The CEO of a Texas hospice agency has pleaded guilty to defrauding Medicare and Medicaid. Bradley J. Harris, the 39-year-old former head of Novus and Optimum Health Services, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit healthcare fraud and healthcare fraud. According to his plea papers, Mr. Harris admitted that from 2012 to 2016, he billed Medicare and Medicaid for hospice services that were not provided, that were not directed by a medical professional, or that were provided to patients who were not actually eligible for hospice care. He further admitted that he used blank, pre-signed controlled substance prescriptions to doll out potent drugs without physician input. Mr. Harris admitted that two of his coconspirators, Dr. Mark Gibbs and Dr. Laila Hirjee, frequently certified that that his hospice patients faced terminal illnesses without actually examining with the patients in person, as required by Medicare. The doctors were paid around $150 for each false order they signed. Mr. Harris also admitted that Dr. Gibbs, Dr. Hirjee, and another physician, Dr. Charles Leach, left him blank controlled substance prescriptions, sometimes a whole pad at a time. This allowed Mr. Harris, an accountant by trade, to “prescribe” schedule II controlled substances to hospice beneficiaries without the guidance of a medical professional.