0 results for 'Garfunkel Wild'
Bid for Review of Medicaid Overcharges Fails
An administrative law judge did not err by deciding St. Barnabas Hospital was time-barred from requesting a review of an audit that found it made $5.38 million in overcharges to the Medicaid program, a state judge ruled.State Poised to Expand Telemedicine Options
With advances in digital technology and widespread use of the Internet in everyday life, "telemedicine" would appear to be the next IT phenomenon and has already generated a great deal of media interest.Court Upholds Rescission of Admission by St. John's Law
The decision by St. John's University School of Law to rescind a student's application for inaccurately disclosing his involvement with illegal drugs was "rational" and in line with its treatment of other applicants with similar drug pasts, the Court of Appeals decided Thursday.Court Upholds Rescission of Admission by St. John's Law
The decision by St. John's University School of Law to rescind a student's application for inaccurately disclosing his involvement with illegal drugs was "rational" and in line with its treatment of other applicants with similar drug pasts, the Court of Appeals decided Thursday.Judges Question School's Rescission of Student's Admission
A law student's involvement with drugs seemed to concern state Court of Appeals judges less than St. John's University's decision to rescind his admission to law school.Judges Question School's Rescission of Student's Admission
A law student's involvement with drugs seemed to concern state Court of Appeals judges less than St. John's University's decision to rescind his admission to law school.Protecting Separate Property During Marriage and Divorce
Jane K. Cristal, the founder of Jane K. Cristal, P.C., and Doris L. Martin and Madelin Zwerling of Garfunkel Wild, write: Prenuptial agreements serve to prevent undesirable divisions of property in divorce and death. Trusts should also be considered as a valuable supplement to the prenuptial agreement.Health Care Fraud: What's Intent Got to Do With It?
John G. Martin, a partner at Garfunkel Wild, writes: The concepts of fraud and fraudulent intent seem simple enough to apply, at least on the surface. But something about placing the words "health care" in front of these terms tempts federal prosecutors to broaden the definitions, and to seek to include within their reach conduct which, although admittedly wrong on some level, is already addressed through regulatory prohibition and punishment, and to substitute prison sentences for the fines and debarments historically used to sanction such conduct.Trending Stories
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