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Former Brick Township Employee Sentenced to Five Years in Prison for Stealing More than $940,000 in Claims from Township Health Insurance Program

Kim-Bogan[1]

January 7,2018

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Brick Township NJ,  Attorney General Christopher S. Porrino and the Office of the Insurance Fraud Prosecutor (OIFP) announced that a former Brick Township employee today was sentenced to five years in state prison for stealing more than $940,000 from the township’s health insurance program.

Kim E. Bogan, 52, of Brick, was sentenced in accordance with a plea agreement reached when she pleaded guilty to second-degree theft by deception on October 24, 2017. She must also pay $941,354.77 in restitution to Brick Township under the terms of the plea agreement and sentence imposed by Superior Court Judge Linda G. Baxter in Ocean County.

During her plea hearing, Bogan, who worked in the township’s Building Department, admitted that between January 2011 and April 2017 she assisted an-out-of-state health care practitioner in submitting false claims to her employee health insurance program, which is self-funded by Brick Township. The claims were for treatments purportedly rendered to individuals covered under Bogan’s policy.

Bogan admitted she allowed the practitioner to submit claims on her insurance for services she knew had not been rendered and then endorsed the insurance checks when they were mailed to her, knowing the money was stolen.

“This defendant is going to prison for willingly participating in a health care claims scheme that cost Brick Township taxpayers – her own friends and neighbors – nearly a million dollars,” said Attorney General Porrino. “Her sentence sends a message that stealing money from health care plans is a serious crime with serious consequences, no matter what role you play in the illegal plot.”

“Through her illegal acts, the defendant stole taxpayer dollars meant to cover health care services for township employees. In addition to serving time in prison, she will be responsible for repaying those stolen funds,” said Acting Insurance Fraud Prosecutor Christopher Iu. “We will continue to aggressively investigate and prosecute individuals who commit these kind of health care claims crimes.”

7 thoughts on “Former Brick Township Employee Sentenced to Five Years in Prison for Stealing More than $940,000 in Claims from Township Health Insurance Program

  1. She scares me.

  2. this chick got 4 years ,yet coin boy walked

  3. Coin boy probably still has supporters in the village government. Coin boy’s supporters have not yet implemented secure canisters, which Roberta haad promised as “2 months, and low budget” task in 2015. Someone still wants to deal with coins.

  4. This chick falsified documents and forged signatures, Did Coin boy falsify documents or forge signatures in connection with his crime? No, and there is the difference, understand now James.

  5. I understand that the amount stolen in coins is considered grand larceny. He may have not forged papers but he didn’t have to as the money was lying around for the taking. I will never understand why he didn’t get jail time.

  6. 940 K divided by 4 years…is real money…likely the tip of the iceburg…

  7. One thing I have to say about going boy he kept his mouth shut. He could’ve wrote down the whole employer. You think Rome is burning now, forget about it. Some of the acts top officials the retarded knew more.

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