A Portsmouth man was sentenced to two years in prison for defrauding the Virginia Medicaid program by submitting over $188,000 in false claims for a residential nursing facility. According to court documents, Lopez Scott, 47, operated Turning Points Residential Care, a business authorized to provide residential support services and skilled nursing services to recipients of Medicaid. Between October 2016 and October 2019, Scott submitted numerous false and fraudulent claims to Virginia Medicaid, known as the Virginia Medical Assistance Program (VMAP), which misrepresented that 5,847.75 hours of skilled nursing services had been provided to a Medicaid recipient. As a result, Scott received approximately $188,297.39 in healthcare payments to which he was not entitled. According to court documents, in order to conceal and cover up the fact that no skilled nursing services had been provided to the Medicaid recipient, Scott created fraudulent entries of nursing notes in the electronic office records of Turning Points, including the forged signature of a nurse, which falsely indicated that such services had been provided. Scott also asked this nurse to falsely state to investigators that she had continued to work for the company even after her employment had ceased.