Unthinkable: Dentist breaks his patients' healthy teeth to put cases - "Made millions"

Shocking is the story where a dentist broke his patients' teeth in order to make more money from their repair.

558 TRUE HISTORY, DENTIST

Shocking story where one dentist he broke his patients' teeth in order to make more money from their repair.

The teeth of his patients Scott Charmolly it was fine, but that way he did not make as much money as he wanted

So did the Jackson dentist Wisconsin he was drilling and breaking their teeth in order to charge them for the damage he was causing, according to federal prosecutors.
With this method, Charmoli, with revenue of $ 1,4 million and installation of 434 cases in 2014, reached 2,5 million and over 1.000 cases a year later.

A dentist broke patients' teeth to place cases

After a four-day trial o 61year He was found guilty of five counts of healthcare fraud and two counts of making false statements about treating patients. His sentence is expected to be announced in June and he is facing up to 10 years of imprisonment for each of the charges for health care fraud and up to five years for the other two charges.

His action was revealed when he sold his office in 2019. The new owners, examining his files, noticed a high percentage of cases and reported it to the authorities. When prosecuted in December 2020, more than 60 patients contacted prosecutors and said they believed he had caused them intentional damage in the teeth. Nearly 100 of his former patients sued Charmoli, cases that were pending until the criminal case was completed.

The dentist's fortune exceeded $ 6,8 million at the end of 2020 and he had vacations in Wisconsin and Arizona, according to prosecutors, who claim he owed more than $ 4,2 million for cases from 2016 to 2019.

He was sending fake photos to the insurance companies

Since 2015, Charmoli has been pressuring his clients to put in cases they did not need, according to prosecutors. After deliberately damaging their teeth, submit photos and x-rays to insurance companies as "before", to justify the treatment needed to repair the damage he had caused.

One of those clients, Todd Tendesi, testified that the dentist persuaded him to put two toothpicks in one visit, even though his teeth looked fine, according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. "It seemed excessive, but I did not know. He was the professional, I just trusted him ", he said.

Charmoli gave his clients more cases than 95% of Wisconsin dentists between 2016 and 2019, according to prosecutors. At the trial, an insurance company executive testified that on average one dentist in the state places about six cases per 100 patients, while Charmoli put more than 32.

 

via: Enimerotiko