National

Ailing man faked history in Navy for health benefits, feds say. Now he’s sentenced

Due to the high costs of private insurance, a Montana man lied about having served in the Navy to receive health benefits, according to officials.
Due to the high costs of private insurance, a Montana man lied about having served in the Navy to receive health benefits, according to officials. Getty Images/iStockphoto

A 66-year-old man walks with a cane. He has a history of heart problems and seizures, federal officials say.

Two and a half years ago, after many battles with his health, the man applied for health care benefits with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs in Helena, Montana, writing on his application that he had served with the Navy from 1981 to 1984, according to court documents. He was approved.

The problem was, the man had never actually served in the military, officials say.

McClatchy News reached out to his attorney on Jan. 25 but did not immediately receive a response.

Sometime after his approval, VA Veterans Benefits Administration representatives searched their systems and were unable to find records of the man’s service, according to a Jan. 22 news release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Montana.

In the interview with them that followed, the man admitted that he did not serve in the Navy and that he had applied for the benefits due to “the high cost of private healthcare,” prosecutors said.

Last year, the average cost for private health insurance in the U.S. was $456 for one person and $1,152 for a family per month, according to eHealth, an online marketplace for health insurance. For someone in poor health, in his 60s and not yet qualifying for Medicare at the time, these rates would likely have been even higher.

In August 2023, the man pleaded guilty to health care fraud, and he was sentenced on Jan. 22 to three years of probation, with 180 days of home confinement, and required to pay $46,075 in restitution.

“The nature of the offense is closely tied with (his) health issues,” reads the man’s sentencing memo, filed by his attorney.

He “has a voluminous medical history. … He has acknowledged that he was not entitled to the benefits that he was receiving, and that he committed the crime in order to receive better health care than that available for civilians.”

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This story was originally published January 25, 2024 at 4:16 PM with the headline "Ailing man faked history in Navy for health benefits, feds say. Now he’s sentenced."

JD
Julia Daye
McClatchy DC
Julia Daye is a national real-time reporter for McClatchy covering health, science and culture. She previously worked in radio and wrote for numerous local and national outlets, including the HuffPost, The Philadelphia Inquirer, The Taos News and many others.
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