I Am Scared And Need Advise

This is a personal essay/story so I understand if there is a lack of interest. But I am scared, have good reasons to be and need advise as I am in panic mode when I need to be calm. Those of you who can,please help me with your thoughts.

Yes I have been quiet for nearly 2 months now and I gave a partial reason several days ago – I have decided to move to Italy and that required self contemplation. I did not state the second reason out of fear of seeming vain. Well, I am vain or I would not have done what I did and that’s the reason I am scared.

After the accident (you all know about it so I’ll skip it) my face did not look the same. Sure make-up covered the once straight nose and the once matching cheeks – but in truth I have always loathed wearing a lot of make-up. A little lip gloss and I was out of the house – good to go.

So after much thinking about it and listening to a ‘friend’ talk about a plastic surgeon who did unbelievable non-invasive plastic surgery without going under the knife – I decided to do it. He uses fillers instead to plump up certain areas – botox and others.

It was not until I got to his office that it dawned on me given that given that only recently I have really recovered from a traumatic brain injury I sustained in the accident and so maybe this wasn’t the best idea. So I explained my entire medical history to him and asked if there was any possibility  I could be hurting myself through having fillers injected not too far away from where the head stops and the brain begins. “No”he said. I believed him. I was wrong.

This essay is not about all of the things that went wrong – including fillers that are migrating lumps around my head and yes, I do not know where they are going next, and no the surgery to remove them is too risky – I have checked. It’s about that he had no remorse for either such a botched job or that he has seriously threatened my health. I found that odd.

So I called him and called him and emailed him and went on boards where he posted (being the celebrity doc that he is) and generally became a huge annoyance to the point that my ‘friend’ told me he was connected with the Armenian mafia in Los Angeles and I should watch my mouth. My “friend’ I later learned takes kicks back for bringing in new patients and no longer takes my calls.

Two things happened today were related but not intentionally so. I was contacted my a major LA publication because I had emailed them so much about this doctor that they decided to do a piece about the dangers of celeb doctors and yes they are naming names.

My mouth flew open about two hours ago when a story broke that he and several other doctors have been federally indicted for fraud, kick backs – both giving and receiving – and – here is the kicker – targeting the mentally ill or people with mental issues – with their procedures as they are less likely to object. He is facing a minimum of 10 years in prison if convicted. In the meantime his office is very much in practice and I just received a called from the law firm who launched the case. I haven’t returned the call.

Which brings me to why I am scared.Its obvious really. Husband out of town. Armenian mafia. Already warned once. What do I do? Be calm and pretend nothing at all is wrong, I am in no way at risk? That is what I want to do but each and every cell in my body is screaming alarm  bells at me. Your thoughts?

44 comments

Skip to comment form

  1. are you present ?!?…..

    • Robyn on February 19, 2008 at 03:06

    There is some safety in numbers…even small numbers.

  2. friend who knows all the parties and he told me to clear out – NOW god bless you all

    • Edger on February 19, 2008 at 04:21

    You say “major LA publication” meaning I take it, print media, and you’ve receive what you took as a threat. Have you taken a copy of the article to the police, and explained the threat you received and your fears… and asked for whatever protection they can offer?

    Are there friends or family you can stay with or have them stay with you until you leave for Italy?

  3. Inuendously, it does seem you’ve been threatened or, at least, intimidated — I’m not sure why, particularly, since you have no visible court action against them.  To be safe, take the pooches and stay with friends for a while, if possible, or family, if they are around.  It could be that their offices assume that you have had some measure of input into the eventual lawsuit, who the hell knows?  Or, on the other side of the coin, they are attempting to intimidate you to the point where you do not join in the lawsuit.  

    As you have done nothing, I would not go overboard in fear, but take certain safeguards.

    I am sorry for your unhappy predicament.  Seems things like this and all sorts of things are happening to people now!

