........................... 68 
           G.      Dosing Clients Before They Are Seen By A
                   Physician and A Licensed Provider. .................... 72 
           H.      Connections Bills DSAMH and Medicaid for the
                   Same Claims......................................................... 73 
           I.      Connections Submits Claims to Medicare
                   Knowing Such Claims Will Be Rejected, and Then
                   Submits the Claims to DSAMH. .......................... 74 
           J.      Connections Unbundles Billing Codes to
                   Fraudulently Increase Reimbursement................. 75 
   IV.             GOVERNING LAW ........................................................................... 76 
           A.      Medicare ............................................................... 76 
           B.      Medicaid ............................................................... 82 
           C.      Licensed Clinical Social Worker ......................... 86 
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          D.     Federal False Claims Act ..................................... 87 
          E.     Delaware False Claims and Reporting Act .......... 89 
   ADDITIONAL FALSE CLAIMS ACT AND DELAWARE FALSE CLAIMS
   AND REPORTING ACT ALLEGATIONS ........................................................... 91 
   COUNT I VIOLATION OF THE FALSE CLAIMS ACT, 31 U.S.C.
   § 3729(A)(1)(A) AGAINST ALL DEFENDANTS .............................................. 100 
   COUNT II VIOLATION OF THE FALSE CLAIMS ACT, 31 U.S.C.
   § 3729(A)(1)(B) AGAINST ALL DEFENDANTS .............................................. 103 
   COUNT III VIOLATION OF THE DELAWARE FALSE CLAIMS AND
   REPORTING ACT, 6 DEL. C. § 1201(A)(1) AGAINST ALL DEFENDANTS 107 
   COUNT IV VIOLATION OF THE DELAWARE FALSE CLAIMS AND
   REPORTING ACT, 6 DEL. C. § 1201(A)(2) AGAINST ALL DEFENDANTS 110 
   COUNT V VIOLATION OF THE FALSE CLAIMS ACT, 31 U.S.C.
   § 3729(A)(1)(A) AGAINST ALL DEFENDANTS .............................................. 113 
   COUNT VI VIOLATION OF THE FALSE CLAIMS ACT, 31 U.S.C.
   § 3729(A)(1)(B) AGAINST ALL DEFENDANTS .............................................. 116 
   COUNT VII VIOLATION OF THE DELAWARE FALSE CLAIMS AND
   REPORTING ACT, 6 DEL. C. § 1201(A)(1) AGAINST ALL DEFENDANTS 120 
   COUNT VIII VIOLATION OF THE DELAWARE FALSE CLAIMS AND
   REPORTING ACT, 6 DEL. C. § 1201(A)(2) AGAINST ALL DEFENDANTS 123 
   COUNT IX VIOLATION OF THE FALSE CLAIMS ACT, 31 U.S.C.
   § 3729(A)(1)(A) AGAINST ALL DEFENDANTS .............................................. 126 
   COUNT X VIOLATION OF THE FALSE CLAIMS ACT, 31 U.S.C.
   § 3729(A)(1)(B) AGAINST ALL DEFENDANTS .............................................. 130 
   COUNT XI VIOLATION OF THE DELAWARE FALSE CLAIMS AND
   REPORTING ACT, 6 DEL. C. § 1201(A)(1) AGAINST ALL DEFENDANTS 135 
   COUNT XII VIOLATION OF THE DELAWARE FALSE CLAIMS AND
   REPORTING ACT, 6 DEL. C. § 1201(A)(2) AGAINST ALL DEFENDANTS 139 
                                                ii
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   COUNT XIII RETALIATION IN VIOLATION OF 31 U.S.C. § 3730(H)(1)
   AGAINST ALL DEFENDANTS .......................................................................... 143 
   COUNT XIV RETALIATION IN VIOLATION OF 6 DEL. C. § 1208 AGAINST
   ALL DEFENDANTS ............................................................................................ 146 
   COUNT XV RETALIATION IN VIOLATION OF 31 U.S.C. § 3730(H)(1)
   AGAINST ALL DEFENDANTS .......................................................................... 149 
   COUNT XVI RETALIATION IN VIOLATION OF 6 DEL. C. § 1208 AGAINST
   ALL DEFENDANTS ............................................................................................ 152 
   V.               PRAYER FOR RELIEF.................................................................... 154 
   VI.              JURY TRIAL DEMANDED ............................................................ 156 
                                                     iii
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                         SUMMARY OF THE ACTION
         1.      This qui tam civil action seeks to recover monetary losses and
   civil penalties on behalf of the United States of America (the “Government”)
   and the State of Delaware (“Delaware” or the “State”) against Defendants
   Connections Community Support Programs, Inc. (“Connections”) and Cathy
   Devaney McKay (“McKay,” and together with Connections, “Defendants”)
   pursuant to the False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. §§ 3729 et seq. (hereinafter
   “FCA”), and the Delaware False Claims and Reporting Act, 6 Del. C. §§ 1201
   et seq. (hereinafter “DFCRA”), arising from Defendants’ multiple fraudulent
   practices, including inter alia, knowingly presenting or causing to be
   presented false or fraudulent claims for reimbursement to the Medicare and
   Medicaid programs and/or knowingly making, using or causing to be made or
   used false records or statements material to false or fraudulent claims to the
   Medicare and Medicaid programs for reimbursement that:
              a. use Relator Malika Spruill’s (“Ms. Spruill’s”) unique National
                 Provider Identifier (“NPI”), which are designed to state or imply
                 that Ms. Spruill, a licensed clinical social worker (“LCSW”),
                 provided or supervised the provision of the services to
                 Connections’ clients, notwithstanding that, in fact, unlicensed
                 and unsupervised providers, who are not entitled to bill for their
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              services, provided these services, in an attempt to cause, and in
              fact causing, the Government and Delaware to pay out more
              money than they owe for these services;
           b. use Dr. Akinlawon Olugbenga Ayeni’s (“Dr. Ayeni”) NPI,
              which are designed to state or imply that Dr. Ayeni, a physician,
              provided or supervised the provision of the services to
              Connections’ clients, notwithstanding that, in fact, unlicensed
              and unsupervised providers, who are not entitled to bill for their
              services, provided these services, in an attempt to cause, and in
              fact causing, the Government and Delaware to pay out more
              money than they owe for these services;
           c. concealed that Defendants fabricated medical records, including
              that physicians’ incomplete medical records were completed by
              Connections’ personnel months after the fact without any
              background or knowledge as to the clients’ condition or
              treatment provided; recovery plans were submitted several
              months late and were “completely wrong and could cause issues
              with an audit;” information for one client was scanned into
              another client’s chart; Connections’ employees were ordered to
              “fraudulently   sign[]   documents     and/or   add[]   unknown
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              milligrams of medications on documents;” multiple HIPPA
              violations; and Connections’ employees knew the status of
              Connections’ documentation was “not good!”;
           d. concealed the whirlwind of fraudulent activity at Connections
              prior to external audits whereby Defendants attempted to hide
              hundreds of unsigned documents,” including “the recovery
              plans, which [were] clearly out of compliance;” McKay’s orders
              to “just start signing” unsigned documents despite knowing
              “they are not all correct;” orders to clean up the charts “scattered
              across the floors and around the desks” and “under desks, on the
              floor, in drawers, etc.” and to conceal the fact that Connections’
              staff lacked the necessary training and certifications to comply
              with the Division of Substance Abuse and Mental Health’s
              (“DSAMH”) requirements and other regulations;
           e. concealed medically unnecessary intake sessions designed to
              increase Connections’ profits;
           f. concealed that Defendants manipulated the length of services
              Connections provided by seeking reimbursement for more time
              than they actually spent with clients, Connections’ providers
              double-booked clients and fabricated their schedules to make it
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                 look like providers were seeing clients after they had clocked out
                 and left the facility -- all to reach arbitrary billing targets
                 designed to increase Connections’ bottom line;
              g. concealed that Defendants dosed clients before they were seen
                 by Connections’ doctors and licensed counselors and billed
                 clients, i.e. Medicaid, Medicare or DSAMH, for the clients’
                 dosing at the clinics when they were not;
              h. concealed that Connections bills and is reimbursed by DSAMH
                 and Medicaid for the same claims;
              i. concealed that Connections submits claims to Medicare knowing
                 such claims will be rejected, and then submits the claims to
                 DSAMH; and
              j. concealed that Connections unbundled Intensive Outpatient
                 Program (“IOP”) services when it fails to provide the minimum
                 required nine hours of weekly contact to increase its
                 reimbursement.
         Defendants’ Improper Use of Ms. Spruill’s NPI
         2.      Any use of Ms. Spruill’s NPI to make or submit claims for
   reimbursement to Medicare or Medicaid for professional services she did not
   personally perform, and not personally performed by staff members that Ms.
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   Spruill’s supervised, is unlawful and causes the Government and Delaware to
   overpay Connections. This case challenges Defendants’ use of fraudulent
   practices to divert federal and State funds via the Medicare and Medicaid
   programs -- funds desperately needed to effectively combat grave societal
   problems such as the prevalence of substance use disorders in Delaware and
   the opioid epidemic in particular -- to their own pockets. As alleged in more
   detail below, Relators Ms. Spruill and Mr. Spruill (collectively, “Relators”)
   possess documentary evidence of Connections’ practice of making or
   presenting false claims using Ms. Spruill’s NPI to obtain Government and
   State funds to which it was not entitled.
         3.     Under the applicable rules, Ms. Spruill was permitted to submit
   or cause to be submitted, under her NPI, claims for professional services she
   personally provided to Medicare or Medicaid beneficiaries. Moreover, a
   limited set of individuals supervised by Ms. Spruill were permitted to submit
   or cause to be submitted, under Ms. Spruill’s NPI, claims for professional
   services such individuals provided under Ms. Spruill’s supervision to
   Medicaid beneficiaries. This case is not about such claims.
         4.     Ms. Spruill supervised the following unlicensed staff in the
   Dover clinic, and therefore, these individuals were permitted to bill Medicaid
   for services they performed under Ms. Spruill’s supervision using Ms.
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   Spruill’s NPI: Alyssa Lucas (“Lucas”), a Counselor II to Counselor I who
   became a Certified Alcohol and Drug Counselor (“CADC”); Alex Cropper
   (“Cropper”), a Counselor I and CADC; Shaneka Geipel (“Geipel”), a
   Counselor I who became a CADC; Cat Montefusco (“Montefusco”), a
   Counselor II to Counselor I who became a CADC; Roderick Anderson
   (“Anderson”), a Counselor II; Edwin Motten (“Motten”), a Counselor II;
   Johanna Truax (“Truax”), a Master’s level Counselor II; Devon Duker Hanzer
   (“Hanzer”), a Counselor II; Diara Miller (“Miller”), a Counselor II; and Jarrett
   Cagel (“Cagel”), a Counselor II. After the rules changed, CADCs were
   permitted to bill Medicaid directly, and should have done so.
         5.     Ms. Spruill also supervised certain staff in Connections’ Smyrna
   clinic from August 2015 through January 2016, and two individuals in the
   Wilmington clinic, including Heather Emmerick (“Emmerick”), a CADC in
   the Smyrna clinic, and Theresa Sharp (“Sharp”) in the Wilmington clinic. All
   of the individuals Ms. Spruill supervised during this time in the Smyrna and
   Wilmington clinics had Master’s degrees, and should have billed under
   CADC rates.
         6.     Moreover, under the applicable rules, if other LCSWs, Licensed
   Professional Counselors of Mental Health (“LPCMHs”) or Licensed Marriage
   and Family Therapists (“LMFTs”) submitted or caused to be submitted claims
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   for professional services that they personally provided to Medicaid
   beneficiaries under Ms. Spruill’s NPI, Medicaid would have reimbursed
   Connections the same amount as if Ms. Spruill had personally performed
   those services. Therefore, although this practice is inappropriate (because
   such licensed professionals are not authorized to use Ms. Spruill’s NPI), the
   Government and Delaware would have paid Connections the same amounts
   they would have paid in the event such licensed professionals used their own
   NPIs. Accordingly, Ms. Spruill does not seek damages for claims submitted
   by or on behalf of LCSWs, LMFTs or LPCMHs for services personally
   performed by these LCSWs, LMFTs or LPCMHs, and submitted to Medicaid
   for reimbursement under Ms. Spruill’s NPI.
         7.      Relators seek recovery of damages suffered by the Government
   and Delaware as a result of claims for reimbursement submitted to Medicare
   or Medicaid by or on behalf of unlicensed, un-credentialed or lower-level
   individuals who Ms. Spruill never supervised, or who Ms. Spruill was not
   supervising at the time they used Ms. Spruill’s NPI to submit claims for
   reimbursement to Medicaid, including but not limited to the following:
              a. any Connections’ staff who worked in the Harrington clinic, as
                 Ms. Spruill never supervised any staff in the Harrington clinic;
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              b. any staff in the Newark clinic from August 2013 through October
                 6, 2014, as Ms. Spruill was not a supervisor while she was
                 working in the Newark clinic during this period; and
              c. any staff other than (i) Lucas, Cropper, Geipel, Montefusco,
                 Anderson, Motten, Truax, Hanzer, Miller, or Cagel in the Dover
                 clinic; (ii) staff under Ms. Spruill’s supervision in the Smyrna
                 clinic from August 2015 to January 2016; and (iii) staff under
                 Ms. Spruill’s supervision in the Wilmington clinic from August
                 2015 to January 2016.
         8.      Medicare does not reimburse, inter alia, CADCs, Certified
   Social Workers, Drug and Alcohol Rehabilitation Counselors, Licensed
   Alcoholic and Drug Counselors (“LADCs”), Licensed Professional
   Counselors (“LPCs”), LMFTs, persons holding a Masters of Social Work, or
   Mental Health Counselors. Thus, Ms. Spruill also seeks damages for claims
   for reimbursement submitted to Medicare by or on behalf of CADCs,
   Certified Social Workers, Drug and Alcohol Rehabilitation Counselors,
   LADCs, LPCs, LMFTs, persons with a Masters of Social Work or Mental
   Health Counselors using Ms. Spruill’s NPI regardless of whether Ms. Spruill
   supervised them.
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         9.     Medicare does not authorize LCSWs to bill for services
   furnished as an incident to their own processional services. In other words, a
   LCSW may not bill Medicare for services s/he orders as part of an active
   treatment plan that are integral, although an incidental part of the LCSW’s
   professional service, and are furnished by another individual under the
   LCSW’s direct supervision. Thus, Relators also seek damages for claims for
   reimbursement submitted to Medicare by or on behalf of unlicensed, un-
   credentialed individuals who used Ms. Spruill’s NPI to submit claims for
   reimbursement to Medicare.
         10.    Although Relators’ complaint alleges the improper use of Ms.
   Spruill’s NPI by unlicensed providers Ms. Spruill did not supervise, the
   practice of Connections’ unlicensed and unsupervised employees and agents
   using licensed qualified healthcare providers’ NPIs for Medicare and
   Medicaid billing purposes is not limited to Ms. Spruill, but extends to several
   of Connections’ other licensed qualified healthcare providers.
   Defendants’ Improper Use of Dr. Ayeni’s NPI
         11.    This qui tam action also seeks to recover monetary losses and
   civil penalties on behalf of the Government and Delaware against Defendants
   pursuant to the FCA and the DFCRA arising from Defendants’ practice of
   knowingly presenting or causing to be presented false or fraudulent claims for
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   reimbursement and/or knowingly making, using or causing to be made or used
   false records or statements material to false or fraudulent claims to federal
   Medicare and state Medicaid for reimbursement that use Dr. Ayeni’s NPI,
   which are designed to state or imply that Dr. Ayeni, a physician, provided the
   services to Connections’ clients or supervised the provision of these services,
   notwithstanding that, in fact, unlicensed and unsupervised providers, who are
   not entitled to bill for their services, provided the services to Connections’
   clients, in an attempt to cause, and in fact causing, the Government and
   Delaware to pay out more money than they owe for these services.
         12.    Additionally, Connections knowingly billed the Government,
   through its federal Medicare and state Medicaid programs and Delaware’s
   DSAMH program, for services purportedly provided by Dr. Ayeni using his
   NPI, despite that these services were not performed by Dr. Ayeni, or
   supervised by Dr. Ayeni.        Instead, these services were provided by
   Connections’ unlicensed agents or employees who are not entitled to bill for
   reimbursement from Medicare and/or Medicaid, unless properly supervised.
   Such action was designed to state or imply that Dr. Ayeni provided these
   services and/or supervised the provision of these services to Connections’
   clients, which is untrue.
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         13.   Defendants have engaged in at least the following further
   schemes to defraud the Government and Delaware.
   Defendants’ Fabrication of Medical Records
         14.   Connections must comply with all of the conditions and
   requirements set by Medicaid, Medicare and DSAMH, including but not
   limited to submitting reimbursement for services that were actually provided
   to the clients, services that were medically necessary and correctly coding
   those services when submitting a claim. As described herein, when physicians
   fell behind on recordkeeping, or were terminated, their records were
   completed months later by Connections’ employees who had no information
   on the clients’ underlying conditions or the treatment provided. Connections’
   providers not only submitted late and incomplete records, but they were so
   inaccurate that Ms. Spruill refused to sign many of them. Other employees
   were ordered to “fraudulently sign[] documents and/or add[] unknown
   milligrams of medications on documents (because the client hadn’t done so).”
   This case challenges, and Relators possess documentary evidence of,
   Connections’ practice of making or presenting false claims using these
   fabricated medical records.
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         Defendants Conceal Their Noncompliance From External
         Auditors
         15.    When faced with external audits by officials who could put
   Connections out of business, Defendants covered up their noncompliance by
   hiding the hundreds of unsigned documents in their records and cleaning up
   the “under desks, on the floor, in drawers, etc.” and scurrying to get locks for
   cabinets that were required to be locked. This case challenges Connections’
   noncompliance with Medicaid, Medicare and DSAMH’s requirements despite
   the appearance that it did when audited. As described in detail herein and in
   the documentary evidence Relators possess, by way of example only, Mr.
   Spruill notified his superiors that the Harrington clinic was out of compliance
   in multiple areas. Six months later, Connections took corrective action against
   Mr. Spruill by offering him a demotion, severance package or termination,
   and seven months later, terminated him.
         Defendants Conceal Medically Unnecessary Intake Sessions
         Designed to Increase Connections’ Profits
         16.    According to the Manual (defined below), Connections is to be
   reimbursed at predetermined rates for providing specific, medically-necessary
   alcohol and drug treatment services. Connections requires its new clients to
   participate in an intake session so providers may determine the level of
   services each client should receive. When current Connections’ clients, who
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   are receiving medication-assisted therapy (“MAT”) services for opioid
   addiction, miss three consecutive days of dosing, Connections requires them
   to submit to another intake, rather than allowing them to speak with an on-call
   physician. These medically-unnecessary intakes are usually conducted at the
   Harrington clinic because it is the only clinic that offers around-the-clock
   intakes, at the cost of $337.27. Following this intake, clients are returned to
   their “home” clinic and treatment continues as it did prior to the intake. As
   described herein, this case challenges these fraudulent, medically unnecessary
   intakes and the “23-hour” program that follows, which serve only to increase
   Connections’ bottom line.
         Defendants’ Improperly Manipulated the Length of Services
         Connections Provided to Clients
         17.    When Connections submits claims for reimbursement for MAT
   services, it is representing that the client was seen for the amount of time that
   it billed for. Not so. As described herein and in Relators’ documentary
   evidence, Connections billed Medicare, Medicaid and DSAMH for the
   maximum time allowed for each service regardless of whether Connections’
   providers actually saw the client for that amount of time, or the minimum
   required time to submit the claim.       In addition, Connections’ providers
   double-booked clients and fabricated records to make it appear they were
   seeing clients after they had clocked out and left the facility. This case
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   challenges these fraudulent practices that were designed to reach arbitrary
   billing targets created to increase Connections’ bottom line.
         Connections Doses Clients Before They Are Seen by a Physician
         and a Licensed Provider
         18.    This case challenges Connections’ practice of dosing clients
   before they are seen by a doctor and a licensed counselor, and submitting
   claims for reimbursement as if they have been seen by such providers. As
   described herein and in Relators’ documentary evidence, dosing clients before
   they go through Connections’ intake procedure and are seen by both a doctor
   and a licensed counselor is against Connections’ policy. Or, in Ms. Spruill’s
   words: “Ridiculous!” “This CAN’T Happen! Clients cannot be dosing with
   us for 2 months with us not seeing them!!!! If this person died on our watch,
   we would be screwed!!! Unacceptable!”
         Connections Bills and Is Reimbursed By DSAMH and Medicaid for
         the Same Claims
         19.    As described herein, this case challenges Connections’ practice
   of submitting a claim to DSAMH for reimbursement for services provided to
   uninsured clients, enrolling the uninsured client in Medicaid and then
   submitting the same claim for reimbursement to Medicaid.         Ultimately,
   Connections receives and pockets reimbursement from both DSAMH and
   Medicaid for these claims.
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         Connections Submits MAT Claims to Medicare Knowing Such
         Claims Will Be Rejected Before Submitting Them to DSAMH
         20.    This case challenges Connections’ standard practice of
   submitting claims for MAT services to Medicare knowing such claims will be
   denied. After Medicare denies these claims, Connections submits them to
   DSAMH for reimbursement relying on DSAMH’s coverage of necessary
   treatment not otherwise covered by alternative sources. While Medicare
   suffers no loss (other than wasted resources rejecting the claim), this practice
   constitutes submission or presentment of a false claim.
         Connections Unbundles IOP Services to Increase Reimbursement
         21.    To be reimbursed for IOP services, Connections must provide
   between nine and nineteen hours of contact per week, with a minimum of
   three contact days per week. This case challenges Connections’ practice of
   maximizing its reimbursement when it fails to provide nine hours of contact
   per week by unbundling IOP services and billing for them on a per unit basis,
   rather than a per diem basis. Again, all in the name of generating more money
   for Connections’ bottom line.
         22.    Defendants’ actions, as described herein, divert government
   funds -- paid by federal and Delaware taxpayers -- for health benefits to low
   income individuals and families, to themselves. Thus, Defendants’ actions
   directly deprive Delaware of money it needs desperately to fight significant
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   societal ills, such as substance use disorders and the opioid epidemic in
   particular, and rob Delaware’s most vulnerable citizens of resources
   designated for their treatment. Indeed, as Connections provides substance use
   disorder treatment, Defendants’ fraudulent submissions of claims for
   reimbursement directly capitalizes on the ongoing opioid epidemic.
         23.   In 2016, throughout the United States:
        116 people died every day from opioid-related drug overdoses;
        2.1 million people had an opioid use disorder;
        948,000 people used heroin – 170,000 for the first time;
        11.5 million people misused prescription opioids – 2.1 million for the
         first time;
        17,087 deaths were attributed to overdosing on commonly-prescribed
         opioids;
        19,413 deaths were attributed to overdosing on synthetic opioids other
         than methadone;
        15,469 deaths were attributed to overdosing on heroin;
        Totaling $504 billion in economic costs.
