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Hospital Scandals In The Chicagoland Area ... connected to BIG BUSINESS, LOBBYIST AND THOSE WITH CLOUT
Hospital Scandals In The Chicagoland Area ... connected to BIG BUSINESS, LOBBYIST AND THOSE WITH CLOUT
Danger Going into Hositals may be deadly if...... You do not have top line coverage and that they are not going to over bill your account. Most of the Hospital scandals hit the news but are vanished to back pages to go bye bye so that those with heavy Clout remain safe from eye view. The scandals involved over nilling medicare and medicaid even Blue Corss and Blue Shield, in order to make up the different in patients lower billing rates which come from the Federal Government and State provided plans paying them less money for services. The nightmare is not more and more patients have the state and federal palns because of illness and being disabled The money from the insurance carriers barely makes a dollar against the fees leveled by the hospitals and its staff for treatment. Therefore the quality of treatment goes down to all most nothing and many people going in are left as victims to cut rate care. The other scandals are like the one I found in the webpage below: Read on: (DUPAGE COUNTY SCANDAL AND THERE IS MORE) « Win, Win (Lose) | Main | Hoffa And Bush In The Papers » July 26, 2004 DuPage Double-Pays - Chicago Sun-Times Article "Probe Looks At Consultant's Pay" I'm guessing most people in DuPage think we should pay once, and pay competitively. It appears to be a difference between me and the DuPage County Board. From the Chicago Sun-Times July 26, 2004 Probe looks at consultant's pay Republican businessman John E. Glennon has made a lot of money off DuPage County, but taxpayers don't know the half of it. His company, North American Capital Opportunities, has been paid $288,000 for county lobbying and financial consulting work since 2000, records show. On top of that, Glennon has raked in at least $105,000 in previously unknown payments - cash that came out of pots of money he helped the county borrow for road projects and new election equipment, among other things. The payments, made directly out of bond proceeds with virtually no accounting to taxpayers, are now part of a larger inquiry by the county's auditor. They raise questions not only about how much money consultants, lawyers and others who work on bond deals have taken in, but also about whether Glennon was being paid twice to do the same job. In the county's most recent bond deal, for example, Glennon made $20,000 as a financial adviser, or "F.A." - a position that a former county official said was unnecessary, especially given that Glennon already was being paid under his county contract. "Did we need an F.A.? Like I need a third leg," said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "But we paid an F.A." An attorney for Glennon declined to comment, standing by DuPage County Board Chairman Robert Schillerstrom's statement that Glennon deserved everything he got because he put in extra work to close out borrowing deals. At the same time, Schillerstrom acknowledges DuPage needs to bring Glennon's payments under one umbrella. "I'm not absolutely sure how he got paid, to be quite frank," Schillerstrom said. "In the future, what we're going to be doing is having a straight-up contract approved by the county board. I agree that's a better way of doing it." The $105,000 paid to Glennon has been a secret because county officials didn't release records showing how much was made by him and other players involved in borrowing deals. The county provided that information - the kind of detailed cost breakdowns routinely disclosed by the State of Illinois and the City of Chicago - only after repeated inquiries by the Chicago Sun-Times. Records for two bond sales remain missing. "It's taxpayer money. And it's buried, quite honestly," said county auditor Jim Rasins, who has begun an examination of the payouts from all borrowing deals authorized by the county board since 2001. "Because of the amount of money involved with these bond issuances, we want to determine where the proceeds went." Glennon, 52, of Lake Forest, once chaired former Gov. George Ryan's campaign fund and is a lobbyist for companies run by Chicago Blackhawks owner Bill Wirtz. He headed a task force that oversaw Ryan's multibillion-dollar Illinois FIRST program for road and other construction improvements. Before creating North American Capital Opportunities, he worked for investment banking companies including Lehman Brothers. Link to hospital scandal In one of the DuPage borrowing deals in which Glennon got cash that previously was unknown, the lead underwriter was Bear Stearns & Co. The investment banking firm is a player in an evolving state hospital construction scandal under investigation by federal authorities. Records of possible payments to Glennon for two other Bear Stearns bond deals in DuPage remain missing, county officials said. Glennon recently was fired as a real estate consultant by Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine & Science, the former Finch University of Health Sciences/Chicago Medical School, which was told by the feds it might be a victim of fraud. He has not been accused of wrongdoing. Glennon has ties to two people who recently resigned from the North Chicago medical school's board: Stuart Levine and Jacob Kiferbaum. They're both defendants in a whistleblower lawsuit filed in May by executives with Edward Hospital in Naperville. The suit accuses them of being involved in a state hospital construction "kickback" scheme. Last year, Glennon arranged meetings between Levine, Kiferbaum and officials with the DuPage Technology Park, for which Glennon also has been a consultant. While Schillerstrom said he's concerned about Glennon's dismissal from the medical school, he has no plans to cancel Glennon's two contracts with the county this year worth $145,000 for lobbying and financial consulting. Services needed Schillerstrom said the county brought in Glennon as a consultant because its infrastructure needed upgrading. Borrowing money, the chairman said, was the best way to tackle big-ticket projects without raising property taxes. "We hadn't done any bond deals in a while," he said. "We brought in John to be our agent to make sure the underwriters, the lawyers and the people who would do the work for us, that the costs stay in line." In the first round of major borrowing deals, Glennon tapped Bear Stearns and the head of its Chicago public finance team, Nicholas Hurtgen, after Merrill Lynch dropped out. Hurtgen resigned from Bear Stearns this month in the wake of the whistleblower lawsuit alleging the hospital construction "kickback" scheme. Like Levine and Kiferbaum, Hurtgen has been named a defendant