Trusting your doctor is the foundation of staying healthy. You expect a prescription to be a medical necessity, not a line item in a billion-dollar scam.
Brett Blackman, the 42-year-old owner of a company called HealthSplash, was just found guilty in Florida. He ran a platform called DMERx that churned out fake orders for medical equipment.
His team used overseas call centers to cold-call seniors. They pushed braces and gear on people who didn't need them, then paid doctors to sign the orders without ever seeing a patient.
WHAT HAPPENED
A Florida man who owned a health care software company has been convicted of running one of the largest Medicare fraud schemes in state history. He and his co-conspirators billed Medicare and other federal programs for more than $1 billion in medical equipment that patients never actually needed.
The scheme specifically targeted sick and elderly Medicare beneficiaries. The company used high-pressure tactics to convince vulnerable people to order equipment they did not need. Once the orders were placed, the company billed the government for the costs.
Prosecutors described the operation as cold and calculated. They argued that the company took advantage of people who were already struggling with serious health problems. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche called the operation industrial-scale theft. He noted that the fraud stole money intended to help hundreds of thousands of real Medicare patients.
What the evidence shows* $1 billion: Total amount billed to Medicare and other federal programs.
- $450 million: Actual cash paid out by insurers based on the fake claims.
- Hundreds of thousands: The number of seniors targeted by the scam.
- Zero: The number of times many "patients" actually spoke to a doctor.
- 2017: The year the fraudulent software platform was first acquired.KEY DATE
The conviction was handed down by a federal jury following a trial that examined the company's billing practices over several years.
THE BIGGER QUESTION
How does a system built to protect the elderly allow $1 billion in fake bills to go through before the red flags go up? This case shows that "telehealth" can be a double-edged sword, making it easier to get care but also easier for tech-savvy criminals to automate theft.
We have to ask if the tools we use to modernize medicine are being built with enough locks on the doors. If a software platform can "generate" a doctor's signature at scale, the human element of medicine is at risk of disappearing entirely.
THE OTHER SIDE
Blackman’s legal team argued that he provided a legitimate software service and that any fraud was committed by the individual suppliers or doctors using the platform. They claimed he was a tech provider, not a criminal mastermind.
However, the evidence of sham contracts and an undercover sting operation makes this defense feel very weak against the paper trail.been very strong.
WHAT HAPPENS NOW
Blackman faces up to 30 years in prison when he is sentenced this August. For regular people, this means your tax dollars are being drained, which often leads to higher costs and stricter rules for those who truly need medical gear.
The government is now launching a new "Fraud Division" specifically to hunt down these types of high-tech scams. Expect to see more scrutiny on any medical company that relies heavily on call centers and "click-to-sign" prescriptions.
WHAT WE STILL DON'T KNOW
How many doctors who took these bribes are still practicing medicine today?
- Will the government be able to recover the $450 million already paid out?
- Are there other software platforms currently doing the exact same thing?
Transparency notes
Published: May 14, 2026. No major post-publication update has been logged.
Spot an error or missing context? Email hi@kindjoe.com and we will review and correct if needed.
Sources
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Will He built a software tool for doctors. Feds say he used it to steal $1 billion.?
Brett Blackman was convicted for running a massive scheme that used fake prescriptions to trick Medicare into paying for unneeded medical gear.
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