         24.   In 2017, throughout the United States:
        More than 130 people died every day from opioid-related drug
         overdoses;
        Drug overdose deaths involving any opioid―prescription opioids
         (including methadone), synthetic opioids, and heroin―rose from
         18,515 deaths in 2007 to 47,600 deaths in 2017;
        17,029 deaths were attributed to overdosing on prescription opioids;
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        28,400 deaths were attributed to overdosing on synthetic narcotics; and
        15, 482 deaths were attributed to overdosing on heroin.
         25.   The opioid crisis has had, and continues to have, a devastating
   impact on Delaware. The Delaware Department of Health and Social Services
   (“DHSS”) reported “[t]here were at least 291 deaths [in 2018] in Delaware
   from suspected overdoses. Tragically, the final number is expected to exceed
   400 after all toxicology screens are finished (they take six-eight weeks) and
   final death determinations are made on outstanding cases by the Division of
   Forensic Science. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ranked
   Delaware as number six in the nation for overdose deaths in 2017.” As of
   June 16, 2019, DHSS reported 110 suspected overdose deaths in 2019.
         26.   According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
   Delaware had the sixth highest increase in overdose deaths from 2015 to 2016
   in the nation, with a 40% increase in drug overdose deaths in 2016. Between
   2016 and 2017, Delaware’s drug overdose death rate increased 20.1%.
         27.   When measured using emergency room and hospital billing data,
   Delaware’s opioid overdose rate increased by 105% -- or more than three
   times the average of the 16 states participating in the Enhanced State Opioid
   Overdose Surveillance program -- from the third quarter of 2016 to the third
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   quarter of 2017. Delaware’s increase over this period was higher than any of
   the 16 other participants, other than Wisconsin.
         28.    In 2016, Delaware lost over 300 lives to overdose, 143 of these
   deaths were due to opioids. The year before, in 2015, Delaware ranked third
   in the United States in per-capita health care costs from opioid abuse, and
   spent approximately $109.4 million in health care costs battling this crisis.
   This staggering cost does not include the financial impact of the opioid
   epidemic on Delaware’s’ criminal justice system, social services, and
   educational resources.
         29.    The Delaware Department of Justice has consistently highlighted
   the need “for Delaware to fund more treatment opportunities [in the areas of
   long-term residential treatment and sober living facilities] for those
   Delawareans with substance use disorder who are willing to seek treatment.”
         30.    Facing an uphill battle, DSAMH’s approximately $24 million
   budget for addressing addiction and behavioral health does not stretch nearly
   far enough. And, DHSS’s Fiscal Year 2019 budget includes $990,000 for
   SUD assessment and referral to treatment of people who have overdosed or
   are suffering from addiction, and have been brought to emergency rooms. It
   also includes $328,500 for 20 additional sober living beds, and $100,000 for
   naloxone.
                                        18
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         31.    Connections holds itself out as Delaware’s largest behavioral
   health provider, and is one of two Delaware treatment providers recently
   named to lead the Delaware Substance Use Treatment and Recovery
   Transformation (START) Initiative, which has been tasked with tackling
   access to treatment and navigating recovery from addiction.
         32.    Defendants’ conduct, as described herein, has allowed
   Connections to pocket enormous reported revenues (approximately $102
   million in 2016 alone) under the guise of its nonprofit status, at the expense
   of vulnerable Delawareans.
         33.    Defendants are and should be required to abide by the current
   Medicare and Medicaid billing requirements, rather than being rewarded with
   additional funding from new Delaware initiatives at a time when more than
   one million additional budget dollars are being devoted to fight this epidemic.
   I.    JURISDICTION AND VENUE
         34.    This Court has subject matter jurisdiction over this action
   pursuant to 31 U.S.C. §§ 3730, 3732.
         35.    The Court has personal jurisdiction over Defendants pursuant to
   31 U.S.C. § 3732(a), which authorizes nationwide service of process, and
   because one or all of the Defendants can be found, resides or transacts
                                          19
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   business in this District. Specifically, Connections is incorporated in the State
   of Delaware, and maintains headquarters in Wilmington, Delaware.
         36.    Venue is proper in this District pursuant to 31 U.S.C. § 3732(a)
   because Defendants transact business in this District.
         37.    This suit is not based upon the prior public disclosure of the
   allegations or actions in a criminal, civil, or administrative hearing, or from
   the news media. This suit is also not substantially based upon allegations or
   transactions, which are the subject of a civil suit or an administrative
   proceeding which the Government or Delaware is already a party.
         38.    To the extent that there has been a public disclosure unknown to
   Relators, they are an original source of the information under 31 U.S.C.
   § 3730(e)(4) and 6 Del. C. § 1206(c). Relators have direct and independent
   knowledge of the information on which the allegations are based, and
   pursuant to 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4) and 6 Del. C. § 1206(c), voluntarily
   provided the information to the United States Attorney General, the United
   States Attorney for the District of Delaware, and the Attorney General of the
   State of Delaware before filing this qui tam action.
                                          20
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   II.   THE PARTIES
         39.    Relator Malika Spruill (“Ms. Spruill”) is a resident of
   Middletown, Delaware, and has knowledge of the factual allegations
   contained herein.
         40.    Relator Douglas Spruill (“Mr. Spruill”) is a resident of
   Middletown, Delaware, and has knowledge of the factual allegations
   contained herein.
         41.    Mr. Spruill worked at Connections in various positions from
   2002 through 2007, and again from January 2013 until he was terminated
   improperly in June 2019. In June 2019, Mr. Spruill was the Site Director of
   the Harrington clinic.
         42.    Defendant Connections is incorporated in Delaware, and its
   registered agent is Catherine DeVaney McKay, 3821 Lancaster Pike,
   Wilmington, Delaware 19805.
         43.    Connections operates an outpatient medical and mental health
   clinic in Wilmington, and provides integrated mental health, substance abuse
   treatment, and primary care at its clinics in Newark, Smyrna, Dover,
   Harrington, and Millsboro. It also has a satellite site in Seaford. Connections
   claims its “clinics are staffed by physicians, nurse practitioners, psychiatrists,
   therapists, nurses and other health care and counseling professionals.”
                                          21
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         44.    Connections operates in more than 100 separate locations in
   Delaware, and provides primary care, mental health, substance abuse and sex
   offender treatment to more than 35,000 Delawareans, including all of the
   individuals who are incarcerated in Delaware’s unified correctional system.
         45.    In 2016, Connections became the provider of medical, mental
   health care and addiction treatment to the Caroline County Detention Center
   in Denton, Maryland.
         46.    Today, Connections is one of Delaware’s largest nonprofit
   organizations that “assists people with psychiatric and intellectual disabilities,
   as well as those with substance use disorders, homeless veterans and their
   families, families in crisis, and men and women who are incarcerated.”
         47.    Connections has more than 1,700 full-time employees who serve
   more than 42,000 people each year.
         48.    Connections’ current strategic plan calls for it to explore
   opportunities in nearby states.
         49.    In response to the nation’s deadly opioid epidemic, Connections
   partnered with DSAMH, the City of Harrington, and the USDA to open
   Connections Harrington Withdrawal Management Center Inpatient and
   Outpatient Services (“Harrington”). This clinic “is the primary place where
   residents of Kent and Sussex Counties receive safe and secure, medically
                                          22
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   monitored withdrawal management services and treatment.” Harrington also
   provides support to those who are withdrawing from alcohol and other drugs.
   In addition, Connections operates sober living homes, the Women’s
   Residential Treatment Center, New Expectations (a residential program for
   pregnant, justice-involved women with substance abuse issues who are facing
   incarceration), and DUI treatment programs.
         50.   As of November 18, 2016, DSAMH reported the following
   licensure and Medicaid Certification information for twenty-nine of
   Connections’ substance abuse and mental health programs in Delaware:
     PROVIDER INFORMATION                        LICENSURE/CERTIFICATION
                                                 STATUS
                                                 (L=License; C=Certification; P=
                                                 Provisional)
     Connections, ACT — Dover (Paul's            Full C
     Team)
     Carroll's Plaza - 1114 South DuPont         Provides services for persons with
     Highway, Suite # 103                        psychiatric disabilities.
     Dover, DE
     19901 302-336-8307
     Connections CSP ACT I                       Full C
     1423 Capitol Trail, Polly Drummond
     Office Plaza, Suite 3302 2nd Floor          Provides services for persons with
     Newark, DE 19711                            psychiatric disabilities.
     302.894-7900
     Connections CSP ACT II                      Full C
     500 W 10th Street
     Wilmington, DE 19801
                                       23
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     302.230.9102                            Provides services for persons with
                                             psychiatric disabilities.
     Connections CSP ACT III                 Full C
     2126 West Newport Pike, Suite 201
     Wilmington, DE 19804                    Provides services for persons with
     302.304.3350                            psychiatric disabilities.
     Connections CSP ACT IV                  Full C
     1423 Capitol Trail, Polly Drummond
     Plaza, (Bldg. #3) (2nd Floor) 3202      Provides services for persons with
     Newark, DE 19711                        psychiatric disabilities.
     302-428-9200
     Connections CSP ACT V                   Full C
     801 West Street
     Wilmington, DE 19801                    Provides services for persons with
     (302) 232-5490                          psychiatric disabilities.
     Connections CSP ACT (Paul's Team)       Full C
     621 W. Division St.
     Dover, DE 19901                         Provides services for persons with
     302.672.9360                            psychiatric disabilities.
     Connections CSP (AOD)                   Full L
     2205 Silverside Road, Suite 5
     Wilmington, DE 19810                    Provides      outpatient     DUI
     302.984.3380                            Treatment.
     Connections CSP ACT IV New Castle       Full L
     1423 Capitol Trail, Polly Drummond
     Office Plaza, Suite 3302                Provides services for persons with
     Newark, DE 19711 302.379.4174           psychiatric disabilities.
     Connections CSP Brandywine St.          Full L
     Women's Residential Treatment
     Program                                 Provides Residential Services.
     822 North West Street
     Wilmington, DE 19802
     1-866-477-5345
     Connections CSP AOD Dover               Full L
     (Outpatient)
                                      24
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     Carroll's Plaza located at 1114 South   Provides Outpatient Treatment
     DuPont Highway                          Services.
     Dover, DE 19901
     1-866.477.5345
     Connections CSP (Opioid Treatment       Full L
     Program)
     Carroll's Plaza located at 1114 South   Provides medicated assistance
     DuPont Highway,                         treatment in an outpatient setting.
     Dover, DE 19901
     1-866.477.5345
     Connections Residential Detox           Full L/Contracted
     1-11 East Street, Spartan Station
     Shopping Center                         Residential         Detoxification
     Harrington, DE 19952                    Services
     1-866.477.5345
                                             Outpatient Treatment Services
                                             Opioid Treatment Services.
     Connections AOD Millsboro (Outpatient   Full L
     Treatment)
     315 Old Landing Road                    Provides Outpatient Treatment
     Millsboro, DE 19966                     Services.
     1-866.477.5345
     Connections AOD Millsboro (Opioid       Full L
     Treatment)
     315 Old Landing Road                    Provides      Opioid    Treatment
     Millsboro, DE 19966                     Services.
     1-866.477.5345
     Connections Millsboro (Co-Occurring     New Provisional License
     Treatment)
     315 Old Landing Road                    Provides Co-Occurring Treatment
     Millsboro, DE 19966                     Services.
     1-866.477.5345
     Connections CSP (Opioid Treatment       Full L
     Program)
     3304 Polly Drummond Office Plaza,       Provides medicated      assistance
     Newark, DE 19711                        treatment.
     1-866.477.5345
     Connections CSP (AOD Outpatient)        Full L
                                       25
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     3304 Polly Drummond Office Plaza,       Provides Outpatient Treatment
     Bldg. 3                                 Services.
     Newark, DE 19711
     1-866.477.5345
     Connections (Outpatient Treatment)      Full L
     Smyrna
     320 High Street                         Provides Outpatient Treatment
     Smyrna, DE 19977                        Services.
     1-866.477.5345
     Connections (Opioid Treatment) Smyrna   Full L
     320 High Street
     Smyrna, DE 19977                        Provides    Opioid    Treatment
     1-866.477.5345                          Services.
     Connections North Wilmington            Full L
     2205 Silverside Road, Suite 5,
     Wilmington, DE 19810                    Provides     DUI      Outpatient
     1-866.477.5345                          Treatment Services.
     Connections (Co-Occurring Treatment)    New Provisional License
     Wilmington
     801 West Street                         Provides Co-Occurring Treatment
     Wilmington, DE 19810                    Services.
     1-866.477.5345
     Connections CSP Blackbird Landing       Full C
     Group Home
     994 Blackbird Landing Road              Group homes for people with
     Townsend, DE 19734                      psychiatric disabilities.
     1-866.477.5345
     Connections CSP Camden Group Home       Full C
     124 N West Street
     Camden, DE 19934                        Group homes for people with
     1-866.477.5345                          psychiatric disabilities.
     Connections CSP Cardinal Group Home     Full C
     722 Cardinal Ave
     Bear, DE 19701                          Group homes for people with
     1-866.477.5345                          psychiatric disabilities.
     Connections CSP Clint Walker Group      Full C
     Home
                                      26
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     676 Black Diamond Rd                        Group homes for people with
     Smyrna, DE 19977                            psychiatric disabilities.
     1-866.477.5345
     Connections CSP Gordy Place Group           Full C
     Home
     204 Gordy Place                             Group homes for people with
     New Castle, DE 19720                        psychiatric disabilities.
     1-866.477.5345
     Connections CSP Roxanna Group Homes         Full C
     35906 Zion Church Rd.
     Frankford, DE 19945                         Group homes for people with
     1-866.477.5345                              psychiatric disabilities.
     Connections CSP Still Road Group Home Full C
     2197 Still Road
     Camden, DE 19934                      Group homes for people with
     1-866.477.5345                        psychiatric disabilities.
         51.    In 2016, Connections earned $102,045,443 in reported revenues,
   53% of which derives from the Delaware Department of Corrections; 15%
   from “other fees for service;” 14% from Delaware Health and Social Services;
   13% from Medicaid; 5% from HUD; and 1% from contributions and grants.
         52.    Defendant McKay is Connections’ founder, chief executive
   officer and president. McKay is a licensed associate marriage and family
   therapist, and has worked as a therapist and supervisor, and in the behavioral
   health industry since 1977.
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   III.   FACTUAL BACKGROUND
          A.    Connections’ Bill-To Pattern and Practice.
          53.   Medicare and Medicaid reimburse, inter alia, physicians and
   LCSWs at a higher rate than they reimburse many other providers. While
   Medicaid permits an employee who is supervised by a LCSW to bill under
   that LCSW’s NPI, Medicare does not.         Therefore, Connections has an
   incentive to submit claims for reimbursement under a LCSW’s NPI to
   fraudulently maximize the amount of reimbursement it receives from
   Medicare and Medicare.
          54.   Similarly, when a non-LCSW or non-physician performs
   services on a Medicare client, Connections has three options: (a) not bill
   Medicare for the services because Medicare only reimburses LCSWs and
   physicians; (b) submit the claim to Medicare for reimbursement under the
   provider’s NPI knowing Medicare will reject the claim, and then seek
   reimbursement from DSAMH; or (c) bill under Ms. Spruill or another
   LCSW’s (or a physician’s) NPI, as if Ms. Spruill, a LCSW or a physician
   performed the services. Connections is only reimbursed for its services under
   the third option.
          55.   Connections instructs its LCSWs to sign off on services they did
   not provide and work they did not supervise for reimbursement purposes,
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   despite Medicaid, Medicare and other managed care organizations
   reimbursing work done by different practitioners at different rates. For
   example, at a meeting attended by Ms. Spruill, McKay, Jevon Hicks, Sr.
   (“Hicks”), Connections’ Director of Billing and Medical Records, Melissa
   Schneck (“Schneck”), Mohamed, Angie Walker (“Walker”) and Bill Northey
   (“Northey”), McKay reported that United Healthcare was requiring LCSWs
   to supervise all counselors, and instructed the LCSWs that they must sign off
   on the counselor’s work. At this meeting, the attendees raised the issue of
   different practitioners being reimbursed by Medicaid, Medicare and other
   managed care organizations at different rates, based on their licensing and
   qualifications. In response, McKay insisted that United Healthcare would
   only accept LCSW-reviewed work from any counselors that were providing
   services. Someone at this meeting asked about Highmark Delaware Health
   Options’ (“Health Options”) practices for reimbursing providers, and McKay
   and Hicks replied that it was easier for LCSWs to sign off on everything to
   make it less confusing.
         56.   When any Connections employee, whether they be licensed or
   unlicensed, enters medical notes and/or other information into Connections’
   Electronic Healthcare Records system (“EHR”), EHR automatically
   populates the “bill to” person’s name with the name of the person who is
                                        29
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   entering the information into EHR. Connections’ providers are instructed by
   management to change the “bill to” person to the Licensed Clinician at the
   clinic where the services were provided by selecting the designated name from
   a list of populated names from a drop-down menu.1 If a provider fails to select
   the designated “bill to” person, then the billing staff and Connections’ billing
   system, CareLogic, will reject that claim, and it will not be sent out for billing
   to the managed care organization. Connections requires a LCSW to be
   selected as the “bill to” person, despite that the LCSW did not provide the
   services or supervise the provision of the services.
         57.    According to the Delaware Adult Behavioral Health Service
   Certification and Reimbursement Provider Specific Policy Manual (Nov. 1,
   2016) (the “Manual”), substance use disorder services (SUDs) may be
   provided by “licensed and unlicensed professional staff, who are at least
   18 years of age with a high school or equivalent diploma, according to their
   areas of competence as determined by degree, required levels of experience
   as defined by State law and regulations and departmentally approved program
   guidelines and certifications.”
         1
          Ex. 1 (1/24/18 10:04 am email from Jevon Hicks to Johanna Truax
   copying Lisa Clark and Malika McMeans-Spruill re: Billing errors).
                                          30
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             58.   Service providers employed by addiction and/or co-occurring
   treatment services agencies, i.e. Connections, must work in a program
   licensed by DSAMH, comply with all relevant licensing regulations, and
   maintain their individual provider licenses.
             59.   Licensed practitioners who may bill Medicaid for SUDs under
   Delaware regulation are licensed by Delaware, and include, but are not limited
   to LCSWs, LPCMHs and LMFTs, Nurse Practitioners (“NPs”), Advanced
   Practice Nurses (“APNs”), medical doctors (MDs and DOs), psychologists,
   and as of July 1, 2016, Licensed Chemical Dependency Professionals
   (“LCDPs”) and CADCs. Delaware licensure of practitioners does not drive
   Medicaid reimbursement. For example, RNs are licensed, but not entitled to
   reimbursement from Medicaid, and are therefore grouped with “unlicensed
   staff.”
             60.   Under Delaware Medicaid, reimbursement for services,
   including crisis intervention services, outpatient addiction services and
   residential treatment services, are based upon a Medicaid fee schedule
   established by Delaware. According to the Methods and Standards For
   Establishing Payment Rates For Other Licensed Behavioral Health
   Practitioners: “If a Medicare fee exists for a defined covered procedure code,
   then Delaware will pay Psychologists at 100% of the Medicaid physician rates
                                         31
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   as outlined under Attachment 4.19-B, item 5 [to the State Plan Under Title
   XIX of the Social Security Act State/Territory: Delaware].” If a Medicare fee
   exists for a defined covered procedure code, then Delaware Medicaid will pay
   LCSWs, LPCMHs and LMFTs at 75% of the Medicaid physician rates as
   outlined under Attachment 4.19-B, item 5.
         61.    Licensed practitioners, such as psychologists, LCSWs, LPCMHs
   and LMFTs may bill Medicaid for eligible outpatient SUDs and for non-
   physician Licensed Behavioral Health Practitioner (“LBHP”) codes.
         62.    According to the Manual, “unlicensed staff,” e.g. certified peers,
   will bill “using their licensed supervisor as the rendering provider number.”
         63.    Delaware also requires:
          Any staff who is unlicensed and providing addiction
          services must be credentialed by DSAMH and/or the
          credentialing board. Certified and Credentialed staff under
          State regulation for SUD services include certified recovery
          coaches, credentialed behavioral health technicians, RNs and
          LPNs, certified alcohol and drug counselor, internationally
          certified alcohol and drug counselor, certified co-occurring
          disorders professional, internationally certified co-occurring
          disorders professional internationally certified co-occurring
          disorders professional diplomat, and licensed chemical
          dependency professional (LCDP).          Effective 7/1/2016,
          Licensed Chemical Dependency Professionals (LCPDs) will
          not be considered “unlicensed.” State regulations require
          supervision of recovery coaches and credentialed
          behavioral health technicians by a QHP meeting the
          supervisory standards established by DSAMH. A QHP
          includes the following professionals who are currently
          registered with their respective Delaware board LCSWs,
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          LPCMH, and LMFTs, APNs, NPs, medical doctors (MD and
          DO), and psychologists. Effective 7/1/2016, LCDPs and
          CADCs will be included in the definition of a QHP. The QHP
          provides clinical/administrative oversight and supervision of
          recovery coaches and credentialed behavioral health
          technicians staff in a manner consistent with their scope of
          practice.
         64.   The Manual reiterates:
          Supervision
          Behavioral Health technicians must receive clinical and
          administrative supervision and oversight by a qualified
          healthcare professional (QHP). A QHP includes the following
          professionals who are currently registered with their
          respective Delaware board LCSWs, LPCMH, LMFTs, APNs,
          NPs, medical doctors (MD and DO), and psychologists.
          Behavioral health technicians should have access to both
          individual and group supervisions.
         65.   DSAMH’s Bureau of Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Rules and
   Regulations’ standards applicable to all alcohol and drug service providers
   require:
          Drug and/or alcohol programs shall have all counselors
          certified by the Delaware Alcohol and Drug Counselor
          Certification Board, Inc. or the State Merit System, as meeting
          the minimum standards to practice in the field. Counselors
          having certification from other states must also have their
          certification approved by the D.A.D.C.C.B. in order to assure
          quality service.
          Staff members who are not certified and are performing any
          counseling functions (e.g. interns, volunteers, etc.) shall
          receive documented clinical supervision from a certified
          counselor.
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         66.    Federal Medicare and Delaware Medicaid reimburse, inter alia,
   physicians and LCSWs at a higher rate than they reimburse many other
   providers. Medicare does not permit LCSWs to bill for services “incident to”
   their own professional services. Stated differently, even if a LCSW supervises
   an employee, that employee may not bill Medicare under the LCSW’s NPI.
