**福克斯新闻独家首发**:佛罗里达一家保险经纪公司总裁和一家营销公司首席执行官周三因主导一场涉及2.33亿美元的《平价医疗法案》(Affordable Care Act)欺诈计划被判处20年监禁。该计划以佛罗里达州最弱势居民为目标——包括无家可归者、失业人员及新受灾的飓风受害者——以获取数百万美元的不当佣金。


46岁的科里·劳埃德(Cory Lloyd)来自佛罗里达州斯图尔特市,42岁的史蒂文·斯特朗(Steven Strong)来自德克萨斯州曼斯菲尔德市,二人因共谋和欺诈罪被定罪。他们在计划中通过编造谎言和伪造政府文件,为个人获取医保覆盖,并在明知会导致受害者失去现有保险的情况下,通过欺骗或贿赂潜在参保者使其注册计划。除了20年监禁外,二人还被判处向受害者支付1.806亿美元的赔偿。

美国司法部官员表示,劳埃德和斯特朗多年来从该计划中获利丰厚,并用所得款项购买了豪华车辆、一艘80英尺长的游艇以及佛罗里达群岛的一处海景房。

“利用本已处于医疗困境的消费者,侵吞数亿美元纳税人资助的项目,这种行为邪恶且不可原谅。”司法部长帕姆·邦迪(Pam Bondi)在声明中对福克斯新闻数字频道表示。

“像这样的欺诈计划会剥夺公民权益,动摇民众对机构的信任。今天的判决是司法部致力于在全国打击欺诈行为的最新例证。”邦迪补充道。

知情的司法部官员告诉福克斯新闻数字频道,在劳埃德和斯特朗主导的多年计划中,约有3.5万人被欺诈性地纳入《平价医疗法案》计划。二人骗取了超过2.33亿美元的欺诈性付款,其中包括约1.8亿美元的联邦《平价医疗法案》资金。

“这些被告是经验丰富的持牌保险经纪人,”司法部刑事司助理司法部长A.泰森·杜瓦(A. Tysen Duva)在声明中表示,“他们拥有一切,却故意利用一无所有的人。这些判决传递的信息很明确:任何试图用纳税人的钱中饱私囊、侵害最弱势群体、耗尽联邦项目资源的人,都将受到追究。”

根据福克斯新闻数字频道审查的材料,二人故意针对佛罗里达州的无家可归者和患有精神疾病(包括阿片类或其他药物成瘾)的人群。

检察官在庭审中称,劳埃德和斯特朗合谋规避联邦收入和资格验证的安全措施。他们还故意提交会触发医保拒付的医疗补助申请,从而将这些人引导至非开放注册期内的全额补贴《平价医疗法案》计划,以全年最大化佣金。

他们奢华的生活方式与被其欺骗的受害者形成鲜明对比。

“此案中最可怕的一点是,它不仅从老年人和残疾人那里敛财、欺骗纳税人,还对患者造成了实际伤害。”一位司法部官员在采访中表示。这种伤害包括患者失去了阿片类药物使用障碍、精神疾病和严重传染病治疗的机会。

庭审中出示的短信显示,斯特朗和劳埃德讨论派遣“街头营销人员”进入佛罗里达飓风避难所招募参保者。在一条短信交流中,斯特朗建议派遣他们的“街头营销团队”进入佛罗里达飓风避难所招募参保者,劳埃德热情回应:“这是个绝妙的主意,如果能成功的话!”

检察官称,这种行为尤其有害,因为它扰乱了现有医保计划,危及了严重疾病的治疗获取。许多受害者是无家可归者、失业者或符合医疗补助资格的人群(医疗补助是低收入或弱势群体的保险选择,在许多情况下最适合他们的需求)。

一名杰克逊维尔的精神病学家出庭作证,讲述了其治疗的无家可归者因欺诈失去医疗补助覆盖后的遭遇。其中一名患者“住在沃尔玛后面的树林里”,患有精神分裂情感障碍,这一案例已被知情人士告知福克斯新闻数字频道。

与其他人一样,该患者此前一直参加医疗补助,该计划全额覆盖了2000美元的精神分裂情感障碍治疗注射费用。而通过《平价医疗法案》计划参保导致其失去了该覆盖。

此次判决正值司法部大力打击医疗保健欺诈之际,包括其正在推进的“打击部队”计划(已在25个联邦地区开展行动,对约5000人提起刑事指控)。

此外,司法部医疗保健欺诈部门在2025年成功破获了美国历史上最大规模的全国性医疗保健欺诈案件,指控涉案金额超过150亿美元,追回5.6亿美元返还公众。

司法部官员指出,这一金额“远超我们的年度预算数倍”。

布雷安妮·德皮施(Breanne Deppisch)是福克斯新闻数字频道的全国政治记者,报道特朗普政府,重点关注司法部、联邦调查局及其他全国性新闻。她此前曾在《华盛顿观察家报》和《华盛顿邮报》报道全国政治新闻,还为《政治》杂志、《科罗拉多公报》等媒体撰稿。可通过Breanne.Deppisch@fox.com向她提供线索,或在X平台关注她@breanne_dep。

联邦法官阻止特朗普政府将拜登减刑的死囚转移至‘落基山脉阿尔卡特拉斯监狱’

美国司法部长帕姆·邦迪与总统唐纳德·特朗普并肩出席活动。(盖蒂图片社)

特朗普政府任命的托马斯·阿尔布斯被任命领导富尔顿县搜查令诉讼

前总统特朗普否认有意废除《平价医疗法案》(盖蒂图片社)

独家:特朗普政府否决拜登团队‘最后一刻’批准的巨型风电场项目

美国司法部刑事司负责人马修·加莱奥蒂(Matthew Galeotti)与医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心管理员梅赫梅特·奥兹(Mehmet Oz)在新闻发布会上宣布美国历史上最大的医疗保健欺诈案件。(凯文·迪施/盖蒂图片社)

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FIRST ON FOX: The president of a Florida insurance brokerage firm and the CEO of a marketing company were sentenced Wednesday to 20 years each in prison for leading a sprawling, $233 million Affordable Care Act fraud scheme that preyed on Florida’s most vulnerable residents — including homeless and jobless individuals and newly displaced hurricane victims — to pocket millions in unearned commissions.

