Every significant law enforcement announcement has a point at which the figures seem unreal. False claims totaling $6.5 billion. 90 physicians and 455 defendants. 56 federal districts in 45 states and territories have filed charges. It doesn’t quite settle even after you read it twice. That is the actual size of the 2026 National Health Care Fraud Takedown by the US government.
For two weeks, the Department of Justice coordinated what it calls the nation’s most comprehensive whole-of-government campaign against health care fraud. Neither a single villain nor a single plan served as the foundation for the operation. It was based on a pattern—the extremely unsettling realization that health care fraud isn’t a minor issue carried out by a small number of dishonest people. Clinics, billing departments, telemedicine platforms, nursing practices, and, in at least one concerning instance, the office of a cardiovascular medical director whose purported rubber-stamping of test results for student athletes overlooked an enlarged heart and contributed to a young person’s death are all affected.
It’s worth sitting with that detail. Because the topic of money almost always comes up when discussing health care fraud. funds from taxpayers. Medicare waste. Programs run by the government are quietly dying. The patient on the other end of that fraudulent billing is what is lost. In exchange for false claims of crisis stabilization, the homeless person shuffled into a hotel room in Virginia. The Native American in Arizona who was battling substance abuse was charged for behavioral services that were reportedly never rendered. In its purest form, fraud is a financial crime. It’s worse in reality.
It is astounding how many different schemes have been discovered here. Amniotic wound allografts, a wound treatment product that turned into a vehicle for what prosecutors characterize as industrial-scale theft, are said to have cost Medicare more than $4 billion. According to reports, a nurse practitioner oversaw a $906 million operation and billed Medicare more than $1 million on average for unnecessary procedures. The DOJ’s Data Analytics Team reportedly noticed and reported the allograft payment spike. This specific thread unraveled in that manner. The rate at which those Medicare claims subsequently decreased—from $14.4 billion to about $100 million since the beginning of this year—indicates that the fraud was largely supported by the lack of oversight.

That might be the most disturbing aspect of it all. Not that anyone attempted to steal. Everyone tries to steal. It seems that systems designed to detect fraud were sufficiently slow and porous to allow billions of transactions to pass through before anyone raised an alarm. It appears that the government now recognizes this. In the announcement, CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz made it clear that preventing fraud before money leaves the building is preferable to prosecuting offenders after the fact.
An additional layer that receives insufficient attention is the international dimension. In relation to a scheme worth more than $3.7 billion, one defendant was captured in Cyprus. In Estonia, two more were taken into custody. In connection with a $1.2 billion telemedicine fraud scheme that had previously been charged, an FBI Most Wanted fraudster was apprehended in the Philippines. It turns out that being close to American patients is not a prerequisite for health care fraud. All you need is access to billing systems in the United States.
More than a thousand providers were suspended. The billing rights of nearly 1,400 were taken away. Since October, the DEA has filed nearly 930 administrative cases in an effort to deny practitioners the right to prescribe controlled substances. Even though those figures are unglamorous and bureaucratic, they might ultimately be more significant than the number of arrests. In certain respects, denying someone the right to bill Medicare or prescribe opioids is a more effective deterrent than going to court.
Since its inception in 2007, the DOJ’s Health Care Fraud Strike Force has identified more than $45 billion in fraudulent billing and charged over 6,200 defendants. That is almost two decades’ worth of evidence that health care fraud isn’t going away on its own. This year’s takedown, if anything, indicates that it’s becoming more sophisticated; at last, so is the response.

