Jason Gerner, 46, of Shamung, New Jersey, was sentenced to 36 months imprisonment and three years of supervised release for his role in multiple healthcare fraud schemes as a co-founder of the drug and alcohol rehabilitation facility Liberation Way, which had locations in Yardley, Bala Cynwyd and Fort Washington, Pennsylvania. As part of his sentence, he was also ordered to pay restitution in the amount of $9,338,607 and ordered to forfeit $444,983. An investigation into the operations and management of the facility exposed an array of schemes, including: fraudulently purchasing premium insurance policies on behalf of prospective patients so that Liberation Way could bill for expensive “treatments” that it never provided; using pre-signed medical orders for tests and treatments for patients who were not actually seen or examined by the only doctor employed by Liberation Way; paying a different doctor to sign urine-testing orders for patients who were never seen or examined; shipping those urine samples for testing to laboratories in Florida in order to submit claims that were excessive and medically unnecessary, in order to maximize billing to insurance companies; receiving kickbacks for the insurance payments made to the laboratories for these overly frequent and expensive tests; and conspiring to hide the proceeds of the illegal urine-testing kickback scheme through a series of financial transactions involving payments to various shell companies disguised as consulting payments.