Former Eagles RB among ex-NFL players accused of defrauding league’s health program

Former Eagles running back Correll Buckhalter charged in health care fraud indictments

In a move that’s certain to put further strain on the relationship between players and the league, former Philadelphia Eagles running back Correll Buckhalter is among 10 retired NFL players charged with defrauding the league’s retiree health care benefits plan, according to ESPN.com via indictments.

Buckhalter, 41, along with other former players, allegedly sought reimbursements for expensive equipment that they never purchased. The grievance comes from the players using the Gene Upshaw NFL Player Health Reimbursement Account Plan to obtain these tax-free reimbursements for out-of-pocket medical care expenses.

“As a result of the fraud, more than $3.9 million in phony claims were submitted to the Plan, and the Plan paid out approximately $3.4 million on those claims between mid-2017 and mid-2018,” said Assistant Attorney General Brian Benczkowski, of the criminal division of the U.S. Department of Justice.

The equipment purchased in the fraudulent claims, included hyperbaric oxygen chambers, ultrasound machines and electromagnetic therapy devices designed for use on horses, according to prosecutors.

The refund was typically in the range of $40,000 to $50,000 each, Investigators said using fake invoices from medical supply companies along with forged letters and prescriptions from medical care providers.

The players named in the indictment include:

Clinton Portis
Robert McCune
John Eubanks
Tamarick Vanover
Ceandris “C.C.” Brown
James Butler
Fredrick Bennett
Etric Pruitt
Carlos Rogers
Correll Buckhalter

Additional charges are expected to be filed against former Saints receiver Joe Horn and former NFL receiver Reche Caldwell.

Buckhalter was a fourth-round selection of the Eagles back in 2001 and spent 8 seasons with the team.

James Butler, Giants’ Super Bowl champion safety, entangled in fraud scheme

Retired New York Giants safety James Butler is one of 10 former NFL players entangled in health care benefit program fraud scheme.

Former New York Giants safety James Butler, a starting safety on the team’s Super Bowl XLII squad that upended the undefeated New England Patriots, is one of 10 former NFL players being charged in a “brazen” scheme to defraud the league’s health care benefit program.

Per the New York Daily News, Butler and nine other ex-players “targeted the targeted the Gene Upshaw NFL Player Health Reimbursement Account Plan and submitted nearly $4 million ‘in false and fraudulent claims,’ according to the Justice Department.”

Also charged are Carlos Rogers, Clinton Portis, Robert McCune, John Eubanks, Tamarick Vanover, Ceandris Brown, Fredrick Bennett, Correll Buckhalter and Etric Pruitt. Five of the players, including Portis and Rogers, played for the Washington franchise.

Two separate indictments involving the 10 athletes were filed in the Eastern District of Kentucky, federal authorities said Thursday.

Butler was an undrafted safety out of Georgia Tech in 2005 and signed with the Giants, playing through the 2008 season. He started all four postseason games during the Giants’ Super Bowl run and led the Giants in tackles in Super Bowl XLII with 10.

After his career with the Giants concluded in 2008, Butler followed Steve Spagnuolo to the then-St. Louis Rams where his played the remainder of his career, which ended in 2012.

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