Servon worked for the Personal Preference Program for Public Partnerships LLC, authorities said, and billed $2,688 for services not delivered to a Medicaid client while the person was hospitalized and eventually died, federal authorities claimed.
According to the indictment, he "knowingly submitted five or more fraudulent timesheets to the New Jersey Medical Assistance and Health Services Program, through Public Partnerships, LLC, for reimbursement for health care services purportedly rendered to (the Medicaid beneficiary)" between Dec. 10, 2024, and Jan. 10, 2025.
Authorities alleged that during this period, Public Partnerships LLC paid Servon a total of $1,504.