   In addition, Delaware Medicaid does not permit unlicensed and unsupervised
   providers to bill for their services at all. Thus, Connections has an incentive
   to submit claims using physicians’ and LCSWs’ NPIs for work performed by
   unlicensed and unsupervised providers that would otherwise be unreimbursed.
         67.    When the State and/or a federal or State-funded insurance
   program audits Connections’ records, they conduct two separate audits: one
   audit of the particular clinic’s clinical records, and another audit of the claims
   for reimbursement for services provided to Medicare and Medicaid recipients
   submitted by each clinic. Ms. Spruill has witnessed such audits taking place.
   Based on her observation, these two audits are never conducted
   simultaneously or in coordination with one another such that clinical and
   financial or billing records would be compared against one another. If
   Connections’ clinical records were audited at the same time as, and in
   coordination with, the clinics’ claims for reimbursement for services provided
   to Medicare and Medicaid recipients, then the auditors would see that the
                                          34
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   providers providing the services (and entering the information into EHR) are
   not the same providers who are listed as the rendering providers on the claims
   submitted for payment. This practice goes undetected because this additional
   step is not customarily taken in auditing procedures. However, the necessary
   data to conduct such a comparison is available in Connections’ electronic
   files.
            68.   Specific, claim-level violations of the FCA and the DFCRA may
   be identified with precision by comparing a Connections clinic’s claims for
   reimbursement for Medicare and Medicaid services on a specific date to that
   clinic’s corresponding clinical records.
            69.   Specifically, with respect to clinics where Ms. Spruill never
   worked or supervised any individuals working at those clinics, violations of
   the FCA and the DFCRA can be identified by comparing the claims for
   reimbursement submitted to Medicare or Medicaid for reimbursement by or
   on behalf of these clinics reflecting Ms. Spruill’s NPI with the corresponding
   clinical records showing the actual employee who provided the services and
   entered the information into EHR. This analysis will show neither Ms. Spruill
   nor anyone she supervised provided these services. Such claims are false.
            70.   Similarly, with respect to clinics where Ms. Spruill worked or
   supervised individuals working at these clinics during discrete periods of time,
                                         35
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   violations of the FCA and the DFCRA can be identified by comparing claims
   for reimbursement submitted to Medicare and Medicaid by or on behalf of
   these clinics reflecting Ms. Spruill’s NPI during the periods when Ms. Spruill
   neither worked nor supervised anyone at these clinics with the corresponding
   clinical records showing the actual employee who provided the services and
   entered the information into EHR. This analysis will show neither Ms. Spruill
   nor anyone she supervised provided these services. Such claims are false.
         B.     Malika Spruill.
         71.    Ms. Spruill has been a LCSW since 2010.
         72.    A LCSW who furnishes, bills, or receives payment for health
   care in the normal course of business, and sends covered transactions
   electronically, must obtain an NPI. An NPI is a unique 10-digit numeric
   identifier for covered health care providers, created to improve the efficiency
   and effectiveness of electronic transmission of health information. LCSWs,
   as covered health care providers, must use NPIs in their administrative and
   financial transactions.
         73.    Ms. Spruill’s NPI is 1811205909.
         74.    On or about August 26, 2013, Connections hired Ms. Spruill as
   a LCSW in its Newark Clinic. When Ms. Spruill was hired, she was the only
   LCSW at the Newark clinic. From August 26, 2013 until October 6, 2014,
                                         36
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   while Ms. Spruill was in the Newark Clinic, she was a Therapist. She was not
   a supervisor.
             75.   Prior to Connections hiring Ms. Spruill, the staff at the Newark
   Clinic was instructed to select Katherine Clendening (“Clendening”), a
   LCSW who worked as a therapist in the Millsboro clinic, as the “bill to”
   person in EHR for work performed at the Newark clinic. Clendening never
   served as a clinical supervisor at any Connections clinic, let alone the Newark
   clinic.
             76.   After Connections hired Ms. Spruill, the staff at the Newark
   Clinic was instructed – without Ms. Spruill’s knowledge or permission – to
   select Ms. Spruill’s name as the “bill to” person from the drop-down menu for
   services provided in the Newark Clinic. Therefore, services performed by
   non-credentialed, unlicensed, and unsupervised providers in the Newark
   clinic were billed to Medicare and/or Medicaid as if Ms. Spruill provided
   them, when she neither provided nor supervised these services.
             77.   By selecting Clendening, and later Ms. Spruill, as the “bill to”
   person when neither Clendening nor Ms. Spruill provided these services or
   supervised the provision of these services, Connections caused to be
   submitted, and submitted, claims for covered services to federal and State-
   funded insurance programs falsely indicating a LCSW provided these services
                                           37
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   (or supervised the provision of these services). Connections was reimbursed,
   and continues to be reimbursed, for such services as if a LCSW provided or
   supervised them.    In reality, however, non-credentialed, unlicensed, and
   unsupervised providers who are not entitled to any reimbursement from
   Medicare and Medicaid provided these services.
         78.    In 2014, a co-worker informed Ms. Spruill that other counselors
   were using Ms. Spruill as the “bill to” person, although Ms. Spruill was not a
   supervisor. Upon learning this, Ms. Spruill emailed Ms. Vinny Hickman
   (“Hickman”), the Director of Human Resources and Assistant to General
   Counsel at Connections, to find out why counselors she was not supervising
   were using her as the “bill to” person when she was not a supervisor and not
   supervising them.
         79.    On or about September 12, 2014, Ms. Spruill emailed Hickman
   in Connections’ Human Resources department, to find out whether persons at
   Connections were using her NPI when submitting claims for reimbursement
   to the Government and/or the State of Delaware.
         80.    On or about October 3, 2014, approximately three weeks after
   emailing Hickman inquiring if someone was billing under her NPI,
   Connections terminated Ms. Spruill without responding to her concerns
   regarding Connections’ “bill to” practice.
                                        38
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         81.    In or about August 2015, Ms. Spruill was re-hired by
   Connections as a Clinical Supervisor.
         82.    According to Connections’ written materials, a Clinical
   Supervisor “is responsible for providing clinical direction to an assigned
   group of programs that offer short to intermediate term integrated medical,
   mental health and alcohol and other drug treatment services (including MAT
   and DUI treatment) in community-based treatment centers located throughout
   Delaware.” A Clinical Supervisor’s principal duties and responsibilities
   include “supervis[ing] all clinical activities of assigned counselors,”
   “provid[ing] supervision to clinical staff, interns and others regarding cases
   which are ‘billed under’ his/her license.”2
         83.    In her capacity as Clinical Supervisor, for approximately three
   months (August 2015 to November 2015), Ms. Spruill rotated between the
   Wilmington, Dover and Smyrna Clinics. During these three months, services
   performed by non-credentialed providers in the Wilmington, Dover and
   Smyrna clinics were billed to Medicaid using Ms. Spruill’s NPI because Ms.
   Spruill was supervising these staff members.
         2
           Ex. 2 (Connections CSP, Inc. Job Description Clinical Supervisor in
   the Integrated Outpatient Services Department).
                                         39
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         84.    In or about August 2015 until approximately November 2015,
   Connections only had three LCSWs for all of its clinics: Schneck in the
   Newark Clinic, Clendening in the Millsboro Clinic, and Ms. Spruill, who split
   her time between the Wilmington, Dover and Smyrna Clinics for
   approximately three months until she was moved to the Dover clinic. During
   this time, Frank Everette (“Everette”), a LPCMH who worked in the Dover
   clinic as a therapist, and was the only other licensed person in that clinic (other
   than Ms. Spruill) was used as the “bill to” person in Dover, and his NPI was
   also used on group notes. Everette did not provide the services to the clients,
   and he was not a supervisor. Ms. Spruill’s suggestion that Everette become a
   supervisor was rejected.       Therefore, during the August 2015 through
   November 2015 timeframe, services performed by non-credentialed and
   unsupervised providers in Connections’ clinics not supervised by Ms. Spruill,
   Schneck, Clendening and/or Everette were billed to Medicare and/or
   Medicaid as if Ms. Spruill, Schneck, Clendening and/or Everette provided
   them and/or supervised these services when they did not.
         85.    Connections’ medical records show that non-credentialed and
   unsupervised providers in Connections’ clinics billed to Medicare and
   Medicaid as if Ms. Spruill, Schneck, Clendening and Everette provided these
   services and/or supervised the services.
                                           40
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          86.      In or about August 2015, the Wilmington clinic was run by Lisa
   Shafer (“Shafer”), a LPCMH. No LCSWs worked in the Wilmington clinic
   at this time.
          87.      Connections was not – and is not – entitled to reimbursement by
   Medicare for clients seen by non-LCSW providers. Ms. Spruill did not
   provide services to any of Connections’ Medicare clients receiving MAT
   services.       Thus, Connections was not entitled to reimbursement from
   Medicare for any claims submitted for services performed, inter alia, in the
   Harrington clinic, or in the Wilmington clinic while Ms. Spruill was
   supervising Schafer, a LCPMH, Teresa Sharpe (“Sharpe”), a MSW and
   another MSW.
          88.      Eventually, Kyle Vansant (“Vansant”), a LCSW, was hired as a
   therapist – but not as a clinical supervisor – of the Wilmington clinic.
          89.      In or about August or September 2017, Connections hired
   Lakeeya Thornton (“Thornton”), a LCSW, as the clinical supervisor, and
   Jamy Rivera (“Rivera”), a LCSW, as the Director of the Wilmington clinic.
          90.      Beginning in approximately November 2015 through August 10,
   2017, Ms. Spruill was moved to the Dover clinic, where she continued in her
   role as Clinical Supervisor.
                                          41
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         91.    In or about November 2016, Ms. Spruill was no longer
   supervising the Smyrna clinic after Rick Thomas (“Thomas”) was hired.
   Discovery is required to show exactly when employees at the Smyrna clinic
   stopped using Ms. Spruill’s NPI as the “bill to” person in the Dover clinic, as
   Ms. Spruill cannot independently confirm when this occurred.
         92.    In February 2016, Caroline Showell (“Showell”), a LCSW, was
   hired as a clinical supervisor for the Millsboro clinic. Showell became the
   “bill to” person for the Millsboro clinic, and Connections’ satellite site,
   Longneck Outpatient.
         93.    When Deborah Pringle (“Pringle”) was promoted from Director
   of the Millsboro clinic to Connections’ Director of Nursing, Showell was
   promoted from clinical supervisor Director of the Millsboro clinic.
         94.    In or about July 2017, Showell left Connections.
         95.    For approximately two months prior to Showell’s replacement
   being hired, Ms. Spruill assisted at the Millsboro clinic.
         96.    After Showell’s departure, Cropper, the then-Director of the
   Dover clinic became the interim Director of the Millsboro clinic. Cropper had
   a Bachelor’s degree, and was a CADC. In or about August or September
   2017, Cropper became the Director of the Millsboro clinic, and Ms. Spruill
   was promoted to Director of the Dover clinic.
                                         42
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         97.    Following the two-month period when Ms. Spruill assisted in the
   Millsboro clinic, and after Cropper took over, Connections’ employees and
   agents were instructed to use Ms. Spruill as the “bill to” person for the
   Millsboro Clinic, despite Ms. Spruill not working at, or supervising the
   provision of services in the Millsboro Clinic during this time. Thus, services
   performed by non-credentialed, unlicensed, and unsupervised providers in the
   Millsboro clinic were billed to Medicare and/or Medicaid as if Ms. Spruill
   provided them, when she neither provided nor supervised these services.
         98.    To be clear, Ms. Spruill has never seen clients at the Millsboro
   clinic, and only supervised individuals at the Millsboro clinic for a two-month
   period prior to Showell’s replacement being hired.
         99.    Thus, from approximately November 2015 through August or
   September 2017, services performed by non-credentialed and unsupervised
   providers in the Wilmington clinic were billed to Medicare and/or Medicaid
   as if Ms. Spruill provided them or supervised these services when she did not.
         100. From approximately November 2015 through February 2016,
   and from in or about July 2017 to in or about August-September 2017,
   services performed by non-credentialed and unsupervised providers in the
   Millsboro clinic were billed to Medicare and/or Medicaid.
                                         43
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         101. When Ms. Spruill saw the Health Options’ Statement of Provider
   Claims for the Harrington Clinic, she learned Lashonda (Johnson) Crawford
   (“Crawford”), an unlicensed counselor, was using Ms. Spruill’s NPI when she
   was working at Connections’ Harrington clinic. When Crawford used Ms.
   Spruill’s NPI, Ms. Spruill was not supervising Crawford, nor did Ms. Spruill
   have any role in providing the services billed under her NPI by Crawford.
   Crawford’s use of Ms. Spruill’s NPI violated the requirement that a licensed
   practitioner be on site and supervising unlicensed staff.
         102. Effective August 11, 2017, Ms. Spruill’s title changed to
   “Clinical Supervisor/Regional Director of Kent & Sussex County.”3
   According to Connections’ written materials, a “Clinical Supervisor” “will
   manage a program site and will deliver direct services to individuals with
   substance use disorders or co-occurring substance abuse and mental health
   conditions. This person will manage the internal relationships needed to make
   the program run effectively.” The principal duties and responsibilities of the
   Clinical Supervisor include, inter alia, “[p]rovid[ing] clinical supervision to
   ensure[] that all treatment plan reviews are conducted in accordance with
   regulatory requirements;” “[m]eet[ing] at least twice weekly with Counselor 2
         3
             Ex. 3 (Amended Offer Letter); Ex. 4 (Employee Action Form).
                                         44
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   positions for clinical supervision;” “complet[ing] document review, co-
   sign[ing] documents, provid[ing] assessment and feedback of counselor 2’s
   performance,” “[p]rovid[ing] clinical supervision to assure that assessments
   and treatment plans are completed on a timely basis,” and “perform[] other
   duties as requested or assigned, verbally or in writing.”4
         103. Ms. Spruill was only briefly a regional director before her title
   was changed again to clinical supervisor.
         104. Effective January 18, 2018, Ms. Spruill’s title changed to “Site
   Manager of the Dover AOD Program.”5
         105. In April or May 2018, Ms. Spruill asked her supervisor Pringle,
   then the director of Connections’ southern Delaware region, which included
   the Dover, Millsboro and Seaford clinics, if she was aware of who, if anyone,
   at Connections was choosing her as the “bill to” person within EHR, thus
   causing Ms. Spruill to be listed as the rendering provider on the claims
   submitted for payment to the Government and/or Delaware. Ms. Spruill also
   asked Pringle who the new “bill to” person was going to be after Showell’s
         4
            Ex. 5 (Connections CSP, Inc. Job Description “Clinical
   Supervisor/Site Manager – AOD Services, Program Operations.
         5
             Ex. 6 (Amended Offer Letter).
                                         45
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   then-recent departure from the Millsboro Clinic. In response, Pringle told Ms.
   Spruill that Connections was using a LPCMH as the “bill to person.”
         106. In May 2018, without explanation, Pringle informed Ms. Spruill
   she was hiring two additional LCSWs.
         107. In or about May 2018, Ms. Spruill called Health Options to ask
   about the use of her NPI by individuals other than herself. Health Options
   refused to provide Ms. Spruill with any information regarding the use of her
   NPI by others.
         108. In April or May 2018, Relator Douglas Spruill (“Mr. Spruill”),
   Ms. Spruill’s husband – who was the Site Director at the Harrington clinic
   until June 10, 2019 (as discussed in more detail below) – received several re-
   submitted claims directly from Health Options. Mr. Spruill noticed that Ms.
   Spruill’s NPI was listed as the “Rendering Provider” on these claims for
   services provided at the Harrington clinic. Thus, any claims submitted to
   Medicaid and Medicare were submitted under Ms. Spruill’s NPI.
         109. Ms. Spruill has never seen clients at the Harrington clinic, did
   not provide the services reflected on these claims for services, and never
   supervised anyone providing services to clients at the Harrington clinic. Yet,
   Ms. Spruill is the only designated “bill to” person for all services provided at
   the Harrington clinic.
                                         46
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         110. On or about June 1, 2018, McKay requested a meeting with Ms.
   Spruill and Connections’ Human Resources department.
         111. On or about June 4, 2018, Ms. Spruill’s physician recommended
   she take the remainder of the week off because her blood pressure was
   extremely high. Ms. Spruill worked a full day on June 5, 2018 to complete
   the previously scheduled appointments on her calendar. She began medical
   leave on June 6, 2018.
         112. On or about June 7, 2018, McKay requested a meeting with Ms.
   Spruill without providing her any information about the purpose of the
   meeting. Despite being out sick, Ms. Spruill met McKay in Wilmington,
   Delaware. At this meeting, McKay and Pringle, Steven Davis and Deb
   Crosson initially told Ms. Spruill she was being demoted to a therapist
   position in Wilmington. Ms. Spruill was not comfortable in that position.
   Later, McKay offered Ms. Spruill the Clinical Supervisor position where she
   provided “clinical chart supervision” over Connections’ employees from a
   remote Middletown location.
         113. Prior to the June 7 meeting, McKay became aggressive and
   hostile towards Ms. Spruill. For example, McKay was very short-tempered
   with Ms. Spruill in meetings, and at times, would not speak to her. McKay
   also claimed Ms. Spruill was consistently angry, which Ms. Spruill disputes.
                                        47
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         114. On or about June 8, 2018, Hicks emailed Julie Morris (“Morris”),
   Mr. Spruill and Pringle stating that individuals should bill under the
   supervisor from their clinic.
         115. On June 11, 2018, Ms. Spruill sent Crosson her doctor’s note
   extending her medical leave. On June 13, 2018, while Ms. Spruill was still
   on leave, Ms. Crosson asked Ms. Spruill if she had decided to take the LCSW
   position in Wilmington.         On the same day, Ms. Spruill emailed Chris
   Devaney, expressing her frustration over “being forced into a position” and
   “being demoted to a therapist; [n]ot even a clinical supervisor” despite never
   being written up.
         116. Ms. Spruill’s NPI has been used in claims for services provided
   at multiple Connections’ clinics at which she has never worked nor supervised
   providers at these sites, including at a minimum, the Harrington clinic.
   Specifically, and by way of example only, Ms. Spruill was listed as the “bill
   to” person on the following Health Options’ Statement of Provider Claims for
   the Harrington Clinic:
                                          48
 Case 1:19-cv-00475-CFC Document 10 Filed 06/26/19 Page 53 of 160 PageID #: 380
Claim #       Dates of       Rendering     Sub Prod Charge     Clm      Clm
              Service        Provider ID   Svc/Mod             Adj      Payment
                                                               Amt
20581288513 09/27/17-        1811205909    90853      $40.00   $40.00   $0.00
            09/27/17
20581288514 09/27/17-        1811205909    90853      $40.00   $40.00   $0.00
            09/27/17
20581288516 09/27/17-        1811205909    90853      $40.00   $40.00   $0.00
            09/27/17
20581288524 10/25/17-        1811205909    90853      $40.00   $40.00   $0.00
            10/25/17
20581288525 10/25/17-        1811205909    90853      $40.00   $40.00   $0.00
            10/25/17
20581288527 10/25/17-        1811205909    90853      $40.00   $40.00   $0.00
            10/25/17
20581288530 10/27/17-        1811205909    90853      $40.00   $40.00   $0.00
            10/27/17
20581288531 10/27/17-        1811205909    90853      $40.00   $40.00   $0.00
            10/27/17
20681727250 12/01/17-        1811205909    90834      $95.00   $95.00   $0.00
            12/01/17
20581287912 11/03/17-        1811205909    90853      $40.00   $40.00   $0.00
            11/03/17
20581288056 11/10/17-        1811205909    90832      $78.00   $78.00   $0.00
            11/10/17
20581288058 11/13/17-        1811205909    90834      $95.00   $95.00   $0.00
            11/13/17
20581288631 11/30/17-        1811205909    90832      $78.00   $78.00   $0.00
            11/30/17
                                      49
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20581288704 12/05/17-          1811205909      90834      $95.00    $95.00     $0.00
            12/05/17
20581288978 12/13/17-          1811205909      90834      $95.00    $95.00     $0.00
            12/13/17
20781469173 11/01/17-          1811205909      H0015      $115.00 $115.00 $0.00
            11/01/17                           HQ
20781469174 11/01/17-          1811205909      90853      $40.00    $40.00     $0.00
            11/01/17
20781469205 11/03/17-          1811205909      90853      $40.00    $40.00     $0.00
            11/03/17
20781469206 11/03/17-          1811205909      90853      $40.00    $40.00     $0.00
            11/03/17
20781469260 11/06/17-          1811205909      90853      $40.00    $40.00     $0.00
            11/06/17
20581287923 11/02/17-          1811205909      90853      $40.00    $40.00     $0.00
            11/02/17
          117. Ms. Spruill has documentary evidence of approximately 651
    examples of her NPI being used improperly at the Harrington clinic on Health
    Options’ February 2, 2018 Statement of Provider Claims Paid for the
    Harrington clinic.
          118. Ms. Spruill’s NPI has been used in claims for services provided
    at multiple Connections’ locations at which she has worked previously, but
    she was not working at (or supervising individuals working at) these locations
                                         50
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   when the claims using her NPI were submitted for payment, including at a
   minimum, at the Smyrna, Millsboro and Wilmington Clinics.
         119. Through her conversations with Connections employees,
   including but not limited to Cropper, Walker, Lezley Sexton (“Sexton”),
   Heather Emerick (“Emerick”) and Hicks, Ms. Spruill learned counselors and
   other lower-credentialed (or non-credentialed) providers who she was not
   supervising were instructed to select her name as the “bill to” person in EHR.
         120. Effective July 26, 2018, Ms. Spruill’s title changed to “Clinical
   Supervisor of the Dover AOD Program.”6
         121. On or about July 30, 2018, Ms. Spruill returned from medical
   leave to her demoted position in the Middletown facility.
         122. As of August 2018, Connections had approximately eleven (11)
   LCSWs working in its Outpatient Clinics: Schneck; Erin Cliffe (“Cliffe”); and
   Robert Riddler (“Riddler”) in its Newark clinic; Thomas in its Smyrna clinic;
   Rivera and Thornton in its Wilmington clinic; Julie Morris (“Morris”), who
   started in or about September 2017 part-time in its Harrington clinic, two
   LCSWs in its Millsboro clinic, including Gail Quennville, and Ms. Spruill and
   Lisa Clark (“Clark”), also a LCSW in its Dover clinic.
         6
             Ex. 7 (Amended Offer Letter).
                                        51
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         123. In November 2018, less than seven months after Ms. Spruill
   asking her supervisor who was using her NPI, and Ms. Spruill calling Health
   Options to get the same information, and less than five months after
   Defendants demoted Ms. Spruill for such inquiries, Defendants took the
   ultimate act of retaliation, and terminated Ms. Spruill.
