http://www.kqed.org/.stream/anon/radio/tcrmag/2014/02/2014-02-21a-tcrmag.mp3
On Friday, federal prosecutors charged Los Angeles-area state senator Ron Calderon with 24 counts of corruption, including bribery and influence peddling. Prosecutors also filed seven counts of money laundering against Calderon's brother, Tom. The case involves two conspiracies, one involving a real hospital executive and a second involving an undercover FBI agent. We talk with Sacramento Bureau Chief Scott Detrow who has been following the story.
RACHAEL MYROW: Federal prosecutors unveiled a major health insurance scandal. Can you explain it for us?
SCOTT DETROW: Sure. Michael Drobot was the executive of a Southern California hospital, and he is admitting to carrying out these expensive spinal surgeries, really inflating the cost of the material needed for the surgery, and then passing that cost along to insurance providers. California insurance officials say this is the largest health insurance fraud scandal they have ever had to deal with. And the way that Ron Calderon gets looped in is that Michael Drobot, the executive, was allegedly bribing Calderon tens of thousands of dollars for Calderon’s help in blocking legislation that would have put a stop to the scheme that Drobot had set up, this pass-along scheme where they were bilking insurance companies out of extra money here.
MYROW: There are so many elements to this case. I was also intrigued by the no-show jobs for Calderon’s son and daughter.