The United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Colorado and the Colorado Attorney General’s Office announce that Ashley Marie Stevens, 40, and Wesam Yassin, 42, have been separately charged with defrauding Medicaid’s non-emergent medical transportation program. According to the indictment filed against Stevens, from approximately July 2022 to February 2023, Stevens billed Colorado Medicaid under the business name Armistead Twin Rides, LLC., for over one million dollars of non-emergent medical transportation rides for Medicaid beneficiaries. Of those one million dollars, Stevens billed Colorado Medicaid for more than $400,000 for rides for herself and family members, most of which did not have corresponding medical appointments. The indictment alleges that Stevens also billed Colorado Medicaid for over $150,000 for rides for four beneficiaries for whom the rides either did not occur at all or involved a destination unrelated to any medical provider or service. Additionally, the indictment alleges that Stevens billed Colorado Medicaid for more than $450,000 for rides that were 400 or more miles long per patient, per day. Only a handful of those rides corresponded to medical appointments or services, and those destinations were less than 400 miles away. Proceeds from the scheme were allegedly used for personal gain including travel and the purchase of a luxury vehicle.
According to the indictment filed against Yassin, from approximately March 2022 to October 2023, Yassin billed Colorado Medicaid under the business name Sama Limo for approximately $3.3 million in non-emergency medical transportation rides. Alleged in the scheme is one instance where Yassin billed Colorado Medicaid for approximately $283,000 for 64 rides for a beneficiary of which approximately $165,000 represented billing for rides after the date of the beneficiary’s death. Additionally, the balance of those rides do not correspond to any medical appointments in Colorado. In other instances, Yassin billed Colorado Medicaid for hundreds of thousands of dollars for rides that beneficiaries say never occurred. Proceeds from this scheme were allegedly used for personal gain including the purchase of a home, furnishings, luxury vehicles, jewelry, and cosmetic surgery.