         C.     Dr. Akinlawon Olugbenga Ayeni.
         124. Dr. Ayeni, an Addiction Medicine specialist, is an employee or
   agent of Connections, who practices telemedicine. His NPI is 1821167149.
         125. CMS requires, as a condition of payment, physicians providing
   telemedicine “to use an interactive audio and video telecommunications
   system that permits real-time communication between you, at the distant site,
   and the beneficiary, at the originating site.”7
         126. Connections has used Dr. Ayeni’s NPI on thousands (the exact
   number to be determined in discovery) of claims related to services provided
   to clients in its Women’s Residential Program, and other clinics, for which he
   did not interact with the clients, nor supervise the unlicensed providers who
         7
           CMS Medicare Learning Network Booklet re: Telehealth Services
   at 4 (ICN 901705, Feb. 2018), available at https://www.cms.gov/Outreach-
   and-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network-
   MLN/MLNProducts/Downloads/TelehealthSrvcsfctsht.pdf.
                                          52
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   interacted with the clients, including services for which Connections billed
   federal and/or state-funded insurance programs as if he provided or supervised
   such services. Specifically, and by way of example only, Dr. Ayeni was listed
   as the “bill to” person on the following Health Options’ Statement of Provider
   Claims for the Harrington Clinic:
  Claim #        Dates of       Rendering     Sub Prod Charge        Clm        Clm
                 Service       Provider ID    Svc/Mod                Adj      Payment
                                                                     Amt
20091790466      12/13/17-     1821167149      H0048      $25.00    $25.00     $0.00
                 12/13/17                       HF
20881565803      11/09/17-     1821167149      H0020      $15.00    $11.00     $4.00
                 11/09/17
20881565808      11/10/17-     1821167149      H0020      $15.00    $11.00     $4.00
                 11/10/17
20881565818      11/11/17-     1821167149      H0020      $15.00    $11.00     $4.00
                 11/11/17
20881565830      11/12/17-     1821167149      H0020      $15.00    $11.00     $0400
                 11/12/17
20881565860      11/14/17-     1821167149      H0020      $15.00    $11.00     $4.00
                 11/14/17
20881565904      11/17/17-     1821167149      H0020      $15.00    $11.00     $4.00
                 11/17/17
20881565917      11/18/17-     1821167149      H0020      $15.00    $11.00     $4.00
                 11/18-17
20881566119      10/22/17-     1821167149      H0020      $15.00    $11.00     $4.00
                 10/22/17
20881566120      10/23/17-     1821167149      H0020      $15.00    $11.00     $4.00
                 10/23/17
20881566124      10/26/17-     1821167149      H0020      $15.00    $11.00     $0.00
                 10/26/17
20881566126      10/28/17-     1821167149      H0020      $15.00    $11.00     $4.00
                 10/28/17
20881566131      11/20/17-     1821167149      H0020      $15.00    $11.00     $4.00
                 11/20/17
                                        53
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  Claim #           Dates of      Rendering    Sub Prod Charge        Clm       Clm
                    Service      Provider ID   Svc/Mod                Adj     Payment
                                                                      Amt
208811566241        11/21/17-    1821167149     H0020      $15.00    $11.00    $4.00
                    11/21/17
20881566247         11/22/17-    1821167149     H0020      $15.00    $11.00    $4.00
                    11/22/17
20881566266         11/24/17-    1821167149     H0020      $15.00    $11.00    $4.00
                    11/24/17
20881566297         11/26/17-    1821167149     H0020      $15.00    $11.00    $4.00
                    11/26-17
20881566319         11/27/17-    1821167149     H0020      $15.00    $11.00    $4.00
                    11/27/17
20881566354         11/30/17-    1821167149     H0048      $25.00    $25.00    $0.00
                    11/30/17
20881565686         11/01/17-    1821167149     H0020      $15.00    $11.00    $4.00
                    11/01/17
20881565717         11/03/17-    1821167149     H0020      $15.00    $11.00    $4.00
                    11/03/17
            127. In addition, and by way of example only, Ms. Spruill has
    documentary evidence of approximately 971 examples of Dr. Ayeni’s NPI
    being used as the “bill to” person on Health Options’ February 2, 2018
    Statement of Provider Claims Paid for the Harrington clinic.
            128.   Dr. Ayeni neither directed nor inspected the work, actions, or
    performance of, nor oversaw the work of the Connections’ employees and/or
    agents who used his NPI, as described herein.
            D.     Fabrication of Medical Records.
            129. On or about November 11, 2015, Diveadra Harmon (“Harmon”),
    EHR Support and Clinical Technician at Connections, informed Hicks that
                                          54
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   Dr. Ayeni, Dr. Adaeze Udezue (“Dr. Udezue”) and Dr. Scott Houser (“Dr.
   Houser”) had missing and unsigned documents in the EHR.
           130. Specifically, as of the review on November 9, 2015, Dr. Ayeni
   had fifty (50) unsigned documents related to MAT clients from the Newark
   and Dover clinics, twenty-nine (29) unsigned documents related to
   methadone/buprenorphine clients from the Newark clinic, and fifteen (15)
   other unsigned notes related to, inter alia, admissions for buprenorphine,
   admissions for methadone, biopsychosocial assessment, and MAT CPE from
   the Newark and Dover clinics for clients he had seen as far back as February
   2015.
           131. As of November 9, 2015, Dr. Udezue, a substance abuse/MAT
   doctor at Connections, had, inter alia, not signed nine evaluation for
   methadone/buprenorphine notes, two progress notes, eight physician progress
   notes, two medical physician progress notes, one MAT CPE, two admission
   notes for methadone and four admission notes for buprenorphine for clients
   she had seen as far back as September 2, 2015 in the Millsboro clinic.
           132. As of November 9, 2015, Dr. Houser, a psychiatrist at
   Connections, had, inter alia, twenty-four (24) MAT service documents
   missing for patents he had seen as far back as March 23, 2015; twenty-four
   (24) missing Methadone/suboxone evaluations that CareLogic did not locate
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   for patents he had seen as far back as November 21, 2014; fifty-two (52)
   physician progress notes missing for patients he had seen as far back as March
   24, 2015; and fifteen (15) missing medical physician progress notes for
   patients he had seen as far back as November 10, 2014 at the Newark clinic.
         133. In 2017, Dr. Ayeni had over 500 unfinished medical records in
   the CareLogic software program.
         134. Mr. Spruill noticed Dr. Ayeni’s records were incomplete.
   Thereafter, Mr. Spruill noticed these records had been completed.
         135. Dr. Ayeni did not complete these records himself. Instead,
   Pringle, who had administrative access to CareLogic (prior to her termination
   from Connections on or about June 7, 2018), completed these records on Dr.
   Ayeni’s behalf.
         136. Pringle did not consult with Dr. Ayeni to obtain the facts relevant
   to the clients’ care, nor did she have any notes relevant to these clients’ care
   on the dates of service in question. Instead, Pringle fabricated Dr. Ayeni’s
   incomplete records to make it look like they were complete and services were
   provided by Dr. Ayeni.
         137. The records Pringle fabricated inaccurately describe the services
   provided and the clients’ conditions.
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         138. Karen Hanson Saroglia (“Saroglia”) was also required to login to
   CareLogic using Dr. Ayeni’s login credentials and fabricate over 1,400 of Dr.
   Ayeni’s unfinished records.
         139. Saroglia did not consult with Dr. Ayeni to obtain the facts
   relevant to the clients’ care, nor did she have any notes relevant to these
   clients’ care on the dates of service in question. Instead, Saroglia fabricated
   Dr. Ayeni’s incomplete records to make it look like they were complete and
   services were provided by Dr. Ayeni.
         140. Dr. Somasunderman Padmalinggam (“Dr. Padmalinggam”) is a
   family practitioner, who worked at several of Connections’ clinics, including
   the Smyrna, Dover and Harrington clinics.
         141. On or about August 30, 2017, Dr. Padmalinggam was terminated
   from Connections and escorted from the building.
         142. When he was terminated, Dr. Padmalinggam had not completed
   his records in CareLogic.
         143. Approximately two weeks after Dr. Padmalinggam was
   terminated, Ms. Spruill noticed Dr. Padmalinggam records had been
   completed.
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         144. Dr. Padmalinggam could not have completed these records
   himself because these records were incomplete when he was terminated from
   Connections and escorted from the building.
         145. Doctors working at Connections were not the only Connections’
   personnel whose records were falsified, or who failed to complete the required
   paperwork.
         146. As Ms. Spruill explained on or around October 26, 2015:
           Did you speak with [redacted] on Friday and do you feel that
           he understood what was expected from him? I’m asking
           because he submitted several recovery plans and although I
           said I would not un sign them, some of them I have to. He has
           a recovery plan that was due in August that he just did in
           today, however he left gaps in treatment. I’m trying to
           allow him to complete work, but I will not sign work that is
           completely wrong and could cause issues with an audit. 
           (emphasis added).
         147. Connections recordkeeping is so horrendous that, in at least one
   instance, one client’s information was scanned into another client’s chart
   causing Schneck to flag the second client’s chart as missing a transfer
   summary.
         148. In another example, on or around August 30, 2018, Cliffe asked
   Ms. Spruill to sign off on a record in which Cliffe wrote “Treat for Diabetes
   and Spinal Fusion” when the underlying record clearly stated “refer to a
   specialist.” As Ms. Spruill told Cliffe before sending the record back to Cliffe:
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          I am very sorry, but I am no longer going to be able to sign
          things that I can’t clinically stand by. When I sign my name,
          it is saying that I agree with what is written and in some
          instances, that is not correct. I am sending back RB (11068).
          I believe we can monitor her medical condition without
          actually stating that we are going to treat it. If we were
          treating her Diabetes, than yes. A spinal fusion, I am not
          sure about that and how we can go about treating that. The
          fact that she states that we are referring to a specialist and
          then says Treat is very contradicting. However, if you are
          comfortable with it, then I think you should be the one who
          signs it. (emphasis added).
         149. Following her exchange with Cliffe, Ms. Spruill told Baker:
          I am not comfortable signing some of the stuff that they say. I
          am not signing something that Erin [Cliffe] says Treat for
          Diabetes and Spinal Fusion when it clearly states that it says
          refer to a specialist.
         150. On or about May 8, 2017, McKay was informed her employees
   were, inter alia, being asked to “fraudulently sign[] documents and/or add[]
   unknown milligrams of medications on documents,” and “violat[ing]
   HIPPA.”
         151. While Connections routinely fabricated medical records, during
   the period leading up to external audits, Connections rushed to complete its
   documentation regardless of whether the final documents had any relation to
   the actual services or treatment provided. By way of example only, on or
   about January 23, 2013, Chris Devaney, Connections’ Chief Operating
   Officer, flagged several documentation issues noting:          “This is not
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   good…either documentation is not complete or people aren’t working. This
   needs to improve by the end of the week.”
         152. More than a year later, on or about June 2, 2014, the
   documentation problem persisted at Connections.        As Anna Harmon
   explained to the ACT1 Newark team:
         153. Connections knew its shoddy recordkeeping was “a violation of
   HIPPA” and it would be in “MAJOR trouble” if the State did “a pop up audit”
   and saw these charts “scattered across the floors and around the desks” and
   “under desks, on the floor, in drawers, etc.” As Chanda Gibson (“Gibson”),
   the Performance Improvement Coordinator for the ACT Teams warned:
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         154. Not only did Connections’ records fail to comply with the
   applicable regulations, but its personnel lacked the required training and
   certifications required to comply with DSAMH’s requirements and other
   applicable regulations.
         155. In February 2016, in advance of Dover’s DSAMH outpatient
   audit, McKay was “worried about Smyrna and Dover where there [was] no
   site manager.” Thus, McKay scheduled time to talk with Ms. Spruill, Cropper
   and Heather Emrick (“Emrick”) about the impending audits.
         156. On or about April 15, 2016, with the Smyrna clinic’s audit fast
   approaching, McKay decided to “make chart auditing for them a priority” and
   wanted to “talk about … what we can do to make sure that their audit is as
   good as it can be?”
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         157. In advance of the audits on the files for Clint Walker, Blackbird
   Landing, Gordy Place, West Street Commons, Connections emailed a “list of
   individuals that are in need of various documents.…” and urged the recipients
   to send the documents promptly.
         158. On or about August 18, 2018, after having looked again at the
   status of the clinical supervision in Dover, McKay was “really worried that
   there [were] hundreds of unsigned documents. … The ones that worry me
   the most are the recovery plans, which are clearly out of compliance.”
   (emphasis added).
         159. On or about February 7, 2017, McKay recognized “[a]ll of a
   sudden, DSAMH is coming fast and furious to audit” and called on her staff
   to “make it a priority to get ready.”
         160. By April 17, 2017, McKay began to panic about the audit of the
   Dover clinic, and directed her staff to blindly sign unsigned documents.
   Specifically, she told Cropper and Ms. Spruill:
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         161. In 2018, the Dover clinic’s records were no better than they were
   the year prior forcing Ms. Spruill to email the Dover AOD team:
         162. Prior to the 2018 audit, the Harrington clinic’s documents
   continued to be in a state of disarray. When Anthony Davis selected fifteen
   of his most compliant files for the audit, two of them were “not a good choice
   for an active or discharge client,” one because his “Front Desk Consents were
   not completed at the time of intake on 5.18.18, but 27 days later on 6.13.18”
   and the other because his Front Desk Intakes “were not completed at the time
   of intake on 6.14.19 but 29 days later on 7.12.18.”
         163. In August 2018, Connections was still “trying to get ready for
   CARF and DSAMH” and had “a lot of med checks that [were] past due.”
         164. On or about October 2, 2018, Mr. Spruill notified Chris DeVaney
   and Lamont Baker that the Harrington clinic did not have a full-time nurse
   practitioner and would be out of compliance. Mr. Spruill also told Chris
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   DeVaney and Baker that the Harrington clinic was “not in compliance for the
   fast track 23s CPEs, MH appts and IOP sick calls.”
          165. On or about April 12, 2019, Glenn LeFevre, a Senior SUD
   Treatment Administrator, sent Mr. Spruill an updated job description for the
   “Site Manager” position and an updated agreement that added substantial
   additional responsibilities to his position, in addition to his current
   responsibilities, and drastically modified his schedule.        As Mr. Spruill
   explained in his April 15, 2019 response, Connections was retaliating against
   him for revealing its “fraudulent billing practices” and that the “levels of care
   at HWMC” failed to meet the standards for regulatory compliance, and these
   documents were “punitive” and “without justification.”
          166. As of June 10, 2019 when Connections improperly terminated
   Mr. Spruill, the Harrington clinic still failed to comply with the requirements
   for the “fast track” program’s CPE’s, mental health appointments and IOP
   sick calls.
          E.     Medically Unnecessary Intake Sessions.
          167. The Manual provides for Connections to be reimbursed at
   predetermined rates for providing specific, medically-necessary alcohol and
   drug treatment services.
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         168. All of Connections’ new clients are required to participate in an
   intake session. During the intake session, Connections determines the level
   of services that each client should receive.
         169. All Connections facilities conduct intake sessions, however, only
   the Harrington clinic offers intake services twenty-four hours a day, seven
   days a week.
         170. Harrington is also the only clinic that offers up to twenty-three
   hours of continuous observation, monitoring, and support in a supervised
   environment for individuals initially recovering from the effects of alcohol
   and/or other drugs, i.e. the “23-hour program.”
         171. After clients who are receiving medication-assisted therapy
   (“MAT”) services for opioid addiction miss three consecutive days of dosing,
   they are required to speak with a physician. Rather than allowing clients to
   speak with an on-call physician, Connections requires clients to submit to
   another intake. If the client presents to a clinic that is not offering an intake
   session that day, Connections arranges for the client to be transported to the
   Harrington clinic. Once at the Harrington clinic, the client is subjected to
   another intake and admitted into the 23-hour program. Connections refers to
   this as its “fast track” program.
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         172. Connections “fast tracks” clients every day at its Harrington
   clinic. Its policy is to “fast track” as many clients as possible, regardless of
   the client’s medical needs, so Connections can receive the per diem
   reimbursement rate of $334.27 (Code H0012) for each client.
         173. Connections effectively treats all clients sent to the Harrington
   clinic for an intake as new clients, even though they may have been actively
   treating with Connections for an extended period of time, and only recently
   missed three consecutive days of dosing, so it may bill Medicare, Medicaid
   and/or DSAMH for a new assessment.
         174. If clients refuse to participate in the additional intake,
   Connections refuses to dose him/her.
         175. After the “fast track” program, clients are returned to the clinic
   that referred them to Harrington. Then, that clinic provides the same services
   as Harrington provided in the “fast track” program.
         176. Mr. Spruill has discussed the “fast track” program with Dr.
   Henry Luu (“Dr. Luu”), a provider of telemedicine services at Connections.
   Mr. Spruill and Dr. Luu have also discussed the procedure that should be
   followed when a client misses dosing sessions, i.e. meeting with a physician
   and then resuming his/her dosing program.
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         177. When Connections seeks reimbursement for clients in its “fast
   track” program, it is reimbursed for 23-hours of services, even if it provides
   only four hours of services.
         178. Connections rarely provides more than four hours of services to
   its clients in the “fast track” program regardless of the client’s medical needs.
   Mr. Spruill estimates that less than 25% of Connections’ “fast track” clients
   receive 23-hours of services.
         179. Some of the clients who received intake assessments at the
   Harrington facility were referred to Connections by Christiana Care Health
   Systems (“Christiana Care”). Christiana Care and Connections collaborated
   together to implement a program known as Project Engage whereby
   Christiana Care hospitals referred substance abuse patients to Connections.
   Upon receiving referrals, Connections tracks these referrals internally as
   being referred from Christiana Care.
         180. Connections’ policy, as required by McKay and Baker, was that
   all Project Engage referrals had to be accepted regardless of whether
   Connections’ employee thought the client could be properly treated at the
   clinic. By way of example, one specific Project Engage referral had a high
   BAC. Connections’ Harrington staff did not want to accept the client, and in
   response, McKay indicated that all referrals were to be accepted. McKay also
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   required a record to be kept and reported to her daily if any clients from
   Christiana Care were sent back to the hospital.
         F.   Manipulation of Length of Services Provided to Meet
   Arbitrary Billing Targets.
         181. CareLogic places a timestamp on every activity entered into the
   system. As Emrick warned: “Length of client sessions- Carelogic puts time
   stamps on every activity we check-in/check-out. This means if we are billing
   for a 1-hour session, the client needs to be in our offices for a minimum of 45
   minutes.”
         182. Nevertheless, Connections billed Medicare, Medicaid and
   DSAMH for the maximum time allowed for each service regardless of
   whether Connections actually saw the client for that length of time.
         183. Connections also began double-booking its providers for, inter
   alia, mental health appointments and intakes.
         184. After Shockley questioned the Dover clinic’s practice of
   scheduling its clients during the Harrington clinic’s allotted appointments
   with Dr. Luu, on or about August 30, 2018, Johanna Johnson explained:
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         185. To hide its practice of double-booking, Connections records are
   fabricated to make it look like its providers are seeing clients when, in reality,
   the Connections’ employees have clocked out and left the facility.
         186. By way of example only, records for a provider at the Dover
   clinic have been fabricated to make it appear she had, for example, eleven
   individual sessions and a group sessions between the hours of 5:00 a.m. and
   4:00 p.m. without a single break one day, and eight individual sessions and a
   group session on two other days between the hours of 5:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m.,
   with no appointments scheduled from 7:00 a.m. – 8:00 a.m.
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         187. In reality, this team at the Dover clinic does not work twelve-
   hour shifts (certainly not without breaks), and is more likely to work no later
   than 1:30 p.m. each day.
         188. McKay and Devaney frequently reminded Connections’
   employees of their billing targets.          Devaney repeatedly pressured
   Connections’ employees to meet their billing targets, and demanded detailed
   plans as to how they were going to meet their targets.
         189. Zoe Timme (“Timme”), Director of Community Behavioral
   Health Services at Connections, also pressured Connections employees to
   make their targeted hours. For example, on or about February 24, 2014,
   Timme told Mr. Spruill and others she was “very concerned about the number
   of service hours you have entered so far this month. This is a critical element
   of your job at Connections and it is inexcusable to simply neglect
   documentation. These notes should be entered on a daily basis in order to
   adequately document the services you provide.”
         190. As of July 8, 2014, Chris Devaney gave the ACT1 team in
   Newark “until the end of the day [on July 8, 2014] to add June hours.” The
   team was instructed to “go back into links and [their] schedules to review
   [their] June hours and add what [they] may have missed.”
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         191. On or about November 1, 2017, McKay changed the billing
   targets, and all counselors, site managers, LCSWs, LPCMHs, peer specialists,
   CADCs, physicians and other Connections’ employees were expected to meet
   these new targets, despite not picking up any additional hours, overtime being
   prohibits and no influx of new patients. As a one-time incentive, staff
   members who met their November 2017 billing targets, were eligible for a
   $100 bonus.
         192. Connections tracked its employees’ actual production to goal in
   various ways, including on a monthly “Outpatient Billing Target Report.”
   Ironically, the June 2018 Outpatient Billing Target Report was named “Top
   Secret.xlsx.” Despite threatening “corrective actions for everyone who [was]
   yellow” in May 2017, when McKay circulated the billing targets for October
   2017, she voiced her disappointment: “Some of these are god awful.” By
   March 2018, McKay demanded “a specific corrective action plan for each
   person who [was] highlighted in yellow.”
         193. Faced with this pressure and threat of termination, Connections’
   employees constantly thought of creative ways to generate additional revenue.
   For example, on or about October 16, 2018, Mr. Spruill proposed an idea to
   Baker he thought might work to increase billing, and asked Baker to obtain
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   McKay and/or Devaney’s approval before he implemented this plan for
   generating more revenue for Connections.
        G.    Dosing Clients Before They Are Seen By A Physician and A
   Licensed Provider.
         194. Contrary to its policy, Connections doses clients before they are
   seen by Connections’ doctors and licensed counselors. In one example, on or
   about January 25, 2016, Ms. Spruill uncovered two clients who were “guest
   dosing” at the Millsboro clinic before they had gone through Connections’
   intake procedure or been in the clinic for thirty days. These clients were not
   on the doctors’ schedule for an intake, and they were scheduled to see Dr.
   Udezue. As Ms. Spruill observed, “Ridiculous! … I suppose they were just
   going to keep sending him as a guest doser. There are two more like him here
   now, that have also not seen the dr and are guest dosing.”
         195. On or about July 19, 2017, Pringle reminded Connections’ staff:
          Please make sure that when you schedule a Client for their
          annual CPE they also must be scheduled with the Doctor
          who is prescribing their medication, they have to see both
          the NP, PA, and The Doctor that is prescribing their
          medication on the same day. Please Nurses go back and
          audit your MAT charts and if this have not happen make
          appointments with the Doctor ASAP please if anyone have
          any questions or concerns please let know. Directors can
          you please add this to your chart Auditors list of medical
          documentation that should be completed annually.
