A federal jury in the Eastern District of Michigan convicted Ruby Scott, a Michigan nurse and owner of Delta Home Health Care LLC, for a $1.6 million Medicare fraud scheme involving illegal kickbacks, stolen patient records, and false home health billing.
According to the DOJ, Scott paid a discharge nurse at a Detroit hospital to identify Medicare patients and send their confidential records to Delta without the patients’ knowledge.
From 2018 through 2021, Scott allegedly used those records to bill Medicare for home health services. The DOJ said she paid the nurse more than $130,000 through CashApp, PayPal, checks, and cash, including roughly $300 per patient when Delta successfully billed Medicare.
Prosecutors said Scott falsely represented that doctors had certified patients as eligible for home health care, including that they were homebound, even though no doctor had evaluated those patients for Delta’s services. In some cases, Scott allegedly used real doctors’ identities to fabricate evaluations. One witness testified that a patient for whom Delta received thousands of dollars in Medicare payments never received services from Scott’s company.
Delta also failed to maintain patient files for more than one-third of the patients it billed Medicare for. Medicare paid Delta more than $1.2 million for those patients alone. The DOJ said Scott caused approximately $1.6 million in losses to Medicare.
The jury convicted Scott of five counts of health care fraud, conspiracy to defraud the United States and pay illegal health care kickbacks, and four counts of paying illegal health care kickbacks. She is scheduled to be sentenced on September 24, 2026.
For Find Corporate Waste, this case shows how public health care dollars can be drained through kickbacks, fake medical necessity, stolen patient information, and false billing records. Medicare fraud is not victimless. Every false claim takes money from taxpayers, legitimate providers, and patients who depend on the system

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