Two medical services company executives have been sentenced to prison and ordered to pay restitution to their victims for orchestrating a massive fraud scheme. According to court documents, Khemwattie Singh, 53, was the chief executive officer of Global Medical Services, LLC and Minnesota International Medicine. Neeraj Chepuri, 55, was the chief medical officer of Global Medical Services. Global Medical Services was a Minnesota-based company that purported to provide accessible healthcare solutions and services worldwide. Minnesota International Medicine was an assumed name for a Minnesota-based medical concierge company that was acquired by Global Medical Services in June 2018. Between June and October 2018, Singh, Chepuri, and others devised a fraud scheme by entering into factoring contracts with a Florida-based investment company to purchase the accounts receivable of Global Medical Services and Minnesota International Medicine for more than $2.6 million. Factoring is a form of short-term financing in which a business sells its accounts receivable to a third-party at a discount.
According to court documents, Singh and Chepuri defrauded the investment company by failing to pay over the receivables as they were collected and falsely represented that no funds had been received. Instead, Singh and Chepuri pocketed the money and wired more than $5 million overseas. In addition, Singh was responsible for complying with all federal tax laws pertaining to Global Medical Services, LLC and Minnesota International Medicine as the chief executive officer, including the requirement that the business would withhold federal income taxes and Social Security and Medicare (“FICA”) taxes from employees’ pay and report and pay over the withheld amounts to the Internal Revenue Service. Beginning in approximately 2018, Singh willfully failed to file quarterly payroll tax returns or pay over the withheld amounts and the employer’s contribution to FICA.