SF4783
Suspension of medical assistance payments during investigation of kickback fraud authorization provision
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)
Related bill: HF4566
AI Generated Summary
Purpose
- To strengthen how Minnesota handles suspected fraud in the Medical Assistance program (MA/Medicaid) by giving the state more tools to pause or reduce payments during fraud investigations, and to ensure kickbacks are clearly treated as fraud.
Main Provisions
Payment suspensions and reductions during fraud investigations
- The commissioner can suspend or reduce payments to an individual or entity after notice and before a hearing if needed to protect public welfare and program interests, with an exception for nursing homes or convalescent care facilities.
- If there is good cause, advance notice may not be required under certain federal rules (42 CFR 455.23e or f).
Withholding without advance notice for certain fraud scenarios
- Payments can be withheld or reduced without advance notice if there is:
- Conviction of a crime related to the conduct described in the statute, or
- A credible allegation of fraud, including illegal remuneration, where an investigation is pending.
What counts as a credible fraud allegation
- A credible allegation is one verified by the state using evidence and reliability indicators, from sources such as:
- Fraud hotline complaints
- Claims data mining
- Provider audits
- Civil false claims cases
- Law enforcement investigations
Notice requirements for withholding
- The state must notify the affected party within five days of withholding, outlining general allegations, the temporary nature (except in certain convictions), the types of claims affected, and the right to submit written evidence. The notice may avoid disclosing ongoing investigation details.
Termination or suspension tied to Medicare exclusions
- If a person or entity is excluded from Medicare, the state can suspend or terminate participation in MA without advance notice, but must notify within five days of action and explain the need to be reinstated before reapplying.
Forfeiture and penalties for fraud-related actions
- Upon conviction for crimes related to providing or managing health services, payments held can be forfeited to the state or its managed care partner.
- The commissioner can require repayment or sanctions and may order fines for failing to properly document services.
Documentation standards and fines for incomplete documentation
- Fines may be imposed for missing required documentation:
- Incomplete documentation fines: 20% of the paid claim amount or up to $5,000, whichever is less.
- Repeated violations can lead to higher fines (up to $5,000 or 20% of the claim value, whichever is greater).
- Fines must be paid by the due date; failure to pay can lead to withholding or reduction of future payments.
- A timely appeal (contested case) can stay payment of the fine until a final decision is issued.
Appeals
- If a monetary recovery or sanction is proposed, the affected party can request a contested-case hearing within 30 days, detailing the disputed items, the calculations, statutory/rule references, and contact information.
Rulemaking mandate
- The Department of Human Services must pursue expedited rulemaking to clearly include kickbacks in the definition of fraud.
- This includes either correcting a citation to the federal anti-kickback statute (42 U.S.C. 1320a-7bb) or adding a reference to the Minnesota crime of illegal remuneration (Minnesota Statutes 609.542) and fixing any incorrect federal citation.
Significant Changes to Existing Law
- Expanded use of payment withholding without prior notice for credible fraud allegations or certain crimes.
- Explicit inclusion of kickbacks (anti-kickback issues) in the definition of fraud, via expedited rulemaking.
- New formal process for notice, hearings, and appeals related to monetary recoveries and sanctions.
- Introduction of fines tied to documentation standards, with a tiered penalty structure and enhanced consequences for repeated violations.
- Tighter linkage between MA and Medicare exclusions, allowing immediate suspension/termination without notice in those cases.
- Clearer rules on how and when payments can be forfeited following criminal convictions related to health services.
Implementation Notes
- The bill directs expedited rulemaking (faster-than-usual rule updates) to align state rules with federal anti-kickback provisions and to fix or clarify references to kickbacks and illegal remuneration.
Practical Effects to Beneficiaries
- Potentially quicker pauses or reductions in MA payments to providers under investigation for fraud.
- Stronger enforcement against kickbacks and improper billing.
- More robust notice and appeal procedures to ensure due process for providers facing sanctions.
Relevant Terms - medical assistance / Medicaid - MA payments, withholding, suspension, reduction - monetary recovery, sanctions, fines - credible allegation of fraud - kickbacks, illegal remuneration - fraud, investigation, allegations verified by the state - notice and hearing, Chapter 14, contested case - 42 CFR 455.23e, 455.23f - Medicare exclusion - provider, individual, entity - data mining, fraud hotline, provider audits, civil false claims, law enforcement investigations - Minnesota Statutes 609.542 (illegal remuneration) - United States Code 42 U.S.C. 1320a-7bb (federal anti-kickback statute) - Minnesota Rules part 9505.2165 - expedited rulemaking, Minn. Stat. 14.389 - documentation standards, Minnesota Rules chapter 9505 - appeal process, five-day notice period, five-day notice to withhold - official notice, reinstatement, deemed compliance
Past committee meetings
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Actions
| Date | Chamber | Where | Type | Name | Committee Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| March 25, 2026 | Senate | Action | Introduction and first reading | ||
| March 25, 2026 | Senate | Action | Referred to | Health and Human Services | |
| April 13, 2026 | Senate | Action | Author added | ||
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Progress through the legislative process
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