          (emphasis in original)
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         196. In another example, Connections began dosing a client on or
   about March 23, 2018 and by May 24, 2018, the client still have not seen a
   doctor or licensed counselor.
         197. As Ms. Spruill stated in her May 24, 2018 email to Johanna
   Johnson and the Dover AOD team:
           This CAN’T Happen! Clients cannot be dosing with us for
           2 months with us not seeing them!!!! If this person died on
           our watch, we would be screwed!!! Unacceptable! They need
           to be seen by a counselor within a week or they don’t get a
           freakin DOSE!!!!!!! I don’t give a damn if they are MAD!!!!!!
         198. During an audit on January 29, 2019, Johanna Johnson
   (“Johnson”), Nurse Manager at the Dover and Harrington clinic, found a client
   was referred and added to the Dover clinic’s per diem as of January 24, 2019.
   However, he “never started/transferred with Dover. Last dosing with
   Harrington 1/24/19.” She admonished Harrington Nurses to:
           Please make sure before referring/transferring programs, that
           client has showed to new clinic. This client has been getting
           billed as dosing with Dover since 1/24/19 but has not. Wait
           until last does is verified before changing over the programs.
           (emphasis added)
        H.      Connections Bills DSAMH and Medicaid for the Same
   Claims.
         199. When an uninsured client presents at Connections for treatment,
   Connections submits a claim to DSAMH for reimbursement for services
   provided to that client.
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         200. Upon information and belief, Hicks prepares the claim and
   submits a hard copy of the claim to DSAMH.
         201. Based on the information provided to DSAMH indicating that
   the client is uninsured, DSAMH approves these claims and reimburses
   Connections.
         202.     Connections also enrolls the uninsured client in Medicaid and
   submits a claim to Medicaid for the services provided to the client through
   CareLogic. Thus, Connections seeks reimbursement from Medicaid for the
   same services it seeks and ultimately receives reimbursement from DSAMH.
         203. Once the client is enrolled in Medicaid, Medicaid also
   reimburses Connections for these services causing Connections to be
   reimbursed twice for the same services, once by DSAMH and once by
   Medicaid.
         204. Connections does not return either of these payments to DSAMH
   or Medicaid.
        I.    Connections Submits Claims to Medicare Knowing Such
   Claims Will Be Rejected, and Then Submits the Claims to DSAMH.
         205. Connections routinely submits claims for MAT services to
   Medicare knowing such claims will be denied.
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         206. After Medicare denies the claim, Connections submits the claim
   to DSAMH for reimbursement, relying on DSAMH’s coverage of necessary
   treatment not otherwise covered by alternative sources.
         207. Although this practice results in no loss to Medicare, it
   constitutes submission or presentment of false claims. In addition, this
   practice wastes the scarce resources made available to those who need the
   services Medicare provides.
         J.   Connections Unbundles Billing Codes to Fraudulently
   Increase Reimbursement.
         208. The Manual allows for reimbursement of IOP services, including
   group and individual therapy, assessments, counseling, crisis intervention,
   education, depending on the type, amount and frequency of services provided.
         209. For IOP per diem claims, “the services must be delivered in
   accredited programs where there is a licensed practitioner on-site and
   supervising unlicensed staff and the individuals must meet admission criteria
   for a higher level or care as specified in the provider manual.” Manual at 44-
   45.
         210. Claims for reimbursement for IOP services are submitted under
   Code H0015, and require not less than nine and no more than nineteen hours
   of contact per week, with a minimum of three contact days per week.
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         211. Connections frequently fails to provide the minimum required
   nine contact hours per week. Thus, to maximize its reimbursement and avoid
   the nine-hour minimum required to bill for IOP services, Connections
   unbundles these services and bills them as individual services.
         212. Connections bills for these IOP services on a per unit basis rather
   than a per diem basis, and submits unbundled claims that allows it to receive
   a larger reimbursement than it is entitled to receive for these services.
   IV.   GOVERNING LAW
         A.     Medicare
         213. In 1965, Congress enacted Title XVIII of the Social Security Act,
   known as the Medicare program. Medicare is a federally-funded health
   insurance program primarily benefitting the elderly. Entitlement to Medicare
   is based on age, disability or affliction with end-stage renal disease.
   See 42 U.S.C. § 426 et seq.
         214. The Medicare program is administered through the Department
   of Health and Human Services, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
   (“CMS”).
         215. To assist in the administration of Medicare Part A, CMS
   contracts with “fiscal intermediaries.”       42 U.S.C. § 1395(h).          Fiscal
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   intermediaries, typical insurance companies, are responsible for processing
   and paying claims and auditing cost reports.
         216. When providers such as Connections enroll for Medicare, they
   complete the Medicare Enrollment Application, i.e. Form CMS-855B
   (“Medicare Application”). Section 14 of the Medicare Application explains
   the penalties for deliberately falsifying information to gain or maintain
   enrollment in the Medicare program, including those under the FCA:
         217. Section 15 of the Medicare Applications must be signed by an
   authorized official, i.e. “an appointed official … to whom the organization has
   granted the legal authority to enroll it in the Medicare program, to make
   changes or updates to the organization’s status in the Medicare program, and
   to commit the organization to fully abide by the statutes, regulations, and
   program instructions of the Medicare program.” The Medicare Applications
   suggests the authorized official should be the organization’s chief executive
   officer, chief financial officer, general partner, chairman of the board or direct
   owner. By signing the Medicare Application, “an authorized official binds
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   the supplier to all of the requirements listed in the Certification Statement and
   acknowledges that the suppler may be denied entry to or revoked from the
   Medicare program if any requirements are not met.”
         218. The Medicare Application requires the applicant to meet and
   maintain additional requirements to bill to the Medicare program, and by
   signing the Medicare Applications the applicant “is attesting to having read
   the requirements and understanding them.”
         219. For example, in order to bill the Medicare program, providers
   agree to adhere to, inter alia, the following:
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         220. The Medicare Application must be signed in ink, and if the
   signature is deemed not an original, the Medicare Application will not be
   processed.
         221. According to the Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Medicare
   pays claims submitted by clinical social workers at 75% of the Medicare
   Physician Fee Schedule.      The CMS currently recognizes LCSWs, and
   Medicare Part B covers LCSWs.
         222. Medicare does not authorize LCSWs to bill for services
   furnished incident to their own professional services. In other words, persons
   they supervise may not bill Medicare under a LCSW’s NPI for services
   performed by that individual under the supervision of the LCSW.
         223. Medicare currently considers, inter alia, LPCMHs, LMFTs and
   CADCs “non-eligible” providers. Thus, LPCMHs, LMFTs and CADCs may
   not contract with Medicare, submit claims to Medicare, or be reimbursed by
   Medicare.
         224. The Medicare Health Insurance Claim Form, i.e. Form CMS-
   1500, warns:
          NOTICE: Any person who knowingly files a statement of
          claim containing any misrepresentation or any false,
          incomplete or misleading information may be guilty of a
          criminal act punishable under law and may be subject to civil
          penalties. (emphasis in original).
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         225. When a provider signs and submits a Form CMS-1500, the
   provider certifies:
           1) the information on this form is true, accurate and
           complete; 2) I have familiarized myself with all applicable
           laws, regulations, and program instructions, which are
           available from the Medicare contractor; 3) I have provided or
           will provide sufficient information required to allow the
           government to make an informed eligibility and payment
           decision; 4) this claim, whether submitted by me or on my
           behalf by my designated billing company, complies with all
           applicable Medicare and/or Medicaid laws, regulations,
           and program instructions for payment including but not
           limited to the Federal anti-kickback statute and Physician
           Self-Referral law (commonly known as Stark law); 5) the
           services on this form were medically necessary and
           personally furnished by me or were furnished incident to
           my professional service by my employee under my direct
           supervision, except as otherwise expressly permitted by
           Medicare or TRICARE; 6) for each service rendered
           incident to my professional service, the identity (legal
           name and NPI, license #, or SSN) of the primary individual
           rendering each service is reported in the designated
           section. For services to be considered "incident to" a
           physician's professional services, 1) they must be rendered
           under the physician's direct supervision by his/her employee,
           2) they must be an integral, although incidental part of a
           covered physician service, 3) they must be of kinds commonly
           furnished in physician's offices, and 4) the services of non-
           physicians must be included on the physician's bills.
           ***
           No Part B Medicare benefits may be paid unless this form is
           received as required by existing law and regulations (42 CFR
           424.32) (emphasis added).
         226. Form       CMS-1500     warns    providers   seeking    Medicare
   reimbursement:
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          NOTICE: Any one who misrepresents or falsifies essential
          information to receive payment from Federal funds requested
          by this form may upon conviction be subject to fine and
          imprisonment under applicable Federal laws
         227. Each provider submitting a Form CMS-1500 for Medicaid
   reimbursement certifies:
          I hereby agree to keep such records as are necessary to disclose
          fully the extent of services provided to individuals under the
          State's Title XIX plan and to furnish information regarding
          any payments claimed for providing such services as the State
          Agency or Dept. of Health and Human Services may request.
          I further agree to accept, as payment in full, the amount paid
          by the Medicaid program for those claims submitted for
          payment under that program, with the exception of authorized
          deductible, coinsurance, co-payment or similar cost-sharing
          charge.
         228. By signing the Form CMS-1500, the provider certifies:
          I certify that the services listed above were medically indicated
          and necessary to the health of this patient and were personally
          furnished by me or my employee under my personal direction.
         229. Form      CMS-1500            warns     providers   seeking   Medicaid
   reimbursement:
          NOTICE: This is to certify that the foregoing information is
          true, accurate and complete. I understand that payment and
          satisfaction of this claim will be from Federal and State funds,
          and that any false claims, statements, or documents, or
          concealment of a material fact, may be prosecuted under
          applicable Federal or State laws.
         230.   “Altering claim forms, electronic claim records, medical
   documentation,    etc.     to   obtain     a     higher   payment   amount”   and
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   “[m]isrepresenting dates and descriptions of services furnished or the identity
   of the beneficiary or the individual who furnishes the service” are two of
   several examples in a non-exhaustive list of Medicare fraud examples
   identified in the Medicare Program Integrity Manual.
         231. CMS’s Medicare Fraud & Abuse: Prevention, Detection, and
   Reporting booklet lists as one of several examples of Medicare fraud:
   “Knowingly billing for services at a level of complexity higher than services
   actually provided or documented in the file.”
         B.     Medicaid
         232. Delaware’s Medicaid program “furnishes medical assistance to
   eligible Delaware low-income families and to eligible aged, blind and/or
   disabled people whose income is insufficient to meet the cost of necessary
   medical services.” To qualify for Delaware’s Medicaid program, individuals
   must be a resident of the state of Delaware, a U.S. national, citizen, permanent
   resident, or legal alien, in need of health care/insurance assistance, whose
   financial situation may be characterized as low income or very low income.
   For example, in order to qualify, an individual with four members in her
   household must have an annual household income before taxes below
   $32,178. “For Adult Medicaid the individual must be between the ages of
   19 and 64, and for Youth Medicaid the individual must be between the ages
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   of 6 and 18. Some individuals must meet specific technical reasons such as
   age, pregnancy, or disability.”
         233. Delaware’s Medicaid program is administered through the
   Delaware Division of Medicaid & Medical Assistance (DMMA).
         234. Prior to January 2018, United Healthcare and Health Options
   offered Medicaid benefits to Delaware residents. Currently, Health Options
   and AmeriHeath Caritas offer Medicaid benefits to approximately 200,000 of
   the current 225,000 Medicaid clients in Delaware.
         235. When a provider enrolls with Medicaid in Delaware, it must
   enter into a contract with the State of Delaware, the Department of Health and
   Social Services, the Division of Medicaid and Medical Assistances, and the
   Delaware Medical Assistance Program (“DMAP”) (the “Medicaid
   Enrollment Agreement”).
         236. The provider must agree to the conditions stated in the Medicaid
   Enrollment Agreement. For example, by applying to participate in Delaware
   Medicaid, the provider agrees any claim submitted by or on its behalf under
   the DMAP:
          shall constitute certification by the Provider that the items or
          services for which payment is claimed wherein compliance
          with the DMAP rules, regulations and policies, including but
          not limited to: that the items or services were actually rendered
          by the Provider to and medically necessary for the person
          identified as the DMAP eligible; that the claim does not
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          exceed the Provider's charge for the same or equivalent items
          or services provided to persons who are not DMAP eligible;
          that the claim is correctly coded in accordance with billing
          instructions prescribed by the DMAP; and, that all information
          submitted with or in support of the claim is true, accurate, and
          complete.
          The DMAP agrees to reimburse the Provider for those
          allowable medical and related items or services provided to a
          DMAP eligible in amounts determined solely at the discretion
          of the DMAP in accordance with the Federal Medical
          Assistance Program or the DMAP laws and regulations.
          Reimbursement will be in accordance with policies as
          established by the DMAP. The DMAP may deny
          reimbursement for any cost incurred for items or services
          rendered not in compliance with this Contract. Payment by the
          DMAP is subject to the availability of State and/or Federal
          funds.
          Prior to billing the DMAP, the Provider shall be responsible
          for identifying and making collection from any other third
          party payer who may, by insurance contractor or otherwise, be
          liable for all or part of the cost of items or services provided,
          except where waived by DMAP policy. In the event that a
          claim with third party liability coverage exists and has been
          paid by the DMAP, the Provider shall promptly reimburse the
          DMAP in accordance with the DMAP policies and
          procedures.
          The Provider shall not solicit, charge, accept, or receive any
          money, gift or other consideration from a DMAP eligible or
          from any other person on behalf of the eligible for any service
          or item allowable under the DMAP, except to the extent that
          the DMAP regulations require a DMAP eligible contribution
          or require the Provider to bill a third party prior to billing the
          DMAP.
          Prior to rendering any item or service, the Provider shall
          inform the DMAP eligible of any item or service which the
          Provider will deliver to him or her which will not be covered
          by the DMAP and for which item or service the DMAP
          eligible must pay.
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              The Provider shall accept the amounts paid to it by the DMAP
              in accordance with the DMAP regulations as payment in full
              for such items or services.8
          237. By signing the Medicaid Enrollment Agreement, the provider
   certifies:
              I understand in endorsing or depositing checks or accepting
              electronic fund transfers that payment will be from Federal
              and State funds and that any falsification, or concealment of a
              material fact, may be prosecuted under Federal and State law.9
          238. Per the Medicaid Enrollment Agreement, the provider is required
   to make timely restitution to the DMAP “for any payments received in excess
   of amounts due to the Provider under the DMAP regulations or payment
   schedules whether such overpayment is discovered by the Provider or by the
   DMAP. The DMAP retains the right to offset reimbursements to be made to
   the Provider subsequent to the identification of an overpayment.”10
          239. Per the Medicaid Enrollment Agreement: “The Provider is
   responsible for the proper licensure and actions of his/her employees. The
   DMAP will regard any failure to comply with the DMAP’s rules, regulations
          8
         Ex. 8 (Delaware Health and Social Services Medicaid Enrollment
   Agreement) ¶ 3.
          9
         Ex. 8 (Delaware Health and Social Services Medicaid Enrollment
   Agreement) ¶ 3.
          10
          Ex. 8 (Delaware Health and Social Services Medicaid Enrollment
   Agreement) ¶ 4.
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   or policies or any negligent or fraudulent act by such an employee against the
   DMAP as an action of the Provider.”11
         240. Connections       made    the    foregoing    certifications   and
   representations to participate in and submit claims for reimbursement under
   the Delaware Medicaid program.
         241. Connections also resubmitted and recertified the accuracy of its
   enrollment information on its periodic Revalidation Applications, which
   allow it to continue participating in and submitting claims for reimbursement
   under the Delaware Medicaid program.
         C.     Licensed Clinical Social Worker
         242. LCSWs in Delaware are governed by 24 Del C. §§ 3901 et seq.,
   and Title 24 of the Delaware Administrative Code § 3900 et seq.
         243. According to the Delaware Code, a “licensed clinical social
   worker” is “any individual duly licensed under [Title 24, Chapter 39 of the
   Delaware Code].” 24 Del C. § 3902(6).
         244. In Delaware, no person shall engage in the independent practice
   of clinical social work or hold himself or herself out to the public, as being
   qualified to practice clinical social work; or “use in connection with that
         11
          Ex. 8 (Delaware Health and Social Services Medicaid Enrollment
   Agreement) ¶ 11.
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   individual’s name, or otherwise assume or use, any title or description
   conveying or tending to convey the impression that the individual is qualified
   to practice clinical social work,” unless such person has been duly licensed
   under Title 24, Chapter 39 of the Delaware Code. 24 Del C. § 3903(a).
            245. Pursuant to Title 24 of the Delaware Administrative Code § 3900
   ¶ 9.3.3, a LCSW, or any employee or supervisee of the LCSW, “must be
   accurately identified on any bill as the person providing a particular service,
   and the fee charged the client should be at the [LCSW’s] usual and customary
   rate.”
            D.    Federal False Claims Act
            246. In 1863, motivated by unscrupulous government contractors
   during the Civil War, Congress enacted the FCA, and it was substantially
   amended in 1986 by the False Claims Amendments Act, Pub. L. 99-562, 100
   Stat. 3153 to strengthen and enhance enforcement of the FCA. The 1986
   Amendments increased the damages and penalties that could be recovered,
   increased the incentives for private citizens to come forward and identify
   fraudulent conduct, added protections for whistleblowers against retaliation,
   defined knowledge specifically, declared specific intent was unnecessary,
   provided for a preponderance of the evidence standard, and expanded the
   statute of limitations. In 2009, the FCA was further amended by the Fraud
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   Enforcement and Recovery Act of 2009, which expanded the FCA to reach
   frauds by financial institutions and other recipients of TARP and other
   economic stimulus funds, reduced intent required to establish liability, and
   relaxed the necessary connection between the false statement and payment.
         247. The FCA provides, in pertinent part, that any person who
   knowingly presents, or causes to be presented, a false or fraudulent claim for
   payment or approval; or knowingly makes, uses, or causes to be made or used,
   a false record or statement material to a false or fraudulent claim is liable to
   the Government for a civil penalty of not less than $11,181 and not more than
   $22,363, as adjusted by the Federal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act
   of 1990, plus three times the amount of damages which the Government
   sustains because of the act of that person. 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a). The FCA
   defines “knowing” and “knowingly” to mean that a person, with respect to
   information, has actual knowledge of the information; acts in deliberate
   ignorance of the truth or falsity of the information; or acts in reckless disregard
   of the truth or falsity of the information; and no proof of specific intent to
   defraud is required. 31 U.S.C. § 3729(b). A person violating the FCA shall
   also be liable to the Government for the costs of a civil action brought to
   receive any such penalty or damages. 31 U.S.C. § 3729(3).
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         248. As alleged in more detail herein, Defendants knowingly violated
   the FCA by presenting or causing to be presented false or fraudulent claims
   for payment to federally-funded insurance programs for payment or approval
   and/or knowingly making, using or causing to be made or used false records
   or statements material to false or fraudulent claims to federally-funded
   insurance programs related to services provided by unlicensed and
   unsupervised Connections’ employees or agents using Ms. Spruill’s NPI, Dr.
   Ayeni’s NPI, and as alleged herein, other LCSWs’ NPIs, when Ms. Spruill,
   Dr. Ayeni and other such LCSWs did not provide (or supervise the provision
   of) such services.
         E.     Delaware False Claims and Reporting Act
         249. Under the DFCRA, any person who knowingly presents, or
   causes to be presented a false or fraudulent claim for payment or approval; or
   knowingly makes, uses or causes to be made or used a false record or
   statement material to a false or fraudulent claim shall be liable to the State for
   a civil penalty of not less than $10,957 and not more than $21,916, as adjusted
   by the Federal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act of 2015, for each act
   constituting a violation of this section, plus three times the amount of damages
   which the State sustains because of the act of that person. 6 Del. C. § 1201(a).
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         250. A person violating the DFCRA shall also be liable for the costs
   of a civil action brought to recover any such penalties or damages, including
   payment of reasonable attorney’s fees and costs. 6 Del. C. § 1201.
         251. As alleged in more detail herein, Defendants knowingly violated
   the DFCRA by presenting or causing to be presented false or fraudulent claims
   for payment to State-funded insurance programs for payment or approval
   and/or knowingly making, using or causing to be made or used false records
   or statements material to false or fraudulent claims to State-funded insurance
   programs related to services provided by unlicensed and unsupervised
   Connections’ employees or agents using Ms. Spruill’s NPI, Dr. Ayeni’s NPI,
   and as alleged herein, other LCSWs’ NPIs, when Ms. Spruill, Dr. Ayeni and
   other such LCSWs did not provide (or supervise the provision of) such
   services.
         252. The FCA and the DFCRA both allow any person having
   information about false or fraudulent claims to bring an action for herself, and
   on behalf of the Government and the State, respectively, and to share in any
   recovery. Relators seek through this action to recover all available damages,
   civil penalties, and other relief for State and federal violations alleged herein.
         253. Although the precise amount of the loss from Defendants’
   misconduct alleged in this action cannot be determined prior to discovery, it
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   is estimated that the damages and civil penalties that may be assessed against
   Defendants under the facts alleged herein amount to millions of dollars.
     ADDITIONAL FALSE CLAIMS ACT AND DELAWARE FALSE
         CLAIMS AND REPORTING ACT ALLEGATIONS
         254. Connections’ bill-to practice resulted in Connections’ unlicensed
   employees and/or agents who were not supervised by Ms. Spruill or Dr. Ayeni
   submitting claims for reimbursement to Medicaid and Medicare under Ms.
   Spruill’s NPI and Dr. Ayeni’s NPI.
         255. Here, Connections’ use of Ms. Spruill’s NPI and Dr. Ayeni’s NPI
   failed to satisfy the plain meaning of the word “supervise” because neither
   Ms. Spruill nor Dr. Ayeni directed nor inspected the work, actions, or
   performance of, nor oversaw the work of the Connections’ employees and/or
   agents who used their NPI, as described herein.
         256. Currently, the Delaware Legislature, when credentialing mental
   health screeners, defines “supervision of unlicensed mental health
   professionals by a psychiatrist” as:
          an unlicensed mental health professionals who need to work
          under a psychiatrist licensed to practice medicine will perform
          this work under their organization’s practice standards and
          guidelines. This includes requirements that the credentialed
          mental health screener discuss the individual in care’s issues
          on the phone or through telepsychiatry with the supervising
          psychiatrist at the time of the detainment decision and assuring
          that this psychiatrist agrees and countersigns the decision
          made. An electronically transmitted copy or original
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          detainment form with the supervising psychiatrist’s signature
          will need to be placed in the client’s medical record at the
          facility or site where the detainment occurred within 24 hours.
