A federal grand jury in the Eastern District of Texas returned a superseding indictment charging two Texas men with conspiring to fix prices by lowering rates paid to certain healthcare workers and then conspiring and endeavoring to obstruct a Federal Trade Commission (FTC) investigation of their conduct. According to court documents, Neeraj Jindal and John Rodgers violated the Sherman Act by agreeing with co-conspirators in 2017 to pay lower rates to certain physical therapists and physical therapist assistants in north Texas, including the Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area. At the time, Jindal was the owner and Rodgers was a clinical director of a Texas-based therapist staffing company providing in-home physical therapy services. The superseding indictment alleges their company paid lower rates for several months after entering into the agreement. Additionally, Jindal and Rodgers are charged with conspiring to obstruct and make false statements in proceedings before the FTC and endeavoring to obstruct those proceedings. According to the superseding indictment, Jindal and Rodgers conspired and then made false and misleading statements and withheld and concealed information during the FTC’s investigation to determine whether their company or other therapist staffing companies violated the Federal Trade Commission Act. The superseding indictment follows an indictment against Jindal returned in December 2020.