in that case. Glennon and Hurtgen were among the financial minds hammering out plans for a $131 million bond sale for DuPage road construction projects in April 2001. Glennon already had been paid $13,400 by the county as a consultant, but he got $25,000 out of the bond proceeds "for professional advisory services." That started a trend of Glennon drawing paychecks from both bond proceeds and his county contracts. "My understanding is that in all the payouts that were made on all of this stuff, all kinds of lawyers were involved, and everything was appropriately handled," Schillerstrom said. Some of Schillerstrom's critics question that. "I think the DuPage County Board members ought to start to ask some questions and perhaps even be talking to the DuPage County state's attorney," said Woodridge Mayor William Murphy, a member of the DuPage Water Commission, which once rebuffed an effort by Schillerstrom to make Glennon its borrowing adviser. Other DuPage business The county board chairman has been more successful in helping Glennon land other government consulting work in DuPage. At the DuPage Airport, Glennon came on the scene in late 2002 as the airport authority was in the midst of refinancing about $23 million in debt. "Mr. Glennon just showed up and said he was going to be involved with us as a broker [on the deal]," recalled Duane Gengler, who was chairman of the airport board at the time. "I mentioned it to Mr. Schillerstrom during a private meeting and told him it would cost us a lot more to use Mr. Glennon as a broker. Mr. Schillerstrom said, 'Use him as a consultant because it's not as expensive.' " Schillerstrom denies forcing Glennon on any government authority. "Especially my dealings with the airport authority," he said. "I want them to run the very best airport they can, and I want them off the tax rolls in two or three years." This isn't the first time Glennon's contracts have been called into question. In 2001, Illinois gambling regulators fined Empress Casino Joliet Corp. $95,000 for entering into a contract that would give Glennon a $1.5 million success fee if the Empress was sold. The contract wasn't reported to regulators and didn't specify Glennon needed to do anything to get the fee - a violation of Illinois Gaming Board rules. Glennon never has been accused of any criminal wrongdoing stemming from that contract. ************************************* DUPAGE COUNTY'S $440,000 MAN At the same time John Glennon had contracts with DuPage County for financial consulting work, he also was getting paid out of pots of money he helped the county borrow. [Below] is a breakdown of the $282,415 that Glennon's company, North American Capital Opportunities, has taken in for lobbying and financial consulting work through July 16. The county provided this information after a Freedom of Information Act request by the Chicago Sun-Times, but it took repeated inquiries before DuPage disclosed "separate payments" Glennon "may have" gotten for bond work. Records for two other deals where Glennon might have been paid still can't be found. Below are the previously undisclosed payments that the county did find: Borrowing deal: Payment to Glennon $131 million for road construction (2001): $25,000 $55 million for courthouse construction (2001): $20,000 $26 million for drainage work (2001): $15,000 $29 million for refinancing (2001): $25,000 $18.5 million for county jail (2002): Records not found $27 million for drainage work (2002): Records not found $9 million for refinancing (2003): $20,000 Total: $105,000 Besides his work for the county board, Glennon since 2001 also has done consulting for other agencies affiliated with DuPage County government: DuPage Technology Park: $27,559 DuPage Airport Authority: $25,000 Known payments to Glennon since 2000: $439,974 SOURCE: DuPage County records Posted by Hiram Wurf at July 26, 2004 08:29 PM | TrackBack
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Truthradio Defrauded
Truthradio Defrauded  
 
My wife and I are victims of a phone scam by Premier Benefits of Orange, California. We hope nobody else in our area will fall for it after reading our story. The phone solicitor wanted to give us $200 worth of coupons "good for two hundred dollars in purchases at any mall in the U.S." Price? "Just $3.95, unrefundable, as a delivery fee," to be taken from our checking account. We listened through all the disclosures of the verifier and we "made a deal" with Premier Benefits claiming to be located at 1442 E. Lincoln Avenue, Orange, California 98865. We were also to be sent information about other offers including a generous phone card, and we would have at least thirty days to examine the package, with the right to cancel. I told my wife, "It's worth the risk. It is only $3.95. If they take more than that, they would be guilty of a crime." I was wrong. What did we get? That was two weeks ago. The coupons have not arrived. The $3.95 is still in our account. Instead, we just learned Premier Benefits withdrew $149.95 from our checking account, because we "did not call to cancel." Why didn't we call to cancel? We didn't call to cancel because there was nothing to cancel. We had not received the package, so how could we cancel? On the phone April 29, I talked to a supervisor who would not admit to any mistake and said it was our fault that the coupons were not delivered. After a long unfruitful conversation I told the supervisor, who sounded like a native of India, "You will probably take a lot of money out of the accounts of hundreds of customers and then flee back to India." "How could I flee to India? I am in India now," admitted the "Orange County" businessman. I called the sheriff's office. The cordial deputy explained to me that our problem is a "civil matter." No crime has been committed. So, apparently it is not a crime to: 1. Sell something at an agreed price and fail to deliver the product. 2. Take without authorization a payment nearly 40 times greater than the agreed amount and never deliver anything. 3. Blame the customer for what has happened. I am writing this because I want the public to be warned about scams like this. We enjoy using coupons, so we were good prospects. It was only at the very end that we learned the coupons would NOT be mailed to us. "They will be delivered personally," said the salesman "By one of our employees." That alone should have been warning enough. When you are operating a "legal" scam, you do not use the mails. The post office has rules against fraud, even when local law enforcement does not. Oh, yes. I phoned the Better Business Bureau in Orange County during business hours. Nobody was there. This e-mail is from: Richard Palmquist Truth Radio: rp@truthradio.com PO Box 344 Nipomo, CA 93444

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