Goody bag of unnecessary pills: Indian-origin Dr Neil K Anand, who treated 9/11 patients, sentenced to 14 years in prison


Goody bag of unnecessary pills: Indian-origin Dr Neil K Anand, who treated 9/11 patients, sentenced to 14 years in prison
Dr Neil K Anand has been sentenced to 14 years in prison for medical fraud after years-long trial that he earlier called David vs Goliath legal battle with the US government.

Indian-origin doctor Neil K Anand who was convicted for US health care fraud earlier this year has been sentenced to 14 years in prison for pushing his patients to accept goody bags of sedatives that they did not need so that he could get insurance money. The 48-year-old Pennsylvania doctor was also ordered to pay over $2 million in restitution and over $2 million in forfeiture.

Blank prescriptions pre-signed by Anand

Layers of irregularities were uncovered in the investigation as apart from forcing patients to take medicines that they did not need, he pre-signed prescriptions where his interns, with no license to prescribe medicines, wrote controlled substances. According to court documents and evidence presented at trial, Dr Anand conspired to submit false and fraudulent claims to health plans provided by Medicare, the US Office of Personnel Management (OPM), Independence Blue Cross (IBC), and Anthem, for “Goody Bags” of medically unnecessary prescription medications, which were dispensed to patients by in-house pharmacies owned by Anand. In total, Medicare, OPM, IBC, and Anthem paid over $2.4 million in reimbursements. To entice patients to take the unwanted Goody Bags, Anand also conspired to distribute oxycodone outside the usual course of medical practice and without a legitimate medical purpose. Unlicensed medical interns wrote prescriptions for controlled substances using blank prescriptions that were pre-signed by Anand. As part of the scheme, Anand prescribed 20,850 oxycodone tablets for nine different patients. After learning that he was under investigation, Anand concealed the proceeds of the fraud by transferring approximately $1.2 million into an account in the name of a relative and for the benefit of a minor relative.

Anand disputed allegations, said he treated victims of 9/11, was US Navy’s physician

Dr Anand and his family disputed the allegations and said his compassion for patients was unfairly criminalized. He treated victims of 9/11 attacks in New York City in 2001 and then enlisted in the US Navy as a physician. “The law has spoken for now, but the deeper questions remain: What is healing? What is justice? Where’s the line between mercy and misconduct?” Anand said. US District Judge Chad F Kenney said he believed Anand had grown to be motivated by greed and illicit profits and not the needs of his patients. “For you, their pain was your gain,” Kenney said. “You were not focused during this period on treating your patients.”Dr Anand was charged in 2019 and as his trial went for years, several groups on social media claimed that he became a victim of government propaganda and sought support. “The government is using artificial intelligence and manipulated data to prosecute me for treating chronic pain patients, turning tools meant to help into weapons against doctors,” Dr Anand wrote earlier in a blog seeking support.



  • Related Posts

    After giving away billions to charity, MacKenzie Scott says, ‘small acts of kindness matter’ | World News

    After giving away more than $26 billion since 2019, including roughly $7 billion in 2025 alone, MacKenzie Scott has continued to emphasise a message that runs counter to the scale…

    Continue reading
    Indian-origin man in critical condition after saving sister in Australia restaurant fire: ’70 per cent burns all over his body’

    An Indian-origin man is in a critical condition after suffering severe burns while rescuing his sister from a fire that tore through a restaurant in Australia’s Adelaide Hills.47-year-old Baljeet Singh…

    Continue reading

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *