Southern California Docs Bribed to Use Unsafe Spine Screws, Suits Claim
A former Southern California hospital executive is being sued by more than two dozen people who claim he ran a scheme that bribed surgeons to implant counterfeit screws in their patients’ spines, causing pain and injury.
Twenty-eight fraud and negligence lawsuits were filed in mid-October in Los Angeles, joining several earlier suits.
They claim that Michael Drobot, several doctors and hospitals and a Temecula machine shop took part in a scheme to make and implant cheap, unapproved and unsafe spinal fusion screws and bill insurers at inflated prices.
Attorney Brian Kabateck says there may be thousands of victims.
Drobot – the former owner of Pacific Hospital in Long Beach – pleaded guilty in April to paying doctor kickbacks. He’s also acknowledged bribing state Sen. Ron Calderon, who’s facing corruption charges.
- Mississippi Insurance Dept. Top Examiner Named in $90M Credit Union Theft Suit
- AM Best: Data Centers Pose Risks Beyond What P/C Industry Has Experienced
- California Man Charged With Defrauding Western Alliance Bank Out Of $100M
- Wall Street Is Gaining Access to New Catastrophe Models to Help Predict Wars