         257. The term “supervise,” in the context of a state’s Medicaid plans,
   has been defined as “[t]o oversee,” “to have the oversight of, superintend the
   execution or performance of (a thing)....”
         258. Defendants submitted false claims to federal and state-funded
   insurance program for payment for services provided by non-credentialed and
   unsupervised providers who are not permitted to bill federal and state-funded
   insurance programs for their services.
         259. When submitting claims to federal and state-funded insurance
   programs, Defendants’ certified that the claims were accurate, truthful and
   complete.
         260. The federal and state-funded insurance programs paid the false
   or fraudulent claims based on Defendants’ certification that LCSWs were
   providing these services and/or had supervised the provision of these services
   when they did not.
         261. In the instances where Dr. Ayeni’s NPI was used without Dr.
   Ayeni seeing clients or supervising the provision of services, the federal and
   state-funded insurance programs paid the false or fraudulent claims based on
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   Defendants’ certification that physicians were providing these services and/or
   had supervised the provision of these services when they did not.
         262. Connections knowingly billed the Government, through its
   Medicare and Medicaid programs, and Delaware, through its DSAMH
   program, inter alia, for clients that do not have Medicaid or any other
   insurance, and when Medicare or any other insurance company rejects its
   claim, for services purportedly provided by Ms. Spruill, a LCSW, using Ms.
   Spruill ’s NPI, that were not performed by Ms. Spruill, and were not
   supervised by Ms. Spruill (or any other LCSW), and for Dr. Ayeni, a
   physician, using his NPI that were not performed by nor supervised by Dr.
   Ayeni. Instead, these services were provided by Connections’ unlicensed
   agents or employees who are not entitled to bill Medicaid for their services
   unless they are properly supervised by a LCSW or a physician. Such actions
   were designed to state or imply that Ms. Spruill or Dr. Ayeni provided these
   services to Connections’ clients and/or supervised the provision of these
   services, which is untrue. Federal and/or State-funded insurance programs
   unaware of the falsity or fraudulent nature of the claims caused by Defendants
   remitted, and continue to remit, payment to Connections for these claims in
   reliance on Connections’ certification that the claims it submits are truthful
   and accurate.
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         263. Connections knowingly made, used or caused to be made or used
   false records or statements, such as the claims for reimbursement, and
   presented, or caused to be presented, claims for reimbursement on forms, such
   as the Form CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, which were material to
   the Government’s and Delaware’s decisions to pay the claims, indicating Ms.
   Spruill or Dr. Ayeni provided these services and/or supervised the provision
   of these services when, in reality, Connections’ unlicensed and unsupervised
   agents or employees provided these services. Such action was designed to
   state or imply that Ms. Spruill or Dr. Ayeni provided these services to
   Connections’ clients and/or supervised the provision of these services, which
   is untrue. Federal and/or State-funded insurance programs unaware of the
   falsity or fraudulent nature of the claims caused by Defendants remitted, and
   continue to remit, payment to Connections for these claims in reliance on
   Connections’ certification that the claims it submits are truthful and accurate.
         264. Defendants knowingly presented, or caused to be presented
   claims for reimbursement and/or knowingly made, used or caused to be made
   or used false records or statements, such as the claims for reimbursement on
   forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, while falsely
   certifying, inter alia: (a) the information they have submitted is truthful and
   accurate; (b) the claim complies with all applicable Medicare and/or Medicaid
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   laws, regulations and program instructions for payment; (c) the services
   rendered were personally furnished by the provider listed on the claim or by
   an employee under the provider’s supervision; and (d) the provider whose NPI
   is listed on the claim was the primary individual rendering the services. See
   Form CMS-1500. Federal and/or State-funded insurance programs unaware
   of the falsity or fraudulent nature of the claims caused by Defendants remitted,
   and continue to remit, payment to Connections for these claims in reliance on
   Connections’ certification that the claims it submits are truthful and accurate.
         265. Defendants knowingly presented, or caused to be presented
   claims for reimbursement and/or knowingly made, used or caused to be made
   or used false records or statements, such as the claims for reimbursement on
   forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, without
   disclosing to the Government and the State that they violated regulations that
   affected Connections’ eligibility for payment. For example, Connections
   failed to disclose that unlicensed and unsupervised individuals provided the
   services, rather than the providers whose NPIs are reflected on the claims for
   reimbursement. Federal and/or State-funded insurance programs unaware of
   the falsity or fraudulent nature of the claims caused by Defendants remitted,
   and continue to remit, payment to Connections for these claims in reliance on
   Connections’ certification that the claims it submits are truthful and accurate.
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          266. Defendants violated, and continue to violate, the FCA and the
    DFCRA by knowingly submitting, causing to be submitted and continuing to
    submit and cause to be submitted claims for reimbursement where the
    Government and/or State has been provided with worthless services, instead
    of the services paid for and required by the regulations.       In addition,
    Defendants violated, and continue to violate, the FCA and the DFCRA by
    knowingly making, using, or causing to be made or used false records or
    statements, such as the claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form
    CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, without disclosing to the
    Government and the State that the Government and/or State has been provided
    with worthless services, instead of the services paid for and required by the
    regulations.
          267. For example, instead of Ms. Spruill (or another LCSW)
    providing the services for which Connections sought and obtained
    reimbursement on the basis of the fraudulent use of Ms. Spruill’s NPI, an
    unlicensed and unsupervised individual provided these services, and
    Connections billed Medicare and/or Medicaid as if Ms. Spruill, a LCSW,
    provided or supervised the provision of these services. By way of further
    example, instead of Dr. Ayeni (or another physician) providing the services
    for which Connections sought and obtained reimbursement on the basis of the
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    fraudulent use of Dr. Ayeni’s NPI, an unlicensed and unsupervised individual
    provided these services, and Connections billed Medicare and/or Medicaid as
    if Dr. Ayeni, a physician, provided or supervised these services. As a result,
    Federal and/or State-funded insurance programs unaware of the falsity or
    fraudulent nature of the claims caused by Defendants remitted, and continue
    to remit, payment to Connections for these claims in reliance on Connections’
    certification that the claims it submits are truthful and accurate.
          268. Defendant McKay has had knowledge that Connections’ agents
    and employees were submitting these false and fraudulent claims since at least
    prior to August 2013.
          269. McKay abdicated her responsibility and authority to prevent or
    correct the false billings, and as a result Connections obtained and continues
    to obtain substantial financial benefit to the detriment of vulnerable
    Delawareans.
          270. McKay, as Connections’ founder, chief executive officer and
    president, knew or had reason to know that Connections’ unlicensed and
    unsupervised employees were submitting these false claims, and that
    Connections is benefitting from these false claims while robbing Delawareans
    of potentially life-saving resources.
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          271. McKay knew, or had reason to know, that Connections
    employees required clients to submit to medically unnecessary intakes as part
    of MacKay and Connections’ campaign to increase revenue.
          272. McKay knew, or had reason to know, that Connections
    employees manipulated the length of services provided to Connections’
    clients in Connections’ records to meet arbitrary billing targets designed to
    pad Connections’ bottom line set by McKay through, inter alia, (i) seeing
    clients for less than the time required to justify the reimbursement
    Connections sought; (ii) double-booking clients; and (iii) fabricating time
    records to make it appear as if they were treating clients when they had
    clocked out and left the facility.
          273. McKay knew, or had reason to know, that Connections
    employees were dosing clients before they were seen by physicians or
    licensed providers, which was against Connections’ policy, among other
    things.
          274. McKay knew, or had reason to know, that Connections
    employees billed and were reimbursed by DSAMH and Medicaid for the same
    claims, and did not return to either DSAMH or Medicaid the duplicative
    reimbursement.
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          275. McKay knew, or had reason to know, that Connections
    employees billed Medicare knowing the claim for reimbursement would be
    rejected, and then billed DSAMH.
          276. McKay knew, or had reason to know, that Connections
    employees unbundled IOP services when, for example, they failed to meet the
    minimum nine hours of required weekly contact to increase Connections’
    revenues.
          277. McKay and others at Connections violated Connections’ policy
    of not retaliating against employees for reporting suspected fraud by
    terminating Ms. Spruill and Mr. Spruill.
          278. After Ms. Spruill was terminated, Connections management sent
    an email to the employees in the Dover and Harrington clinics instructing
    them to no longer use Ms. Spruill as the “bill to” person.
          279. Connections has knowledge that its agents and employees are
    submitting these false claims, and that Connections is benefitting financially
    from the false claims.
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                                  COUNT I
         Violation of the False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1)(A)
                            against All Defendants
          280. Relators re-allege and incorporate by reference the allegations
    contained in the preceding paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set forth
    herein.
          281. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly presented, or caused to be presented, false or fraudulent claims to
    the Government, through its Medicare and Medicaid programs, and Delaware,
    through Medicaid and its DSAMH program. Such claims include claims for
    services using Ms. Spruill’s NPI when the services were neither performed by
    her nor supervised by her or any other LCSW. Instead, these services were
    provided by Connections’ unlicensed agents or employees who are not
    entitled to bill Medicaid for their services unless they are properly supervised
    by a LCSW, such as Ms. Spruill. Such action was designed to state or imply
    that Ms. Spruill provided these services to Connections’ clients and/or
    supervised the provision of these services, which is untrue.
          282. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly presented, or caused to be presented, false or fraudulent claims to
    the Government, through is Medicare program, claims for services using Ms.
    Spruill’s NPI when the services were not performed by her nor any other
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    LCSW. Instead, these services were provided by Connections’ unlicensed
    agents or employees who are not entitled to bill Medicare for their services.
    Such action was designed to state or imply that Ms. Spruill provided these
    services to Connections’ clients, which is untrue.
          283. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly presented, or caused to be presented claims for reimbursement on
    forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, while falsely
    certifying, inter alia: (a) the information they have submitted is truthful and
    accurate; (b) the claim complies with all applicable Medicare and/or Medicaid
    laws, regulations and program instructions for payment; (c) the services
    rendered were personally furnished by the provider listed on the claim or by
    an employee under the provider’s supervision; and (d) the provider whose NPI
    is listed on the claim was the primary individual rendering the services.
          284. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly presented, or caused to be presented claims for reimbursement on
    forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, without
    disclosing to the Government and the State that they violated regulations that
    affected Connections’ eligibility for payment. For example, Connections
    represented that the services were provided by the providers whose NPIs are
    reflected on the claims for reimbursement, and failed to disclose that
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    unlicensed and unsupervised individuals provided the services.         Thus,
    Defendants’ failure to disclose their non-compliance with material statutory,
    regulatory and/or contractual requirements made their representations
    misleading half-truths.
          285. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    violated, and continue to violate, the FCA and DFCRA by knowingly
    submitting, causing to be submitting and continuing to submit and cause to be
    submitted claims for reimbursement where the Government and/or State has
    been provided with worthless services, instead of the services paid for and
    required by the regulations. For example, instead of Ms. Spruill (or another
    LCSW) providing the services for which Connections sought and obtained
    reimbursement on the basis of the fraudulent use of Ms. Spruill’s NPI, an
    unlicensed and unsupervised individual provided these services, and
    Connections billed Medicare and/or Medicaid as if Ms. Spruill, a LCSW,
    provided or supervised the provision of these services.
          286. These false records or statements were material to false or
    fraudulent claims made to the Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or
    state-funded insurance programs, indicating Ms. Spruill provided these
    services and/or supervised the provision of these services when, in reality,
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    Connections’ unlicensed and unsupervised agents or employees provided
    these services.
          287. Defendants knew, or were deliberately ignorant or reckless in not
    knowing, that these claims were false.
          288. Federal and/or State-funded insurance programs unaware of the
    falsity or fraudulent nature of the claims caused by Defendants, remitted, and
    continue to remit, payment to Connections for these claims in reliance on
    Connections’ certification that the claims it submits are truthful and accurate.
          289. Accordingly, Defendants are liable for treble damages, civil
    penalties, and the costs of this action under 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1) and (3).
                                  COUNT II
     Violation of the False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1)(B) against
                                all Defendants
          290. Relators re-allege and incorporate by reference the allegations
    contained in the preceding paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set forth
    herein.
          291. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly made, used, or caused to be made or used false records or
    statements, including, but not limited to claims for reimbursement, and
    submitted claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form CMS-1500
    and its electronic equivalent, and, as alleged above, to cause claims to be paid
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    or approved by the Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or State-funded
    insurance programs.
          292. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly made, used, or caused to be made or used false records or
    statements, including, but not limited to claims for reimbursement, and
    submitted claims for reimbursement for services provided to Medicare
    recipients on forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent,
    and, as alleged above, to cause claims to be paid or approved by the
    Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or state-funded insurance
    programs.
          293. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly made, used, or caused to be made or used false records or
    statements, such as the claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form
    CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, while falsely certifying, inter alia:
    (a) the information they have submitted is truthful and accurate; (b) the claim
    complies with all applicable Medicare and/or Medicaid laws, regulations and
    program instructions for payment; (c) the services rendered were personally
    furnished by the provider listed on the claim or by an employee under the
    provider’s supervision; and (d) the provider whose NPI is listed on the claim
    was the primary individual rendering the services.
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          294. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly made, used, or caused to be made or used false records or
    statements, such as the claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form
    CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, without disclosing to the
    Government and the State that they violated regulations that affected
    Connections’ eligibility for payment. For example, Connections represented
    that the services were provided by the providers whose NPIs are reflected on
    the claims for reimbursement, and failed to disclose that unlicensed and
    unsupervised individuals provided the services. Thus, Defendants’ failure to
    disclose their non-compliance with material statutory, regulatory and/or
    contractual requirements made their representations misleading half-truths.
          295. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    violated, and continue to violate, the FCA and DFCRA by knowingly making,
    using, or causing to be made or used false records or statements, such as the
    claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its
    electronic equivalent, without disclosing to the Government and the State that
    the Government and/or State has been provided with worthless services,
    instead of the services paid for and required by the regulations. For example,
    instead of Ms. Spruill (or another LCSW) providing the services for which
    Connections sought and obtained reimbursement on the basis of the fraudulent
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    use of Ms. Spruill’s NPI, an unlicensed and unsupervised individual provided
    these services, and Connections billed Medicare and/or Medicaid as if Ms.
    Spruill, a LCSW, provided or supervised the provision of these services.
          296. These false records or statements were material to false or
    fraudulent claims made to the Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or
    State-funded insurance programs, indicating Ms. Spruill provided these
    services and/or supervised the provision of these services when, in reality,
    Connections’ unlicensed and unsupervised agents or employees provided
    these services.
          297. Defendants knew, or were deliberately ignorant or reckless in not
    knowing, that these records or statements were false.
          298. Federal and/or State-funded insurance programs unaware of the
    falsity or fraudulent nature of the claims caused by Defendants, remitted, and
    continue to remit, payment to Connections for these claims in reliance on
    Connections’ certification that the claims it submits are truthful and accurate.
          299. Accordingly, Defendants are liable for treble damages, civil
    penalties, and the costs of this action under 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1) and (3).
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                                 COUNT III
      Violation of the Delaware False Claims and Reporting Act, 6 Del.
                    C. § 1201(a)(1) against All Defendants
          300. Relators re-allege and incorporate by reference the allegations
    contained in the preceding paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set forth
    herein.
          301. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly presented, or caused to be presented, to the Government, through
    its Medicaid program, and Delaware through its DSAMH program, claims for
    services using Ms. Spruill’s NPI when the services were neither performed by
    her nor supervised by her or any other LCSW. Instead, these services were
    provided by Connections’ unlicensed agents or employees who are not
    entitled to bill Medicaid for their services unless they are properly supervised
    by a LCSW, such as Ms. Spruill. Such action was designed to state or imply
    that Ms. Spruill provided these services to Connections’ clients and/or
    supervised the provision of these services, which is untrue.
          302. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly presented, or caused to be presented claims for reimbursement on
    forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, while falsely
    certifying, inter alia: (a) the information they have submitted is truthful and
    accurate; (b) the claim complies with all applicable Medicare and/or Medicaid
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    laws, regulations and program instructions for payment; (c) the services
    rendered were personally furnished by the provider listed on the claim or by
    an employee under the provider’s supervision; and (d) the provider whose NPI
    is listed on the claim was the primary individual rendering the services.
          303. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly presented, or caused to be presented claims for reimbursement on
    forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, without
    disclosing to the Government and the State that they violated regulations that
    affected Connections’ eligibility for payment. For example, Connections
    represented that the services were provided by the providers whose NPIs are
    reflected on the claims for reimbursement, and failed to disclose that
    unlicensed and unsupervised individuals provided the services.              Thus,
    Defendants’ failure to disclose their non-compliance with material statutory,
    regulatory and/or contractual requirements made their representations
    misleading half-truths.
          304. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    violated, and continue to violate, the FCA and DFCRA by knowingly
    submitting, causing to be submitting and continuing to submit and cause to be
    submitted claims for reimbursement where the Government and/or State has
    been provided with worthless services, instead of the services paid for and
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    required by the regulations. For example, instead of Ms. Spruill (or another
    LCSW) providing the services for which Connections sought and obtained
    reimbursement on the basis of the fraudulent use of Ms. Spruill’s NPI, an
    unlicensed and unsupervised individual provided these services, and
    Connections billed Medicare and/or Medicaid as if Ms. Spruill, a LCSW,
    provided or supervised the provision of these services.
          305. These false records or statements were material to false or
    fraudulent claims made to the Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or
    state-funded insurance programs, indicating Ms. Spruill provided these
    services and/or supervised the provision of these services when, in reality,
    Connections’ unlicensed and unsupervised agents or employees provided
    these services.
          306. Defendants knew, or were deliberately ignorant or reckless in not
    knowing, that these claims were false.
          307. Defendants knew, or were deliberately ignorant or reckless in not
    knowing, that these claims were false.
          308. Federal and/or State-funded insurance programs unaware of the
    falsity or fraudulent nature of the claims caused by Defendants, remitted, and
    continue to remit, payment to Connections for these claims in reliance on
    Connections’ certification that the claims it submits are truthful and accurate.
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          309. Accordingly, Defendants are liable for treble damages, civil
    penalties and the cost of this action under 6 Del. C. § 1201(a).
                                 COUNT IV
      Violation of the Delaware False Claims and Reporting Act, 6 Del.
                    C. § 1201(a)(2) against All Defendants
          310. Relators re-allege and incorporate by reference the allegations
    contained in the preceding paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set forth
    herein.
          311. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly made, used, or caused to be made or used false records or
    statements, including but not limited to claims for reimbursement, and
    submitted claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form CMS-1500
    and its electronic equivalent, as alleged above, to cause claims to be paid or
    approved by the Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or state-funded
    insurance programs.
          312. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly made, used, or caused to be made or used false records or
    statements, such as the claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form
    CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, while falsely certifying, inter alia:
    (a) the information they have submitted is truthful and accurate; (b) the claim
    complies with all applicable Medicare and/or Medicaid laws, regulations and
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    program instructions for payment; (c) the services rendered were personally
    furnished by the provider listed on the claim or by an employee under the
    provider’s supervision; and (d) the provider whose NPI is listed on the claim
    was the primary individual rendering the services.
          313. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly made, used, or caused to be made or used false records or
    statements, such as the claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form
    CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, without disclosing to the
    Government and the State that they violated regulations that affected
    Connections’ eligibility for payment. For example, Connections represented
    that the services were provided by the providers whose NPIs are reflected on
    the claims for reimbursement, and failed to disclose that unlicensed and
    unsupervised individuals provided the services. Thus, Defendants’ failure to
    disclose their non-compliance with material statutory, regulatory and/or
    contractual requirements made their representations misleading half-truths.
          314. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    violated, and continue to violate, the FCA and DFCRA by knowingly making,
    using, or causing to be made or used false records or statements, such as the
    claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its
    electronic equivalent, without disclosing to the Government and the State that
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    the Government and/or State has been provided with worthless services,
    instead of the services paid for and required by the regulations. For example,
    instead of Ms. Spruill (or another LCSW) providing the services for which
    Connections sought and obtained reimbursement on the basis of the fraudulent
    use of Ms. Spruill’s NPI, an unlicensed and unsupervised individual provided
    these services, and Connections billed Medicare and/or Medicaid as if Ms.
    Spruill, a LCSW, provided or supervised the provision of these services.
          315. These false records or statements were material to false or
    fraudulent claims made to the Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or
    state-funded insurance programs, indicating Ms. Spruill provided these
    services and/or supervised the provision of these services when, in reality,
    Connections unlicensed and supervised agents or employees provided these
    services.
          316. Defendants knew, or were deliberately ignorant or reckless in not
    knowing, that these claims were false.
          317. Federal and/or State-funded insurance programs unaware of the
    falsity or fraudulent nature of the claims caused by Defendants, remitted, and
    continue to remit, payment to Connections for these claims in reliance on
    Connections’ certification that the claims it submits are truthful and accurate.
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          318. Accordingly, Defendants are liable for treble damages, civil
    penalties and the cost of this action under 6 Del. C. § 1201(a).
                                   COUNT V
          Violation of the False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1)(A)
                             against All Defendants
          319. Relators re-allege and incorporate by reference the allegations
    contained in the preceding paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set forth
    herein .
          320. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly presented, or caused to be presented, false or fraudulent claims to
    the Government, through its Medicare and Medicaid programs, and Delaware,
    through Medicaid and its DSAMH program. Such claims include claims for
    services using Dr. Ayeni’s NPI when the services were neither performed by
    Dr. Ayeni nor supervised by him or any other physician. Instead, these
    services were provided by Connections’ unlicensed agents or employees who
    are not entitled to bill Medicaid for their services unless they are properly
    supervised by a physician, such as Dr. Ayeni. Such action was designed to
    state or imply that Dr. Ayeni provided these services to Connections’ clients
    and/or supervised the provision of these services, which is untrue.
          321. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly presented, or caused to be presented, false or fraudulent claims to
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    the Government, through is Medicare program, claims for services using Dr.
    Ayeni’s NPI when the services were not performed by him nor any other
    physician. Instead, these services were provided by Connections’ unlicensed
    agents or employees who are not entitled to bill Medicare for their services.
    Such action was designed to state or imply that Dr. Ayeni provided these
    services to Connections’ clients, which is untrue.
          322. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly presented, or caused to be presented claims for reimbursement on
    forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, while falsely
    certifying, inter alia: (a) the information they have submitted is truthful and
    accurate; (b) the claim complies with all applicable Medicare and/or Medicaid
    laws, regulations and program instructions for payment; (c) the services
    rendered were personally furnished by the provider listed on the claim or by
    an employee under the provider’s supervision; and (d) the provider whose NPI
    is listed on the claim was the primary individual rendering the services.
