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Cuban immigrant accused of conspiracy in Medicare fraud international money laundering scheme

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Both prosecutors and FBI agents started to zero in on Sanchez in recent years after convicted Medicare fraud offenders began cutting plea deals and pointing the finger at him as their money man. Also, authorities began to notice millions of dollars being transferred from medical equipment businesses and HIV-therapy clinics in Florida to shell companies’ accounts at the Royal Bank of Canada in Montreal.

According to court records, this is how Sanchez’s alleged money-laundering scheme worked between 2005 and 2009:

South Florida’s health-care scammers routinely put their Medicare-licensed businesses in the names of “straw” owners — often recently arrived Cuban migrants — to conceal from authorities their own identities as the real owners of the accounts.

In the Sanchez case, prosecutors said 70 South Florida medical companies billed Medicare for $374.4 million and were paid $70.7 million — money that was directly deposited into their corporate bank accounts. But the challenge for the “Medicare fraud masterminds” was withdrawing that money from their accounts because they would have to reveal their identities at the banks, according to court records.

So, many of them turned to Sanchez and his check-cashing business to launder at least $31 million of those Medicare reimbursements, according to court records.

Among those who used Sanchez’s services: Michel De Jesus Huarte, who is serving a 22-year prison sentence for running a $100 million HIV-clinic scam in Miami-Dade and other parts of the southeastern United States.

At the same time, Sanchez came to know a “group of individuals” who controlled shell companies with 15 bank accounts in Canada and Trinidad that wanted to move millions of dollars derived from criminal activity into Cuba’s banking system. They had purchased more than 20 boxes of money orders, moving money in amounts less than $10,000 at a time to avoid having to declare the source of the funds under U.S. laws. They used aliases, including the name “Bill Clinton,” according to court records.

But the process was “costly and time consuming.” Enter Sanchez, who helped them transfer larger amounts of money to Cuba, totaling $63 million, prosecutors allege.

For a 10 percent fee, Sanchez matched up the two sides: One group of criminals supplied millions in ready cash to the Medicare fraud ringleaders. Those leaders, in turn, sent checks or wired money drawn from their South Florida corporate bank accounts to the other criminals’ shell companies in Canada, records show.

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