  4. but there’s a lot of good advice here, breathingstill. And for what it’s worth, a friend of mine was threatened about consequences from the “Armenian mafia,” so we went to a criminal attorney here in LA and asked him if she should be worried or what she should do. He said “These people just want you frighten you. Don’t let them do that, because then you’ll do something stupid.”

    Not saying you shouldn’t be careful, pay attention to what’s happening around you and have other people nearby, but try not to completely stress out, either. After all you’ve been through, you don’t need that, too. Good luck!!      

  5. get a lawyer yourself. It sounds to me like this is a case of serious malpractice and intimidation. For now I would, as many here have consoled if possible go and stay with other people. Even if nothing is wrong your going to be better off around people, as you won’t be as panicked. Italy sounds wonderful,  would you visit or live? Either way sounds like you could use a break a change. I have missed you. Take care of yourself breathingstill.    

  6.      

    criminal defense lawyer credentials Los Angeles, California

    Selecting criminal defense attorneys in Los Angeles, California

    about Joe Shemaria – federal criminal defense attorney Los Angeles, California

    federal criminal defense cases – attorney Joseph Shemaria – Los Angeles, California

    criminal law – money laundering, bankruptcy fraud, drug trafficking, Los Angeles, California

    preeminent criminal defense attorneys in Los Angeles, California

    myths about criminal law & federal criminal defense – lawyers, Los Angeles, California

    federal criminal defense vs. state criminal defense – lawyers in Los Angeles, California

    Criminal Law News from the courts of Los Angeles, California

    contact a federal criminal defense lawyer in Los Angeles, California

    Law Offices of Joseph Shemaria Home

    February 14, 2007

    NINE DOCTORS, NINE OTHERS INDICTED IN HEALTH CARE SCAM THAT BILKED FEDERAL MEDICARE PROGRAM OUT OF $12 MILLION BY GIVING UNNEEDED TREATMENTS TO ELDERLY, MENTALLY ILL

    Los Angeles, CA – Two indictments returned today by a federal grand jury in Santa Ana charge a total of 18 defendants, half of whom are medical doctors, with fraudulently billing Medicare for more than $12 million worth of treatments that were not needed or were never performed.

    The two indictments outline a scheme in which the doctors, “cappers” and administrators at board-and-care facilities worked together to provide respiratory treatments on elderly, infirm and mentally ill people that were unnecessary, not performed in accordance with Medicare’s rules, or not performed at all. To facilitate the scheme, the doctors allegedly paid illegal kickbacks to cappers and board-and-care owners and administrators to make the elderly, infirm and mentally ill patients available for respiratory therapy.

    The first indictment charges 12 defendants with conspiracy and 68 counts of health care fraud. In addition, six of the doctors and three marketers are charged with money laundering. The defendants are:

    – Paul Arnold Lessler, 68, of Corona Del Mar, a physician;

    – Alexander Zinovy Rivkin, 38, of Los Angeles, a physician;

    – Gershon Walter Hepner, 68, of Los Angeles, a physician;

    – Xinming Fu, 45, of Irvine, a physician;

    – Ramin Sarshad, 38, of Los Angeles, a physician;

    – Aginah M. DeBerry, 54, of Colorado Springs, a physician;

    – Michael Wayne Chapman, 53, of Cypress, a physician;

    – Truc Huy Dao, of Rowland Heights, a physician;

    – Glen Garcia Madrid, 42, of Yorba Linda, a marketer;

    – Levi Raitchik, 45, of Los Angeles, a marketer;

    – Schmuel B. Fogelman, 46, of Los Angeles, a marketer; and

    – Barbara Sue Thrash, 56, of Garden Grove, a board-and-care administrator

  7.  

