Richard Newbold, a doctor turned entrepreneur, was a man on a mission.
He was trying, he told health care executives, to help hospitals improve their patient care and to help them avoid trouble with the government.
Richard Newbold, a doctor turned entrepreneur, told hospitals he was trying to help them avoid trouble with the government. But now, instead of acting as a consultant, he's charging hospitals with breaking the law. Lawyers following the case say Newbold has broken new ground under the False Claims Act, a chief government weapon against health care fraud. They believe he is the first whistleblower to accuse a large group of defendants of fraud without personal knowledge of what they have done and why.
October 27, 1999 at 12:00 AM
1 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Law.Com
Richard Newbold, a doctor turned entrepreneur, was a man on a mission.
He was trying, he told health care executives, to help hospitals improve their patient care and to help them avoid trouble with the government.
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