          323. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly presented, or caused to be presented claims for reimbursement on
    forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, without
    disclosing to the Government and the State that they violated regulations that
    affected Connections’ eligibility for payment. For example, Connections
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    represented that the services were provided by the providers whose NPIs are
    reflected on the claims for reimbursement, and failed to disclose that
    unlicensed and unsupervised individuals provided the services.         Thus,
    Defendants’ failure to disclose their non-compliance with material statutory,
    regulatory and/or contractual requirements made their representations
    misleading half-truths.
          324. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    violated, and continue to violate, the FCA and DFCRA by knowingly
    submitting, causing to be submitting and continuing to submit and cause to be
    submitted claims for reimbursement where the Government and/or State has
    been provided with worthless services, instead of the services paid for and
    required by the regulations. For example, instead of Dr. Ayeni (or another
    physician) providing the services for which Connections sought and obtained
    reimbursement on the basis of the fraudulent use of Dr. Ayeni’s NPI, an
    unlicensed and unsupervised individual provided these services, and
    Connections billed Medicare and/or Medicaid as if Dr. Ayeni, a physician,
    provided or supervised the provision of these services.
          325. These false records or statements were material to false or
    fraudulent claims made to the Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or
    state-funded insurance programs, indicating Dr. Ayeni provided these
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    services and/or supervised the provision of these services when, in reality,
    Connections’ unlicensed and unsupervised agents or employees provided
    these services.
          326. Defendants knew, or were deliberately ignorant or reckless in not
    knowing, that these claims were false.
          327. Federal and/or State-funded insurance programs unaware of the
    falsity or fraudulent nature of the claims caused by Defendants, remitted, and
    continue to remit, payment to Connections for these claims in reliance on
    Connections’ certification that the claims it submits are truthful and accurate.
          328. Accordingly, Defendants are liable for treble damages, civil
    penalties, and the costs of this action under 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1) and (3).
                                 COUNT VI
         Violation of the False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1)(B)
                            against all Defendants
          329. Relators re-allege and incorporate by reference the allegations
    contained in the preceding paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set forth
    herein.
          330. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly made, used, or caused to be made or used false records or
    statements, including, but not limited to claims for reimbursement, and
    submitted claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form CMS-1500
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    and its electronic equivalent, and, as alleged above, to cause claims to be paid
    or approved by the Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or State-funded
    insurance programs.
          331. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly made, used, or caused to be made or used false records or
    statements, including, but not limited to claims for reimbursement, and
    submitted claims for reimbursement for services provided to Medicare
    recipients on forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent,
    and, as alleged above, to cause claims to be paid or approved by the
    Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or state-funded insurance
    programs.
          332. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly made, used, or caused to be made or used false records or
    statements, such as the claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form
    CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, while falsely certifying, inter alia:
    (a) the information they have submitted is truthful and accurate; (b) the claim
    complies with all applicable Medicare and/or Medicaid laws, regulations and
    program instructions for payment; (c) the services rendered were personally
    furnished by the provider listed on the claim or by an employee under the
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    provider’s supervision; and (d) the provider whose NPI is listed on the claim
    was the primary individual rendering the services.
          333. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly made, used, or caused to be made or used false records or
    statements, such as the claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form
    CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, without disclosing to the
    Government and the State that they violated regulations that affected
    Connections’ eligibility for payment. For example, Connections represented
    that the services were provided by the providers whose NPIs are reflected on
    the claims for reimbursement, and failed to disclose that unlicensed and
    unsupervised individuals provided the services. Thus, Defendants’ failure to
    disclose their non-compliance with material statutory, regulatory and/or
    contractual requirements made their representations misleading half-truths.
          334. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    violated, and continue to violate, the FCA and DFCRA by knowingly making,
    using, or causing to be made or used false records or statements, such as the
    claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its
    electronic equivalent, without disclosing to the Government and the State that
    the Government and/or State has been provided with worthless services,
    instead of the services paid for and required by the regulations. For example,
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    instead of Dr. Ayeni (or another physician) providing the services for which
    Connections sought and obtained reimbursement on the basis of the fraudulent
    use of Dr. Ayeni’s NPI, an unlicensed and unsupervised individual provided
    these services, and Connections billed Medicare and/or Medicaid as if Dr.
    Ayeni, a physician, provided or supervised the provision of these services.
          335. These false records or statements were material to false or
    fraudulent claims made to the Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or
    State-funded insurance programs, indicating Dr. Ayeni provided these
    services and/or supervised the provision of these services when, in reality,
    Connections’ unlicensed and unsupervised agents or employees provided
    these services.
          336. Defendants knew, or were deliberately ignorant or reckless in not
    knowing, that these records or statements were false.
          337. Federal and/or State-funded insurance programs unaware of the
    falsity or fraudulent nature of the claims caused by Defendants, remitted, and
    continue to remit, payment to Connections for these claims in reliance on
    Connections’ certification that the claims it submits are truthful and accurate.
          338. Accordingly, Defendants are liable for treble damages, civil
    penalties, and the costs of this action under 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1) and (3).
                                          119
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                                 COUNT VII
     Violation of the Delaware False Claims and Reporting Act, 6 Del. C.
                      § 1201(a)(1) against All Defendants
          339. Relators re-allege and incorporate by reference the allegations
    contained in the preceding paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set forth
    herein.
          340. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly presented, or caused to be presented, to the Government, through
    its Medicaid program, and Delaware through its DSAMH program, claims for
    services using Dr. Ayeni’s NPI when the services were neither performed by
    him nor supervised by him or any other physician. Instead, these services
    were provided by Connections’ unlicensed agents or employees who are not
    entitled to bill Medicaid for their services unless they are properly supervised
    by a physician, such as Dr. Ayeni. Such action was designed to state or imply
    that Dr. Ayeni provided these services to Connections’ clients and/or
    supervised the provision of these services, which is untrue.
          341. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly presented, or caused to be presented claims for reimbursement on
    forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, while falsely
    certifying, inter alia: (a) the information they have submitted is truthful and
    accurate; (b) the claim complies with all applicable Medicare and/or Medicaid
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    laws, regulations and program instructions for payment; (c) the services
    rendered were personally furnished by the provider listed on the claim or by
    an employee under the provider’s supervision; and (d) the provider whose NPI
    is listed on the claim was the primary individual rendering the services.
          342. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly presented, or caused to be presented claims for reimbursement on
    forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, without
    disclosing to the Government and the State that they violated regulations that
    affected Connections’ eligibility for payment. For example, Connections
    represented that the services were provided by the providers whose NPIs are
    reflected on the claims for reimbursement, and failed to disclose that
    unlicensed and unsupervised individuals provided the services.              Thus,
    Defendants’ failure to disclose their non-compliance with material statutory,
    regulatory and/or contractual requirements made their representations
    misleading half-truths.
          343. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    violated, and continue to violate, the FCA and DFCRA by knowingly
    submitting, causing to be submitting and continuing to submit and cause to be
    submitted claims for reimbursement where the Government and/or State has
    been provided with worthless services, instead of the services paid for and
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    required by the regulations. For example, instead of Dr. Ayeni (or another
    physician) providing the services for which Connections sought and obtained
    reimbursement on the basis of the fraudulent use of Dr. Ayeni’s NPI, an
    unlicensed and unsupervised individual provided these services, and
    Connections billed Medicare and/or Medicaid as if Dr. Ayeni, a physician,
    provided or supervised the provision of these services.
          344. These false records or statements were material to false or
    fraudulent claims made to the Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or
    state-funded insurance programs, indicating Dr. Ayeni provided these
    services and/or supervised the provision of these services when, in reality,
    Connections’ unlicensed and unsupervised agents or employees provided
    these services.
          345. Defendants knew, or were deliberately ignorant or reckless in not
    knowing, that these claims were false.
          346. Defendants knew, or were deliberately ignorant or reckless in not
    knowing, that these claims were false.
          347. Federal and/or State-funded insurance programs unaware of the
    falsity or fraudulent nature of the claims caused by Defendants, remitted, and
    continue to remit, payment to Connections for these claims in reliance on
    Connections’ certification that the claims it submits are truthful and accurate.
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          348. Accordingly, Defendants are liable for treble damages, civil
    penalties and the cost of this action under 6 Del. C. § 1201(a).
                                 COUNT VIII
          Violation of the Delaware False Claims and Reporting Act,
                 6 Del. C. § 1201(a)(2) against All Defendants
          349. Relators re-allege and incorporate by reference the allegations
    contained in the preceding paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set forth
    herein.
          350. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly made, used, or caused to be made or used false records or
    statements, including but not limited to claims for reimbursement, and
    submitted claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form CMS-1500
    and its electronic equivalent, as alleged above, to cause claims to be paid or
    approved by the Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or state-funded
    insurance programs.
          351. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly made, used, or caused to be made or used false records or
    statements, such as the claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form
    CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, while falsely certifying, inter alia:
    (a) the information they have submitted is truthful and accurate; (b) the claim
    complies with all applicable Medicare and/or Medicaid laws, regulations and
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    program instructions for payment; (c) the services rendered were personally
    furnished by the provider listed on the claim or by an employee under the
    provider’s supervision; and (d) the provider whose NPI is listed on the claim
    was the primary individual rendering the services.
          352. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly made, used, or caused to be made or used false records or
    statements, such as the claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form
    CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, without disclosing to the
    Government and the State that they violated regulations that affected
    Connections’ eligibility for payment. For example, Connections represented
    that the services were provided by the providers whose NPIs are reflected on
    the claims for reimbursement, and failed to disclose that unlicensed and
    unsupervised individuals provided the services. Thus, Defendants’ failure to
    disclose their non-compliance with material statutory, regulatory and/or
    contractual requirements made their representations misleading half-truths.
          353. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    violated, and continue to violate, the FCA and DFCRA by knowingly making,
    using, or causing to be made or used false records or statements, such as the
    claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its
    electronic equivalent, without disclosing to the Government and the State that
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    the Government and/or State has been provided with worthless services,
    instead of the services paid for and required by the regulations. For example,
    instead of Dr. Ayeni (or another physician) providing the services for which
    Connections sought and obtained reimbursement on the basis of the fraudulent
    use of Ms. Spruill’s NPI, an unlicensed and unsupervised individual provided
    these services, and Connections billed Medicare and/or Medicaid as if Dr.
    Ayeni, a physician, provided or supervised the provision of these services.
          354. These false records or statements were material to false or
    fraudulent claims made to the Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or
    state-funded insurance programs, indicating Dr. Ayeni provided these
    services and/or supervised the provision of these services when, in reality,
    Connections unlicensed and supervised agents or employees provided these
    services.
          355. Defendants knew, or were deliberately ignorant or reckless in not
    knowing, that these claims were false.
          356. Federal and/or State-funded insurance programs unaware of the
    falsity or fraudulent nature of the claims caused by Defendants, remitted, and
    continue to remit, payment to Connections for these claims in reliance on
    Connections’ certification that the claims it submits are truthful and accurate.
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          357. Accordingly, Defendants are liable for treble damages, civil
    penalties and the cost of this action under 6 Del. C. § 1201(a).
                                 COUNT IX
         Violation of the False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1)(A)
                            against All Defendants
          358. Relators re-allege and incorporate by reference the allegations
    contained in the preceding paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set forth
    herein.
          359. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly presented, or caused to be presented, false or fraudulent claims to
    the Government, through its Medicare and Medicaid programs, and Delaware,
    through Medicaid and its DSAMH program, including, inter alia,
    (i) fabricating medical records; (ii) concealing their noncompliance from
    external auditors; (iii) submitting claims for reimbursement for medically
    unnecessary intake sessions; (iv) manipulating the length of services provided
    in billing records to reflect more time than Connections’ providers actually
    spent with the clients; (v) double-booking clients; (vi) fabricating time
    records; (vii) dosing clients before they are evaluated by a physician and a
    licensed counselor and submitting reimbursement for such services;
    (viii) submitting the same claims for reimbursement to DSAMH and
    Medicaid and receiving reimbursement from both, (ix) submitting claims to
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    Medicare knowing those claims would be rejected before submitting them to
    DSAMH, and (x) unbundling MAT services to increase its reimbursement, all
    designed to increase Connections’ bottom line rather than provide any
    additional care to Connections’ clients.
          360. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly presented, or caused to be presented claims for reimbursement on
    forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, while falsely
    certifying, inter alia: (a) the information they have submitted is truthful and
    accurate and (b) the claim complies with all applicable Medicare and/or
    Medicaid laws, regulations and program instructions for payment.
          361. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly presented, or caused to be presented claims for reimbursement on
    forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, without
    disclosing to the Government and the State that they violated regulations that
    affected Connections’ eligibility for payment. For example, Connections
    represented that the services were medically necessary and failed to disclose
    these clients had previously participated in an intake session and the additional
    intake was unnecessary and designed to increase Connections’ revenue. In
    addition, Connections: (i) fabricated medical records; (ii) concealed their
    noncompliance from external auditors; (iii) manipulated the length of services
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    provided in billing records to reflect more time than Connections’ providers
    actually spent with the clients; (iv) double-booked clients; (v) fabricated time
    records; (vi) dosed clients before they are evaluated by a physician and a
    licensed counselor and submitting reimbursement for such services;
    (vii) submitted the same claims for reimbursement to DSAMH and Medicaid
    and receiving reimbursement from both, (viii) submitted claims to Medicare
    knowing those claims would be rejected before submitting them to DSAMH,
    and (ix) unbundled MAT services to increase its reimbursement, all designed
    to increase Connections’ bottom line rather than provide any additional care
    to Connections’ clients.   to increase its bottom line rather than provide any
    additional care to Connections’ clients. Thus, Defendants’ failure to disclose
    their non-compliance with material statutory, regulatory and/or contractual
    requirements made their representations misleading half-truths.
          362. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    violated, and continue to violate, the FCA and DFCRA by knowingly
    submitting, causing to be submitting and continuing to submit and cause to be
    submitted claims for reimbursement where the Government and/or State has
    been provided with worthless services, instead of the services paid for and
    required by the regulations. For example, Connections represented that the
    intake sessions were medically necessary and failed to disclose that these
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    clients had previously participated in an intake session and the additional
    intake was unnecessary and designed to increase Connections’ revenue. In
    addition, Connections: (i) fabricated medical records; (ii) concealed their
    noncompliance from external auditors; (iii) manipulated the length of services
    provided in billing records to reflect more time than Connections’ providers
    actually spent with the clients; (iv) double-booked clients; (v) fabricated time
    records; (vi) dosed clients before they are evaluated by a physician and a
    licensed counselor and submitting reimbursement for such services;
    (vii) submitted the same claims for reimbursement to DSAMH and Medicaid
    and receiving reimbursement from both, (viii) submitted claims to Medicare
    knowing those claims would be rejected before submitting them to DSAMH,
    and (ix) unbundled MAT services to increase its reimbursement, to increase
    its bottom line rather than provide any additional care to Connections’ clients.
          363. These false records or statements were material to false or
    fraudulent claims made to the Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or
    state-funded insurance programs, indicating these intakes were medically
    necessary when, in reality, they were part of Connections’ revenue-generating
    machine.
          364. Defendants knew, or were deliberately ignorant or reckless in not
    knowing, that these claims were false.
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          365. Federal and/or State-funded insurance programs unaware of the
    falsity or fraudulent nature of the claims caused by Defendants, remitted, and
    continue to remit, payment to Connections for these claims in reliance on
    Connections’ certification that the claims it submits are truthful and accurate.
          366. Accordingly, Defendants are liable for treble damages, civil
    penalties, and the costs of this action under 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1) and (3).
                                  COUNT X
         Violation of the False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1)(B)
                            against all Defendants
          367. Relators re-allege and incorporate by reference the allegations
    contained in the preceding paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set forth
    herein.
          368. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly made, used, or caused to be made or used false records or
    statements, including, but not limited to claims for reimbursement, and
    submitted claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form CMS-1500
    and its electronic equivalent, and, as alleged above, to cause claims to be paid
    or approved by the Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or State-funded
    insurance programs.
          369. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly made, used, or caused to be made or used false records or
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    statements, including, but not limited to claims for reimbursement, and
    submitted claims for reimbursement for services provided to Medicare
    recipients on forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent,
    and, as alleged above, to cause claims to be paid or approved by the
    Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or state-funded insurance
    programs.
          370. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly made, used, or caused to be made or used false records or
    statements, such as the claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form
    CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, while falsely certifying, inter alia:
    (a) the information they have submitted is truthful and accurate and (b) the
    claim complies with all applicable Medicare and/or Medicaid laws,
    regulations and program instructions for payment.
          371. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly made, used, or caused to be made or used false records or
    statements, such as the claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form
    CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, without disclosing to the
    Government and the State that they violated regulations that affected
    Connections’ eligibility for payment. For example, Connections represented
    that the intake services were medically necessary and failed to disclose these
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    clients had previously participated in an intake session and the additional
    intake was unnecessary and designed to increase Connections’ revenue. In
    addition, Connections: (i) fabricated medical records; (ii) concealed their
    noncompliance from external auditors; (iii) manipulated the length of services
    provided in billing records to reflect more time than Connections’ providers
    actually spent with the clients; (iv) double-booked clients; (v) fabricated time
    records; (vi) dosed clients before they are evaluated by a physician and a
    licensed counselor and submitting reimbursement for such services; (vii)
    submitted the same claims for reimbursement to DSAMH and Medicaid and
    receiving reimbursement from both, (viii) submitted claims to Medicare
    knowing those claims would be rejected before submitting them to DSAMH,
    and (ix) unbundled MAT services to increase its reimbursement, to increase
    its bottom line rather than provide any additional care to Connections’ clients.
    Thus, Defendants’ failure to disclose their non-compliance with material
    statutory,   regulatory   and/or   contractual    requirements    made     their
    representations misleading half-truths.
          372. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    violated, and continue to violate, the FCA and DFCRA by knowingly making,
    using, or causing to be made or used false records or statements, such as the
    claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its
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    electronic equivalent, without disclosing to the Government and the State that
    the Government and/or State has been provided with worthless services,
    instead of the services paid for and required by the regulations. For example,
    Connections represented that the intake sessions were medically necessary
    and failed to disclose that these clients had previously participated in an intake
    session and the additional intake was unnecessary and designed to increase
    Connections’ revenue.      Similarly, Connections:       (i) fabricated medical
    records; (ii) concealed their noncompliance from external auditors;
    (iii) manipulated the length of services provided in billing records to reflect
    more time than Connections’ providers actually spent with the clients;
    (iv) double-booked clients; (v) fabricated time records; (vi) dosed clients
    before they are evaluated by a physician and a licensed counselor and
    submitting reimbursement for such services; (vii) submitted the same claims
    for reimbursement to DSAMH and Medicaid and receiving reimbursement
    from both, (viii) submitted claims to Medicare knowing those claims would
    be rejected before submitting them to DSAMH, and (ix) unbundled MAT
    services to increase its reimbursement, to increase its bottom line rather than
    provide any additional care to Connections’ clients.
          373. These false records or statements were material to false or
    fraudulent claims made to the Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or
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    State-funded insurance programs, indicating these intakes were medically
    necessary when, in reality, they were part of Connections’ revenue-generating
    machine. Similarly, these false records or statements were material to false
    or fraudulent claims made to the Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or
    State-funded insurance programs, indicating: the length of services provided
    were accurately reflected in Connections’ records when they were not and
    Connections’ providers treated clients when its records reflected these clients
    were treated.     Moreover, by submitting reimbursements to DSAMH,
    Medicaid and Medicare, Connections was falsely indicating that it had the
    right to be paid by DSAMH, Medicaid and/or Medicare but not both DSAMH
    and Medicaid for the same claim, and not Medicare when the claims was not
    eligible for reimbursement by Medicare.
          374. Defendants knew, or were deliberately ignorant or reckless in not
    knowing, that these records or statements were false.
          375. Federal and/or State-funded insurance programs unaware of the
    falsity or fraudulent nature of the claims caused by Defendants, remitted, and
    continue to remit, payment to Connections for these claims in reliance on
    Connections’ certification that the claims it submits are truthful and accurate.
          376. Accordingly, Defendants are liable for treble damages, civil
    penalties, and the costs of this action under 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1) and (3).
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                                  COUNT XI
          Violation of the Delaware False Claims and Reporting Act,
                 6 Del. C. § 1201(a)(1) against All Defendants
          377. Relators re-allege and incorporate by reference the allegations
    contained in the preceding paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set forth
    herein.
          378. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly presented, or caused to be presented, false or fraudulent claims to
    the Government, through its Medicare and Medicaid programs, and Delaware,
    through Medicaid and its DSAMH program, including, inter alia,
    (i) fabricating medical records; (ii) concealing their noncompliance from
    external auditors; (iii) submitting claims for reimbursement for medically
    unnecessary intake sessions; (iv) manipulating the length of services provided
    in billing records to reflect more time than Connections’ providers actually
    spent with the clients; (v) double-booking clients; (vi) fabricating time
    records; (vii) dosing clients before they are evaluated by a physician and a
    licensed counselor and submitting reimbursement for such services;
    (viii) submitting the same claims for reimbursement to DSAMH and
    Medicaid and receiving reimbursement from both, (ix) submitting claims to
    Medicare knowing those claims would be rejected before submitting them to
    DSAMH, and (x) unbundling MAT services to increase its reimbursement, all
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    designed to increase Connections’ bottom line rather than provide any
    additional care to Connections’ clients.
          379. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly presented, or caused to be presented claims for reimbursement on
    forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, while falsely
    certifying, inter alia: (a) the information they have submitted is truthful and
    accurate; and (b) the claim complies with all applicable Medicare and/or
    Medicaid laws, regulations and program instructions for payment.
          380. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly presented, or caused to be presented claims for reimbursement on
    forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, without
    disclosing to the Government and the State that they violated regulations that
    affected Connections’ eligibility for payment. For example, Connections
    represented that the intake services were medically necessary and failed to
    disclose these clients had previously participated in an intake session and the
    additional intake was unnecessary and designed to increase Connections’
    revenue.    In addition, Connections: (i) fabricated medical records;
    (ii) concealed their noncompliance from external auditors; (iii) manipulated
    the length of services provided in billing records to reflect more time than
    Connections’ providers actually spent with the clients; (iv) double-booked
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    clients; (v) fabricated time records; (vi) dosed clients before they are evaluated
    by a physician and a licensed counselor and submitting reimbursement for
    such services; (vii) submitted the same claims for reimbursement to DSAMH
    and Medicaid and receiving reimbursement from both, (viii) submitted claims
    to Medicare knowing those claims would be rejected before submitting them
    to DSAMH, and (ix) unbundled MAT services to increase its reimbursement,
    to increase its bottom line rather than provide any additional care to
    Connections’ clients.     Thus, Defendants’ failure to disclose their non-
    compliance     with   material    statutory,   regulatory   and/or    contractual
    requirements made their representations misleading half-truths.
