Michael P. McKinney reports: A former security guard at Rhode Island Hospital has pleaded guilty in federal court to stealing patients’ and job applicants’ identity information and using it to open cell phone and charge accounts at RadioShack. […] Prosecutor Adi Goldstein said at the plea hearing the government could show that from April 2006…
Police: Man steals ID to get surgery
Brian Stanley reports: It’s said to know who you really are, you should look into your heart. But police say one man used someone else’s identity while undergoing heart surgery and left a mentally disabled man on the hook for $350,000 in medical costs. Full story – The Herald News
Hopedale woman sentenced in identity theft case (follow-up)
Michelle Laczkoski reports in the Milford Daily News: Calling it the “most outrageous, untenable cases to ever come across (his) desk,” Worcester Superior Court Judge John McCann today sentenced a 55-year-old former Milford woman to five to seven years in prison for her role in an elaborate identify theft case. Charlotte A. Boehm pleaded guilty…
GA: Second suspect arrested in ID theft of Alzheimer's patients
The AP is reporting two arrests involving theft of personal and medical information from 6 Alzheimer’s patients at an unnamed Buford nursing home. The patients became victims of identity fraud. One of those arrested, Iniabel Ferrer, worked at the nursing home.
Corrective Action Plan and $100,000 Fine Illustrate Tougher HHS Stance on HIPAA Enforcement
Reprinted from REPORT ON PATIENT PRIVACY, the industry’s most practical source of news on HIPAA patient privacy provisions. For the first time, a covered entity (CE) under the privacy and security rules has made a $100,000 payment to Uncle Sam and agreed to subject itself to three years of monitoring by HHS for losing unencrypted…
Doctor fined for dumping patients' files in trash (follow-up)
AP reports: A Bloomington doctor who dumped patients’ sensitive medical records into the trash has been fined $1,250 by state officials. Dr. J.B. O’Donnell agreed to the fines and promised to post information about the possible security breach on his Web site for 30 days. […] The records contained patients’ names, addresses, birth dates, Social…