Cory Lloyd, 46, of Stuart, Florida, and Steven Strong, 42, of Mansfield, Texas, were convicted of conspiracy and fraud for their roles in the scheme, which involved lying and falsifying government forms to obtain coverage for individuals and lying to or bribing would-be enrollees to sign up for plans even when they knew doing so would cost them their existing insurance coverage. In addition to their prison time, the pair were ordered to pay $180.6 million in restitution to their victims.

Lloyd and Strong profited handsomely for years from the scheme, Justice Department officials said, using the proceeds to purchase luxury vehicles, an 80-foot yacht and an oceanfront home in the Florida Keys.

“Preying upon medically compromised consumers to rob hundreds of millions of taxpayer-funded programs is evil and unforgivable,” Attorney General Pam Bondi told Fox News Digital in a statement.

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U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi speaks alongside President Donald Trump.(Getty Images)

“Fraud schemes like this rob citizens and shake faith in our institutions. Today’s sentencing is the latest example of this DOJ’s commitment to fighting fraud nationwide,” Bondi said.

An estimated 35,000 individuals were fraudulently enrolled in Affordable Care Act plans during the years-long scheme led by Lloyd and Strong, Justice Department officials with knowledge of the case told Fox News Digital. The two sought more than $233 million in fraudulent payments, including about $180 million in federal Affordable Care Act funding.

“These defendants were sophisticated, licensed insurance brokers,” Assistant Attorney General A. Tysen Duva of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division said in a statement.

“They had everything and intentionally took advantage of people who had nothing. The message from these sentences is simple: Those who seek to line their own pockets with taxpayer dollars, victimize our most vulnerable and deplete federal programs will be held accountable.”

The two intentionally targeted people in the state who were experiencing homelessness and people experiencing mental health disorders, including addiction to opioids or other drugs, according to materials reviewed by Fox News Digital.

Prosecutors said at trial that Lloyd and Strong conspired to circumvent federal income and eligibility verification safeguards. They also intentionally submitted Medicaid applications designed to trigger denials, allowing them to steer those same individuals into fully subsidized Affordable Care Act plans outside the open enrollment period, maximizing commissions year-round.

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Former President Trump denied wanting to repeal the Affordable Care Act(Getty Images)

Their lavish lifestyle contrasted starkly with that of the individuals they lied to and scammed.

“One of the really awful things about the case is that it’s not only a scheme that’s taking money from the elderly and the disabled and defrauding the taxpayers, but that it actually resulted in real harm to the patients as well,” one Justice Department official said in an interview.

That harm included individuals losing access to life-saving treatments for opioid use disorders, mental health disorders and serious infectious diseases.

Text messages introduced at trial showed Strong and Lloyd discussing sending “street marketers” into Florida hurricane shelters to recruit enrollees.

In one text exchange, Strong suggested sending their team of “street marketers” into Florida hurricane shelters to recruit enrollees. Lloyd responded enthusiastically, stating, “It’s a killer idea, if we could pull it off!”

Prosecutors said the efforts were particularly harmful because they disrupted existing coverage plans and jeopardized access to treatment for serious conditions.

Many of the victims were experiencing homelessness or unemployment or qualified for Medicaid coverage — an insurance option for low-income or vulnerable populations that, in many cases, best suited their needs.

Jurors heard from a Jacksonville-based psychiatrist who treats homeless individuals and testified about the harm some of his patients suffered as a result of the fraud, which caused them to lose their Medicaid coverage.

This included an individual “living in the woods behind Walmart” who was suffering from schizoaffective disorder, a person familiar with the case told Fox News Digital.

EXCLUSIVE: TRUMP ADMIN NIXES GIANT WIND FARM APPROVED ‘LAST-MINUTE’ BY BIDEN TEAM

Matthew Galeotti, head of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, joined by Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Mehmet Oz, delivers remarks during a press conference announcing the largest health care fraud case in history.(Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

Like others, this individual had previously been enrolled in Medicaid, which covered the entirety of a $2,000 shot used to treat the schizoaffective disorder. Enrollment in an Affordable Care Act plan caused the individual to lose that coverage.

The sentencing comes as the Justice Department has moved aggressively to crack down on healthcare fraud, including through its ongoing “strike force” program that operates across 25 federal districts and has resulted in criminal charges against about 5,000 individuals, according to information shared with Fox News Digital.

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It also comes as the DOJ’s Health Care Fraud Unit secured the largest national healthcare fraud takedown in its history in 2025, officials said, charging more than $15 billion in alleged losses and forfeitures and returning more than $560 million to the public.

Justice Department officials noted the amount is “many, many, many times our annual budget.”

Breanne Deppisch is a national politics reporter for Fox News Digital covering the Trump administration, with a focus on the Justice Department, FBI and other national news. She previously covered national politics at the Washington Examiner and The Washington Post, with additional bylines in Politico Magazine, the Colorado Gazette and others. You can send tips to Breanne at Breanne.Deppisch@fox.com, or follow her on X at @breanne_dep.

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