What do a demolished building, a dental office, and an immigrant hub have in common? In Michigan, they’re all billing Medicaid, and you’re paying for it.
We went looking for a lead. All we found was a demolition team eating lunch.
That crew gave us information that sent us to 21 dissolved businesses and $118.8 million in post-dissolution claims. Grace Points Inc. was the demolished building.
Medicaid records showed the company was tied to $2.4 million in billing, but when we went to the address on file in Dearborn, all that was there was a gutted shell: no walls, no windows, no sign, no suite numbers, just a parking lot that had not seen a patient in years.
When we pulled the records, the story got worse.
Grace Points Inc. was not just physically gone. It was legally dead.
Michigan’s Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs (LARA) shows Grace Points Inc. was dissolved effective March 24, 2023, and the certificate was filed with the state a week later. On paper, the company was done.
But the billing did not stop. Medicaid claims data show the Grace Points NPI (National Provider Identifier 1962920397), registered on the National Plan and Provider Enumeration System (NPPES) registry to “Grace Points Inc.” at 23400 Michigan Avenue in Dearborn, kept billing through November 2024, more than twenty months after the corporation ceased to exist on Michigan’s books. A single month of claims from February 2022 pre-dates the dissolution. Everything else—the overwhelming majority of the $2.42 million in total claims across roughly fourteen beneficiaries—came after the state’s records said Grace Points Inc. was done.
Fourteen beneficiaries––$2.42 million. That works out to roughly $173,000 per person over 33 months. At the H2015 reimbursement rate, that implies more than eight hours of community habilitation services per beneficiary per day, every single day, for 33 straight months. That is physically impossible.
https://www.wcdispatch.com/p/something-stinks-in-michigan
this conversation needs to happen in israel
being jewish does not exclude jews from believing in the divinity of Jesus
all of the first believers in the divinity of Jesus were jewish
i didn't say it would be easy
would be impactful if Jesus believing jews, such as sid roth and jonathan khan, were given airtime there
haaretz is notoriously left wing
not talking about conversion
what i am concerned about is the false mantra that being a jew is partly defined by rejection of Jesus
the truth is you can be a believer in the divinity of Jesus and still be fully jewish
that in itself is a vital message