          381. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    violated, and continue to violate, the FCA and DFCRA by knowingly
    submitting, causing to be submitting and continuing to submit and cause to be
    submitted claims for reimbursement where the Government and/or State has
    been provided with worthless services, instead of the services paid for and
    required by the regulations. For example, Connections represented that the
    intake sessions were medically necessary and failed to disclose that these
    clients had previously participated in an intake session and the additional
    intake was unnecessary and designed to increase Connections’ revenue. In
    addition, Connections: (i) fabricated medical records; (ii) concealed their
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    noncompliance from external auditors; (iii) manipulated the length of services
    provided in billing records to reflect more time than Connections’ providers
    actually spent with the clients; (iv) double-booked clients; (v) fabricated time
    records; (vi) dosed clients before they are evaluated by a physician and a
    licensed counselor and submitting reimbursement for such services; (vii)
    submitted the same claims for reimbursement to DSAMH and Medicaid and
    receiving reimbursement from both, (viii) submitted claims to Medicare
    knowing those claims would be rejected before submitting them to DSAMH,
    and (ix) unbundled MAT services to increase its reimbursement, to increase
    its bottom line rather than provide any additional care to Connections’ clients.
          382. These false records or statements were material to false or
    fraudulent claims made to the Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or
    state-funded insurance programs, indicating these intakes were medically
    necessary when, in reality, they were part of Connections’ revenue-generating
    machine.
          383. Defendants knew, or were deliberately ignorant or reckless in not
    knowing, that these claims were false.
          384. Defendants knew, or were deliberately ignorant or reckless in not
    knowing, that these claims were false.
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          385. Federal and/or State-funded insurance programs unaware of the
    falsity or fraudulent nature of the claims caused by Defendants, remitted, and
    continue to remit, payment to Connections for these claims in reliance on
    Connections’ certification that the claims it submits are truthful and accurate.
          386. Accordingly, Defendants are liable for treble damages, civil
    penalties and the cost of this action under 6 Del. C. § 1201(a).
                                 COUNT XII
          Violation of the Delaware False Claims and Reporting Act,
                 6 Del. C. § 1201(a)(2) against All Defendants
          387. Relators re-allege and incorporate by reference the allegations
    contained in the preceding paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set forth
    herein.
          388. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly made, used, or caused to be made or used false records or
    statements, including but not limited to claims for reimbursement, and
    submitted claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form CMS-1500
    and its electronic equivalent, as alleged above, to cause claims to be paid or
    approved by the Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or state-funded
    insurance programs.
          389. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly made, used, or caused to be made or used false records or
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    statements, such as the claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form
    CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, while falsely certifying, inter alia:
    (a) the information they have submitted is truthful and accurate and (b) the
    claim complies with all applicable Medicare and/or Medicaid laws,
    regulations and program instructions for payment.
          390. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    knowingly made, used, or caused to be made or used false records or
    statements, such as the claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form
    CMS-1500 and its electronic equivalent, without disclosing to the
    Government and the State that they violated regulations that affected
    Connections’ eligibility for payment. For example, Connections represented
    that the intake services were medically necessary and failed to disclose these
    clients had previously participated in an intake session and the additional
    intake was unnecessary and designed to increase Connections’ revenue. In
    addition, Connections: (i) fabricated medical records; (ii) concealed their
    noncompliance from external auditors; (iii) manipulated the length of services
    provided in billing records to reflect more time than Connections’ providers
    actually spent with the clients; (iv) double-booked clients; (v) fabricated time
    records; (vi) dosed clients before they are evaluated by a physician and a
    licensed counselor and submitting reimbursement for such services;
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    (vii) submitted the same claims for reimbursement to DSAMH and Medicaid
    and receiving reimbursement from both, (viii) submitted claims to Medicare
    knowing those claims would be rejected before submitting them to DSAMH,
    and (ix) unbundled MAT services to increase its reimbursement, to increase
    its bottom line rather than provide any additional care to Connections’ clients.
    Thus, Defendants’ failure to disclose their non-compliance with material
    statutory,   regulatory   and/or    contractual    requirements     made     their
    representations misleading half-truths.
          391. Through the acts described in this Complaint, Defendants
    violated, and continue to violate, the FCA and DFCRA by knowingly making,
    using, or causing to be made or used false records or statements, such as the
    claims for reimbursement on forms such as the Form CMS-1500 and its
    electronic equivalent, without disclosing to the Government and the State that
    the Government and/or State has been provided with worthless services,
    instead of the services paid for and required by the regulations. For example,
    Connections represented that the intake sessions were medically necessary
    and failed to disclose that these clients had previously participated in an intake
    session and the additional intake was unnecessary and designed to increase
    Connections’ revenue. Similarly, Connections: (i) fabricated medical records;
    (ii) concealed their noncompliance from external auditors; (iii) manipulated
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    the length of services provided in billing records to reflect more time than
    Connections’ providers actually spent with the clients; (iv) double-booked
    clients; (v) fabricated time records; (vi) dosed clients before they are evaluated
    by a physician and a licensed counselor and submitting reimbursement for
    such services; (vii) submitted the same claims for reimbursement to DSAMH
    and Medicaid and receiving reimbursement from both, (viii) submitted claims
    to Medicare knowing those claims would be rejected before submitting them
    to DSAMH, and (ix) unbundled MAT services to increase its reimbursement,
    to increase its bottom line rather than provide any additional care to
    Connections’ clients.
          392. These false records or statements were material to false or
    fraudulent claims made to the Government, Delaware and/or federal and/or
    state-funded insurance programs, indicating these intakes were medically
    necessary when, in reality, they were part of Connections’ revenue-generating
    machine.
          393. Defendants knew, or were deliberately ignorant or reckless in not
    knowing, that these claims were false.
          394. Federal and/or State-funded insurance programs unaware of the
    falsity or fraudulent nature of the claims caused by Defendants, remitted, and
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    continue to remit, payment to Connections for these claims in reliance on
    Connections’ certification that the claims it submits are truthful and accurate.
          395. Accordingly, Defendants are liable for treble damages, civil
    penalties and the cost of this action under 6 Del. C. § 1201(a).
                                    Count XIII
                 Retaliation in Violation of 31 U.S.C. § 3730(h)(1)
                               against All Defendants
          396. Relators re-allege and incorporate by reference the allegations
    contained in the preceding paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set forth
    herein.
          397. The False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. § 3730(h) provides:
              (h) Relief From Retaliatory Actions.—
              (1) In general.—
              Any employee, contractor, or agent shall be entitled to all
              relief necessary to make that employee, contractor, or agent
              whole, if that employee, contractor, or agent is discharged,
              demoted, suspended, threatened, harassed, or in any other
              manner discriminated against in the terms and conditions of
              employment because of lawful acts done by the employee,
              contractor, agent or associated others in furtherance of an
              action under this section or other efforts to stop 1 or more
              violations of this subchapter.
              (2) Relief.—
              Relief under paragraph (1) shall include reinstatement with the
              same seniority status that employee, contractor, or agent
              would have had but for the discrimination, 2 times the amount
              of back pay, interest on the back pay, and compensation for
              any special damages sustained as a result of the
              discrimination, including litigation costs and reasonable
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            attorneys’ fees. An action under this subsection may be
            brought in the appropriate district court of the United States
            for the relief provided in this subsection.
          398. Defendants have an obligation under the False Claims Act to
    refrain from taking any retaliatory actions against employees for attempting
    to report or stop fraud pursuant to 31 U.S.C. § 3730(h).
          399. Ms. Spruill engaged in protected activity through her efforts to
    stop Defendants from presenting or causing to presented false or fraudulent
    claims for reimbursement to the Medicare and Medicaid programs and/or
    knowingly making, using or causing to be made or used false records or
    statements material to false or fraudulent claims to the Medicare and Medicaid
    programs for reimbursement that use Ms. Spruill’s NPI, which are designed
    to state or imply that Ms. Spruill provided or supervised the provision of the
    services to Connections’ clients, notwithstanding that, in fact, unlicensed and
    unsupervised providers, who are not entitled to bill for their services, provided
    these services, in an attempt to cause, and in fact causing, the Government and
    Delaware to pay out more money than they owe for these services.
          400. When Ms. Spruill first learned others at Connections were using
    her as the “bill to” person even though she was not supervising them, she
    questioned Connections’ Director of Human Resources as to why people she
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    did not supervise were using her NPI. Approximately three weeks later, she
    was terminated by Connections without having her concerns addressed.
          401. After being re-hired by Connections, Ms. Spruill asked her
    supervisor if she was aware of who, if anyone at Connections, was choosing
    her as the “bill to” person within EHR and thus causing Ms. Spruill to be listed
    as the rendering provider on the claims submitted for payment to the
    Government and/or Delaware. Ms. Spruill also called Health Options to ask
    about the use of her NPI by individuals other than herself. Within two months
    of Ms. Spruill making these inquiries, McKay requested a meeting with Ms.
    Spruill and Connections’ Human Resources Department. At this meeting, Ms.
    Spruill was initially told she was being demoted to a therapist position, and
    was ultimately offered a position providing “clinical chart supervision” over
    Connections’ employees from a remove Middletown location. Following this
    meeting, Ms. Spruill’s supervisor became aggressive and hostile to her. In
    November 2018, Connections again terminated Ms. Spruill.
          402. After Ms. Spruill highlighted Defendants’ fraudulent “bill to”
    practices, she was threatened, harassed, and discriminated against in the terms
    and conditions of her employment because of the lawful acts she took to stop
    Defendants’ further violations of the False Claims Act.
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           403. In acting to stop Defendants from using her NPI to submit a False
    Claim to the Government and/or Delaware, Ms. Spruill made an effort “to
    stop 1 or more violations” of the False Claims Act.
           404. Ms. Spruill’s actions were protected activity within the meaning
    of 31 U.S.C. § 3730(h)(1).
           405. Defendants were aware that Ms. Spruill was engaged in protected
    activity.
           406. Pursuant to 31 U.S.C. § 3730(h)(2), Ms. Spruill is entitled to two
    times the amount of back pay, interest on the back pay, and compensation for
    any special damages sustained as a result of the discrimination, including
    litigation costs and reasonable attorneys’ fees.
                                     Count XIV
                     Retaliation in Violation of 6 Del. C. § 1208
                               against All Defendants
           407. Relators re-allege and incorporate by reference the allegations
    contained in the preceding paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set forth
    herein.
           408. The DFCRA, 6 Del. C. § 1208 provides:
              (a) Any employee, contractor, or agent shall be entitled to all
              relief necessary to make that employee, contractor, or agent
              whole, if that employee, contractor, or agent is discharged,
              demoted, suspended, threatened, harassed, or in any other
              manner discriminated against in the terms and conditions of
              employment because of lawful acts done by the employee,
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            contractor, agent or associated others in furtherance of an
            action under this chapter or other efforts to stop 1 or more
            violations of this chapter.
            Such relief shall include reinstatement with the same seniority
            status that employee, contractor, or agent would have had but
            for the discrimination, 2 times the amount of back pay, interest
            on the back pay, and compensation for any special damages
            sustained as a result of the discrimination, including litigation
            costs and reasonable attorneys' fees. . . .
          409. Defendants have an obligation under the DFCRA to refrain from
    taking any retaliatory actions against employees for attempting to report or
    stop fraud pursuant to 6 Del. C. § 1208.
          410. Ms. Spruill engaged in protected activity through her efforts to
    stop Defendants from presenting or causing to presented false or fraudulent
    claims for reimbursement to the Medicare and Medicaid programs and/or
    knowingly making, using or causing to be made or used false records or
    statements material to false or fraudulent claims to the Medicare and Medicaid
    programs for reimbursement that use Ms. Spruill’s NPI, which are designed
    to state or imply that Ms. Spruill provided or supervised the provision of the
    services to Connections’ clients, notwithstanding that, in fact, unlicensed and
    unsupervised providers, who are not entitled to bill for their services, provided
    these services, in an attempt to cause, and in fact causing, the Government and
    Delaware to pay out more money than they owe for these services.
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          411. When Ms. Spruill first learned others at Connections were using
    her as the “bill to” person even though she was not supervising them, she
    questioned Connections’ Director of Human Resources as to why people she
    did not supervise were using her NPI. Approximately three weeks later, she
    was terminated by Connections without having her concerns addressed.
          412. After being re-hired by Connections, Ms. Spruill asked her
    supervisor if she was aware of who, if anyone at Connections, was choosing
    her as the “bill to” person within EHR and thus causing Ms. Spruill to be listed
    as the rendering provider on the claims submitted for payment to the
    Government and/or Delaware. Ms. Spruill also called Health Options to ask
    about the use of her NPI by individuals other than herself. Within two months
    of Ms. Spruill making these inquiries, McKay requested a meeting with Ms.
    Spruill and Connections’ Human Resources Department. At this meeting, Ms.
    Spruill was initially told she was being demoted to a therapist position, and
    was ultimately offered a position providing “clinical chart supervision” over
    Connections’ employees from a remove Middletown location. Following this
    meeting, Ms. Spruill’s supervisor became aggressive and hostile to Ms.
    Spruill. In November 2018, Connections again terminated Ms. Spruill.
          413. After Ms. Spruill highlighted Defendants’ fraudulent “bill to”
    practices, she was discharged, demoted, suspended, threatened, harassed, and
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    discriminated against in the terms and conditions of her employment because
    of the lawful acts she took to stop Defendants’ further violations of the
    DFCRA.
           414. In acting to stop Defendants from using her NPI to submit a False
    Claim to the Government and/or Delaware, Ms. Spruill made an effort “to
    stop 1 or more violations” of the DFCRA.
           415. Ms. Spruill’s actions were protected activity within the meaning
    of 6 Del. C. § 1208.
           416. Defendants were aware that Ms. Spruill was engaged in protected
    activity.
           417. Pursuant to 6 Del. C. § 1208, Ms. Spruill is entitled to two times
    the amount of back pay, interest on the back pay, and compensation for any
    special damages sustained as a result of the discrimination, including litigation
    costs and reasonable attorneys' fees.
                                     Count XV
                 Retaliation in Violation of 31 U.S.C. § 3730(h)(1)
                               against All Defendants
           418. Relators re-allege and incorporate by reference the allegations
    contained in the preceding paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set forth
    herein.
              The False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. § 3730(h) provides:
              (h) Relief From Retaliatory Actions.—
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            (1) In general.—
            Any employee, contractor, or agent shall be entitled to all
            relief necessary to make that employee, contractor, or agent
            whole, if that employee, contractor, or agent is discharged,
            demoted, suspended, threatened, harassed, or in any other
            manner discriminated against in the terms and conditions of
            employment because of lawful acts done by the employee,
            contractor, agent or associated others in furtherance of an
            action under this section or other efforts to stop 1 or more
            violations of this subchapter.
            (2) Relief.—
            Relief under paragraph (1) shall include reinstatement with the
            same seniority status that employee, contractor, or agent
            would have had but for the discrimination, 2 times the amount
            of back pay, interest on the back pay, and compensation for
            any special damages sustained as a result of the
            discrimination, including litigation costs and reasonable
            attorneys’ fees. An action under this subsection may be
            brought in the appropriate district court of the United States
            for the relief provided in this subsection.
          419. Defendants have an obligation under the False Claims Act to
    refrain from taking any retaliatory actions against employees for attempting
    to report or stop fraud pursuant to 31 U.S.C. § 3730(h).
          420. Mr. Spruill engaged in protected activity through his efforts to
    stop Defendants’ fraudulent practices, inter alia, by voicing his objections to
    his superiors to Defendants’ fraudulent billing practices and the sub-par levels
    of care at the Harrington clinic that failed to meet regulatory requirements.
          421. Mr. Spruill has been a vocal critic of Defendants’ fraudulent
    practices, including by revealing the fraudulent billing practices and the sub-
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    par levels of care at the Harrington clinic that failed to meet regulatory
    requirements.
           422. After Mr. Spruill highlighted Defendants’ fraudulent billing
    practices and the Harrington clinic’s failure to comply with required
    regulations, he was threatened, harassed, and discriminated against in the
    terms and conditions of his employment because of the lawful acts he took to
    stop Defendants’ further violations of the False Claims Act.
           423. In acting to stop Defendants’ fraudulent practices, Mr. Spruill
    made an effort “to stop 1 or more violations” of the False Claims Act.
           424. Mr. Spruill’s actions were protected activity within the meaning
    of 31 U.S.C. § 3730(h)(1).
           425. Defendants were aware that Mr. Spruill was engaged in protected
    activity.
           426. Pursuant to 31 U.S.C. § 3730(h)(2), Mr. Spruill is entitled to two
    times the amount of back pay, interest on the back pay, and compensation for
    any special damages sustained as a result of the discrimination, including
    litigation costs and reasonable attorneys’ fees.
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                                     Count XVI
                     Retaliation in Violation of 6 Del. C. § 1208
                               against All Defendants
          427. Relators re-allege and incorporate by reference the allegations
    contained in the preceding paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set forth
    herein.
          428. The DFCRA, 6 Del. C. § 1208 provides:
              (a) Any employee, contractor, or agent shall be entitled to all
              relief necessary to make that employee, contractor, or agent
              whole, if that employee, contractor, or agent is discharged,
              demoted, suspended, threatened, harassed, or in any other
              manner discriminated against in the terms and conditions of
              employment because of lawful acts done by the employee,
              contractor, agent or associated others in furtherance of an
              action under this chapter or other efforts to stop 1 or more
              violations of this chapter.
              Such relief shall include reinstatement with the same seniority
              status that employee, contractor, or agent would have had but
              for the discrimination, 2 times the amount of back pay, interest
              on the back pay, and compensation for any special damages
              sustained as a result of the discrimination, including litigation
              costs and reasonable attorneys' fees. . . .
          429. Defendants have an obligation under the DFCRA to refrain from
    taking any retaliatory actions against employees for attempting to report or
    stop fraud pursuant to 6 Del. C. § 1208.
          430. Mr. Spruill engaged in protected activity through his efforts to
    stop Defendants’ fraudulent practices by, inter alia, voicing his objections to
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    his superiors to Defendants’ fraudulent billing practices and the sub-par levels
    of care at the Harrington clinic that failed to meet regulatory requirements.
           431. Mr. Spruill has been a vocal critic of Defendants’ fraudulent
    practices, including by revealing the fraudulent billing practices and the sub-
    par levels of care at the Harrington clinic that failed to meet regulatory
    requirements.
           432. After Mr. Spruill highlighted Defendants’ fraudulent practices
    billing practices and the Harrington clinic’s failure to comply with required
    regulations, he was discharged, demoted, suspended, threatened, harassed,
    and discriminated against in the terms and conditions of his employment
    because of the lawful acts he took to stop Defendants’ further violations of the
    DFCRA.
           433. In acting to stop Defendants’ fraudulent practices, Mr. Spruill
    made an effort “to stop 1 or more violations” of the DFCRA.
           434. Mr. Spruill’s actions were protected activity within the meaning
    of 6 Del. C. § 1208.
           435. Defendants were aware that Mr. Spruill was engaged in protected
    activity.
           436. Pursuant to 6 Del. C. § 1208, Mr. Spruill is entitled to two times
    the amount of back pay, interest on the back pay, and compensation for any
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    special damages sustained as a result of the discrimination, including litigation
    costs and reasonable attorneys' fees.
    V.      PRAYER FOR RELIEF
            WHEREFORE, Relators, Malika Spruill and Douglas Spruill, request
    that judgment be entered against the Defendants, ordering that:
            437. Defendants cease and desist from violating 31 U.S.C. § 3729;
            438. Defendants cease and desist from violating 6 Del. C. § 1201, et
    seq.;
            439. Defendants pay not less than $11,181 and not more than $22,363,
    as adjusted by the Federal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act of 1990,
    for each violation of 31 U.S.C. § 3729, plus three (3) times the amount of
    damages the Government has sustained as a result of Defendants’ actions;
            440. Defendants pay not less than $10,957 and not more than $21,916
    for each violation of 6 Del. C. § 1201, as adjusted by the Federal Civil
    Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act, plus three (3) times the amount of
    damages Delaware has sustained as a result of Defendants’ actions;
            441. Defendants pay all costs of this action, including attorneys’ fees
    and costs pursuant to 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(3) and 6 Del. C. § 1201, et seq.;
            442. Relators be awarded the maximum “relator’s share” allowed
    pursuant to 31 U.S.C. § 3730(d) and 6 Del. C. § 1205;
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          443. Ms. Spruill be awarded all relief necessary to make her whole,
    including but not limited to, two times her back pay, interest on back pay, and
    compensation for any special damages sustained as a result of the
    discrimination, including litigation costs and reasonable attorneys’ fees
    pursuant to 31 U.S.C. 3730(h);
          444. Ms. Spruill be awarded all relief necessary to make her whole,
    including but not limited to, reinstatement, two times the amount of back pay,
    interest on the back pay, and compensation for any special damages sustained
    as a result of the discrimination, including litigation costs and reasonable
    attorneys' fees pursuant to 6 Del. C. § 1208;
          445. Mr. Spruill be awarded all relief necessary to make him whole,
    including but not limited to, two times him back pay, interest on back pay,
    and compensation for any special damages sustained as a result of the
    discrimination, including litigation costs and reasonable attorneys’ fees
    pursuant to 31 U.S.C. 3730(h);
          446. Mr. Spruill be awarded all relief necessary to make him whole,
    including but not limited to, reinstatement, two times the amount of back pay,
    interest on the back pay, and compensation for any special damages sustained
    as a result of the discrimination, including litigation costs and reasonable
    attorneys’ fees pursuant to 6 Del. C. § 1208;
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          447. The Government, Delaware and Relators Malika Spruill and
    Douglas Spruill receive such other relief as the Court deems just and proper.
    VI.   JURY TRIAL DEMANDED
          Relators demand trial by a jury of twelve (12).
    Dated: June 21, 2019                   GRANT & EISENHOFER, P.A.
                                            /s/ Kyle J. McGee
    OF COUNSEL:                            Kyle J. McGee (# 5558)
                                           Laina M. Herbert (# 4717)
                                           123 Justison Street
    Brian Mahany (WI 1065623)              Wilmington, DE 19801
    Tim Granitz (WI 1088934)               Tel: 302-622-7000
    MahanyLaw                              KMcGee@gelaw.com
    8112 West Bluemound Road               LHerbert@gelaw.com
     Suite 101
    Wauwatosa, WI 53213                    Attorneys for Relators Malika
    Tel: (414) 258-2375                    Spruill and Douglas Spruill
    Facsimile: (414) 777-0776
    brian@mahanylaw.com
    tgranitz@mahanylaw.com
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