Six veterans plead guilty to Agent Orange benefits fraud
Scheme allegedly run by former high-ranking Maryland state benefits claim
officer
By Kevin
Rector, The Baltimore Sun
8:28 a.m. EDT, May 2, 2013
Six
military veterans from Maryland pleaded guilty to fraud charges this week in a
scheme to obtain federal military benefits and state tax breaks with faked
documentation claiming they were exposed to Agent Orange
during the Vietnam War,
according to the Maryland U.S. Attorney's Office.
The
veterans allegedly paid thousands of dollars in cash to David Clark, the former
deputy chief of veterans claims in the state Department of Veterans Affairs
Office, in exchange for $1.4 million in fraudulent benefits and tax breaks,
prosecutors said.
The
veterans, some of whom never even served in Vietnam, are from multiple branches
of the military, the indictment says.
Clark
and two others have also been indicted in the scheme, which allegedly dates
back to 1995.
Agent
Orange, the indictment says, "refers to a blend of tactical herbicides the
U.S. military
sprayed in the jungles of Vietnam to remove trees and dense tropical foliage
that provided enemy cover" during the 1960s and 1970s.
The
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs has for years been paying Vietnam veterans
compensation and other benefits for a slew of medical problems associated with
the exposure to the chemical, from Hodgkin's
disease and other forms of cancer to Parkinson's
disease and diabetes,
according to the department.
Clark, 68, of Hydes, was in charge of submitting claims to the federal veterans department on behalf of Maryland veterans, and allegedly forged or fraudulently completed doctors' notes and federal forms alleging he and eight other veterans had developed illnesses — including Type II diabetes and neuropathy — and were forced to take medications because of Agent Orange exposure, the indictment says.
Clark, 68, of Hydes, was in charge of submitting claims to the federal veterans department on behalf of Maryland veterans, and allegedly forged or fraudulently completed doctors' notes and federal forms alleging he and eight other veterans had developed illnesses — including Type II diabetes and neuropathy — and were forced to take medications because of Agent Orange exposure, the indictment says.
Clark
allegedly fabricated documents showing he and others had been awarded service
honors, the indictment says, including Purple Heart Medals and Vietnam Service
Medals.
The
indictment alleges the fraudulent documentation made those it was submitted for
eligible for retroactive lump-sum payments and increased benefits from U.S.
Department of Veterans Affairs. Through the scheme, Clark also allegedly
obtained Maryland property tax waivers for those involved through a
"service connected disability" qualification.
The
fraud resulted in benefits losses of more than $1.15 million and property tax
losses of more than $250,000, the indictment says.
"Like
all government agencies that award benefits based upon a sworn certification
that the claimant deserves them, the Veterans Administration is vulnerable to
abuse by dishonest people," Maryland U.S. Attorney Rod J.
Rosenstein said in a statement. "The defendants cheated the
government of hundreds of thousands of dollars by falsely representing that
they were suffering from medical disabilities as a result of their military
service."
Those
who pleaded guilty this week are Kenneth Williams, 64, of Baltimore (Marine
Corps); Raymond Sadler, 61, of Middle River (Marine Corps); Sandra Tyree, 64,
of Rosedale (Air Force); Kenneth Webster, 67, of Pasadena (Marine Corps); Paul
Heard, 64, of Baltimore (Navy); and John Bratcher, 54, of Conowingo (Air
Force).
All
face up to 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine, and must pay back what they
earned through the scheme, prosecutors said.
The two
others named in the indictment are Richard Genco, of Baltimore, who served in
the U.S. Navy,
and George Kulla, of Baltimore, who served in the Army.
There are also 10 other veterans identified only by their initials who
allegedly played some role in or benefited from the scheme, according to the
indictment.
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