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mdimport

06/27/20 12:58 PM

#198721 RE: Alyssa #198718

No-one knows the truth, because the liars and fraudsters running $ARYC have not published the truth for several years.

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In April 2020, the FDA informed Arrayit that its COVID-19 tests were not at an acceptable performance level—a fact which Arrayit never disclosed to the public.

Schena also defrauded investors by making numerous false and misleading statements about Arrayit’s allergy test sales (inflated by the purported kickbacks), financial condition, and future prospects, including through an “aggressive promotional campaign” on Twitter.

https://www.jdsupra.com/legalnews/doj-and-sec-divide-and-conquer-to-25472/
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rokkdatstock

06/27/20 1:09 PM

#198722 RE: Alyssa #198718

And yet Schena's complaint includes that nonsensical claim. Fraud and conspiracy from the SEC and Justice department and a 2 MILLION dollar bond for the pure Dr. Schena
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stockbuster

06/27/20 1:49 PM

#198726 RE: Alyssa #198718

Couple examples of medical fraud.

In Texas, a supplier of durable medical equipment was found guilty of five counts of healthcare fraud due to submission of false claims to Medicare. The court sentenced the supplier to 120 months of incarceration and restitution of $1.6 million.1
Raritan Bay Medical Center agreed to pay the government $7.5 million to settle allegations that it defrauded the Medicare program, purposely inflating charges for inpatient and outpatient care, artificially obtaining outlier payments from Medicare.2
AmeriGroup Illinois, Inc., fraudulently skewed enrollment into the Medicaid HMO program by refusing to register pregnant women and discouraging registration for individuals with preexisting conditions. Under the False Claims Act and the Illinois Whistleblower Reward and Protection Act, AmeriGroup paid $144 million in damages to Illinois and the U.S. government and $190 million in civil penalties.3
In Florida, a dermatologist was sentenced to 22 years in prison, paid $3.7 million in restitution, forfeited an addition $3.7 million, and paid a $25,000 fine for performing 3,086 medically unnecessary surgeries on 865 Medicare beneficiaries.4
In Florida, a physician was sentenced to 24 months incarceration, ordered to pay $727,000 in restitution for cash payments where the physician signed blank prescriptions and certificates for medical necessity for patients he never saw.5
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of the Inspector General (OIG) found that providers in 8 out of 10 audited states received an estimated total of $27.3 million in Medicaid overpayments for services claimed after beneficiaries' deaths.6
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stockbuster

06/27/20 2:02 PM

#198727 RE: Alyssa #198718

Market Manipulation. Very serious

The Federal Bureau of Investigation describes market manipulation as “artificially raising or lowering the price of stock on any national securities or commodities exchangeor in the over-the-counter marketplace.”
There are different types of market manipulation schemes that can occur, and involvement with any effort to manipulate the market could result in serious criminal charges. Defendants could face charges under the Commodities Exchange Act, under the Securities and Exchange Act, under Sarbanes-Oxley, and under general fraud laws, among other federal and state laws. The types of criminal charges that a defendant could face will vary based on the market manipulation scheme that allegedly occurred.
Authorities take market manipulation seriously. The Federal Bureau of Investigation announced that 14 people were arrested in 2013 as a result of participation in long-term schemes to manipulate stock prices. The scheme allegedly resulted in investors losing more than $30 million after conspirators inflated prices and trading volumes of stocks to make it appear the stocks were being actively traded and increasing in value.  The indictments specified five specific deals, and according to the FBI, if the defendants were convicted, they faced a statutory maximum penalty of at least 100 years in federal prison.