Pharmacy Owner’s Son Admits Role in $24.8 Million Kickback Scheme

Alex Fleyshmakher, 34, the son of a former a co-owner of a Union City, New Jersey, pharmacy, admitted his role in multimillion-dollar conspiracies to pay kickbacks and bribes to healthcare professionals and to defraud the IRS. The superseding information alleges that Fleyshmakher conspired to solicit and pay kickbacks with seven other individuals, three of whom were previously charged with him by superseding indictment: Samuel “Sam” Khaimov and Yana Shtindler, both of Glen Head, New York; and Ruben Sevumyants, of Marlboro, New Jersey. Fleyhsmakher is the first of these four codefendants to plead guilty. His other alleged conspirators in the kickback scheme included his father, Igor Fleyshmakher, of Holmdel, New Jersey, who previously pleaded guilty for his role in the conspiracy; and Eduard “Eddy” Shtindler, of Paramus, New Jersey, who previously pleaded guilty in a related kickback conspiracy. Their respective sentencings are pending.

In order to obtain a higher volume of prescriptions, Khaimov, Yana Shtindler, Igor Fleyshmakher, Alex Fleyshmakher, Sevumyants, Eddy Shtindler, and other Prime Aid employees paid kickbacks and bribes to doctors and doctors’ employees to induce doctors’ offices to steer prescriptions to the Prime Aid Pharmacies. From 2008 to August 2017, these bribes included expensive meals, designer bags, and payments by cash, check, and wire transfers. The bribes and kickbacks were paid to, among others, doctors and doctors’ employees in New Jersey and New York. The prescriptions that just one of those New Jersey medical practices steered to Prime Aid Union City as part of the scheme resulted in Medicare and Medicaid payments to Prime Aid Union City of approximately $24.8 million.

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