'Fool's gold': Naples victim gives $2 million in gold to scammers; police nets arrest
On Friday, Naples Police Department's Criminal Investigations Division and Special Investigations Unit Detectives conducted Operation 'Fool's Gold', arresting a Connecticut man on several felony charges related to the fraud, police said Monday.
Soyeb Rana, 25, of Plainfield, Connecticut, was charged with conspiracy, scheme to defraud, fleeing and eluding, and possession of marijuana less than 20 grams. He bonded out of Collier County Jail on Saturday.
More: Naples man and former Long Island business owner charged with $22 million Medicare scheme
A victim, 72, had reported the loss of more than $2 million after liquidating assets in exchange for gold, police said. The victim then provided untraceable gold incrementally to the scammers over several months.
The victim eventually realized he would not recover the gold conversions. Police devised a plan to apprehend the suspect.
When the operation commenced and the 'fool's gold' was provided to the suspect, detectives acted swiftly to apprehend him.
The suspect fled from detectives, they said, and the getaway vehicle was found nearby and abandoned. Detectives gave the suspect's description to surrounding patrol officers and deputies.
Detectives located the suspect shortly afterward, and he was taken into custody.
This article originally appeared on Naples Daily News: Florida $2 million gold scam lands Connecticut man in Naples jail
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Los Angeles Times
3 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
Medicare fraud has gone global. It'll take a nationwide effort to stop it
Federal law enforcement recently announced a $14-billion fraud takedown — the largest healthcare fraud action in U.S. history, involving many crimes orchestrated by foreign nationals. Every American taxpayer should be alarmed not just because of the dollars at stake, but also because it reveals how vulnerable Medicare and Medicaid have become to large-scale, international exploitation. The Trump administration is changing that — and the American people can help. Fraud is a national problem, but it starts locally. Drive around certain neighborhoods in Los Angeles and you'll pass what appear to be empty office buildings, which unbeknownst to neighbors could serve as hubs of criminal activity. There are more than 1,000 potentially fraudulent hospice operations identified in Los Angeles. Many are nothing more than mailing addresses, used as fronts to siphon off Medicare funds for services never provided. These fake hospices — often backed by international operators — exploit regulatory loopholes and overwhelmed state oversight, illustrating how fraud has gone from isolated abuse to industrial-scale theft. One recent case involved a $17-million Medicare hospice fraud, in which an individual pleaded guilty to healthcare fraud, aggravated identity theft and money laundering. The scheme involved running shell hospice companies and submitting false Medicare claims for unnecessary services, including for people who were not terminally ill and never received care. In some cases, they took this even further by causing harm to the patients directly. As part of the recent takedown, charges were brought against individuals for causing more than $1.2 billion in false and fraudulent claims to be submitted to Medicare and other health insurance programs for expensive, medically unnecessary wound grafts that were applied to elderly and terminally ill patients who were receiving hospice care — potentially causing needless suffering in addition to waste. With a projected expenditure of more than $900 billion this year, Medicare is one of the largest and most attractive targets for financial fraud in the world. The recent takedown made clear that foreign actors are not just randomly gaming the system: They are strategically infiltrating it using fake providers, ghost patients, shell companies and offshore money laundering schemes that prey on vulnerable seniors and take advantage of outdated billing systems at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Many of these scams relied on the same digital platforms that expanded during the pandemic — telemedicine portals, remote behavioral health services and online provider enrollment portals. The ease of digital access, combined with loose identity verification, created an irresistible entry point for sophisticated fraud networks. The Medicare Trust Fund is predicted to run out of funds by 2033. The system can't afford to underwrite international crime. Every fraudulent claim paid is money stolen from American seniors, working families and future healthcare investments. Yet the government's fraud detection systems have been historically reactive — 'pay and chase' rather than detecting attempts in real time and preventing them from succeeding. That posture is no longer tenable. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services is closing the door to what has become a global raid on one of America's most important public trust funds. This spring, we rolled out a war room — the Fraud Defense Operations Center — a team of experts from across the agency using artificial intelligence and other cutting-edge technology to identify fraudulent activity before we pay the bills. But the government cannot combat this problem alone. First and foremost, seniors should protect themselves and their Medicare beneficiary numbers. Medicare will never call to ask for your Medicare number or any personally identifiable information. In the case of the sham hospices, bad actors will try to get seniors to sign papers agreeing that they have requested hospice services for themselves or a loved one. Never sign these types of papers, as by doing so you are giving away your future Medicare rights to those services when you or a loved one actually need them. Second, we need others both inside and outside the healthcare system to chime in — by contacting the 24-hour Medicare call center (1-800-MEDICARE) or the tip line of the Department of Health and Human Services Office of the Inspector General (1-800-448-8477). The public can learn more about what to watch for at The $14 billion uncovered recently isn't just a staggering number — it's a symptom of systemic vulnerability. It reveals how far behind our safeguards have fallen and how rapidly bad actors are adapting. That is why the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has made crushing fraud one of our top objectives. We're locking that door — before another $14 billion walks out of it. Dr. Mehmet Oz is the administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Kim Brandt is the deputy administrator and chief operating officer.

Wall Street Journal
4 days ago
- Wall Street Journal
Podcast: Trump Sends More Tariff Letters; Nasdaq Climbs to Record
Elsewhere in financial markets, drugmaker Merck strikes a roughly $10 billion deal to buy Verona Pharma. The Justice Department's criminal healthcare-fraud unit investigates UnitedHealth's Medicare billing practices. And, shares in advertising conglomerate WPP tumble after it says clients were pulling back on spending. 🎧 Listen: The WSJ's Charlotte Gartenberg hosts the Minute Briefing podcast.
Yahoo
6 days ago
- Yahoo
DOJ questions former UnitedHealth employees over Medicare billing practices, WSJ reports
(Reuters) -Investigators from the U.S. Department of Justice are questioning former employees of UnitedHealth Group as part of a probe into the company's Medicare payment practices, the Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday, citing people familiar with the matter. Shares of the healthcare conglomerate were down 1.7% at $302.47 in early trading. The WSJ report said former employees were questioned by prosecutors working for the healthcare-fraud unit in recent weeks about the company's efforts to record specific diagnoses that generate higher payments and document lucrative diagnoses, including testing patients and sending nurses to patients' homes. UnitedHealth said in a statement it stands "firmly behind" the integrity of it Medicare Advantage business. It also said the WSJ article was "relying on incomplete data, a predetermined narrative and a flawed understanding of how the Medicare Advantage program works." "After more than a decade of a similar Department of Justice challenge to our Medicare Advantage business, the Special Master concluded there was no evidence to support the claims that we were overpaid or engaged in any wrongdoing." The FBI and the Department of Health and Human Services' Office of Inspector General also participated in some of the interviews, the report added. The DOJ did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment. Once considered a reliable bet, the healthcare behemoth has lost its appeal following a series of management missteps. UnitedHealth's stock has fallen nearly 40% so far this year. The Wall Street Journal reported in May that the healthcare-fraud unit was overseeing an investigation into the company's Medicare business, the U.S. government program that covers medical costs for individuals aged 65 or older and those with disabilities. The report came a day after UnitedHealth suspended its annual forecast due to surging medical costs and said that former CEO Stephen Hemsley would replace Andrew Witty.