Allegations of widespread fraud and neglect involving elder care services in Maine are drawing increased scrutiny after reporting by The Maine Wire detailed how taxpayer-funded programs may have been exploited, particularly within home care and residential facilities tied to African immigrant providers.

During an exchange with Newsmax host Rob Finnerty, Steve Robinson, editor-in-chief of The Maine Wire, described what he said are systemic failures and fraudulent practices affecting some of the state’s most vulnerable residents.

“According to multiple reports in the main wire, African immigrants who do not speak English in many cases, and have no experience in health care are allegedly stealing millions of taxpayer dollars from the state by taking a 50 hour course to care for elderly Americans and then billing the government all of this,” Finnerty said, introducing the investigation.

He noted that Robinson and columnist John Featherston are among the only journalists in Maine actively pursuing the story.

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Finnerty asked Robinson whether the individuals involved were actually providing care or if the situation mirrored other high-profile fraud cases seen in cities such as Minneapolis.

“In many cases, no, but in some cases, unfortunately, yes, they're providing some semblance of care,” Robinson responded.

“But it really boils down to neglect and abuse.”

Robinson said the conditions described to him by eyewitnesses and sources familiar with the operations were severe.

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“As I told Sean Ryan on his podcast, it would be better if the patients were fake in some of these homes, because the conditions that they're living in that have been described to me by eyewitnesses and people familiar with these operations are inhumane and deplorable,” he said.

Robinson explained that the alleged fraud in Maine spans multiple programs and takes different forms, ranging from nonexistent agencies to residential facilities that house real patients but fail to meet basic standards of care.

“We have home care agencies that are essentially just PO boxes that send invoices to the Department of Health and Human Services and get paid,” Robinson said.

“But we also have the residential care facilities where actual houses are being operated under the guise of providing care for disabled adults.”

According to Robinson, patients in these facilities are often neglected while employees are overworked and underqualified.

“There are real adults in those houses, but they're cutting corners and they're overworking their employees,” he said.

“So you have employees sleeping and neglecting the people they're supposed to be taking care of.”

Robinson said the scope of the issue is reflected in recent findings by federal investigators.

“Just last week, the Office of Inspector General at the Department of Health and Human Services issued a report saying that in 2023 alone, Maine improperly billed $46 million worth of Medicaid payments to the federal government,” he said.

He added that the Department of Health and Human Services is now seeking to recover the improperly billed funds.

“This was one program, one year, section 28, 46 million, and they're looking to claw back that money,” Robinson said.

WATCH:

The reporting by Robinson and Featherston has brought attention to what they describe as a largely ignored scandal in Maine, raising questions about oversight, accountability, and the protection of elderly and disabled Americans receiving taxpayer-funded care.

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