    NINE DOCTORS, NINE OTHERS INDICTED IN HEALTH CARE SCAM THAT BILKED FEDERAL MEDICARE PROGRAM OUT OF $12 MILLION BY GIVING UNNEEDED TREATMENTS TO ELDERLY, MENTALLY ILL

       Two indictments returned today by a federal grand jury in Santa Ana charge a total of 18 defendants, half of whom are medical doctors, with fraudulently billing Medicare for more than $12 million worth of treatments that were not needed or were never performed.

           The two indictments outline a scheme in which the doctors, “cappers” and administrators at board-and-care facilities worked together to provide respiratory treatments on elderly, infirm and mentally ill people that were unnecessary, not performed in accordance with Medicare’s rules, or not performed at all. To facilitate the scheme, the doctors allegedly paid illegal kickbacks to cappers and board-and-care owners and administrators to make the elderly, infirm and mentally ill patients available for respiratory therapy.

           The first indictment charges 12 defendants with conspiracy and 68 counts of health care fraud. In addition, six of the doctors and three marketers are charged with money laundering. The defendants are:

       * Paul Arnold Lessler, 68, of Corona Del Mar, a physician;

       * Alexander Zinovy Rivkin, 38, of Los Angeles, a physician;

       * Gershon Walter Hepner, 68, of Los Angeles, a physician;

       * Xinming Fu, 45, of Irvine, a physician;

       * Ramin Sarshad, 38, of Los Angeles, a physician;

       * Aginah M. DeBerry, 54, of Colorado Springs, a physician;

       * Michael Wayne Chapman, 53, of Cypress, a physician;

       * Truc Huy Dao, of Rowland Heights, a physician;

       * Glen Garcia Madrid, 42, of Yorba Linda, a marketer;

       * Levi Raitchik, 45, of Los Angeles, a marketer;

       * Schmuel B. Fogelman, 46, of Los Angeles, a marketer; and

       * Barbara Sue Thrash, 56, of Garden Grove, a board-and-care administrator.

           The second indictment charges six defendants with conspiracy to pay and receive illegal kickbacks for patient referrals. The defendants are:

       * David Todd Asher, 39, of Fullerton, a physician;

       * Emilita Nunez Canenea, 47, of San Dimas, a board-and-care owner and administrator;

       * Shahnaz Chadorbaf-Arastoo, 51, of Irvine, a board-and-care owner and administrator;

       * Magdalena Gonzales, 54, of Denver, a board-and-care administrator;

       * Hamid Rafizadeh, 51, of Escondido, a board-and-care administrator; and

       * Alexander Tanciano Tagaro, 59, of Perris, a board-and-care administrator.

           The 18 defendants will all be summoned to appear for arraignment on March 19 in United States District Court in Santa Ana.

           The indictments allege that the scheme targeted elderly, infirm and mentally ill residents of board-and-care facilities throughout Southern California. The doctors paid kickbacks to gain access to residents of board-and-care facilities. The doctors would order respiratory treatment for the residents regardless of whether the residents had respiratory conditions. Respiratory therapists were paid to go out to the board-and-care facilities to perform daily or almost-daily respiratory treatments on the residents. The therapists were ordered to entice the residents to undergo the treatments with gifts, such as sodas, candy and donuts. These respiratory treatments would take place without any doctor present, although Medicare requires that a doctor be present because of the potential danger of a reaction to the treatment. Further, the respiratory treatments were falsely billed as being performed at the doctors’ offices or in a mobile medical van because Medicare prohibited the treatments being performed at board-and-care facilities.

           The doctors received more than $12 million from Medicare after submitting claims in this respiratory treatment scheme. In some cases, the doctors submitted bills for dates the patients were in hospitals and not at the board-and-care facilities, and when the doctors were out of the state or country.

    • Edger on February 19, 2008 at 22:19

    It looks the LA FBI is on the case now, and there is also news about it all over the web.

    • KrisC on February 20, 2008 at 18:25

    hug

    Peace to you my friend…

  8. I am always here for you – count on it.

    I am now dealing directly with the US Attorney on the matter and am in good hands.

Comments have been disabled.