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Funeral Director Fraud in New York City: . Enforcement Using the Administrative Tribunal Flor Betancourt, Director NYC Vital Records Registration. What is the Administrative Tribunal?. Adjudicates New York City Health Code violations Part of the Department’s overall enforcement strategy
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Funeral Director Fraud in New York City: Enforcement Using the Administrative Tribunal Flor Betancourt, Director NYC Vital Records Registration NAPHSIS Conference June 2005
What is the Administrative Tribunal? • Adjudicates New York City Health Code violations • Part of the Department’s overall enforcement strategy • Mostly for restaurants, day care, smoking law enforcement • 35,000 cases annually NAPHSIS Conference June 2005
Why issue Notices of Violations? • Hold funeral firms and their agents accountable for improper actions • Deter forging and altering death certificates • Encourage funeral directors to improve their practices NAPHSIS Conference June 2005
NYC Death Registration • Two registration (“Burial Desk”) sites • Operates 24/7 in Manhattan • 60,000 deaths annually • 165 deaths registered daily • Permits required for disposition • Signatures of MD and FD required NAPHSIS Conference June 2005
Quality Assurance • QA team reviews all death certificates • Questionable certificates investigated • Certificates are compared • same funeral home • same physician • Problem cases may be identified prior to registration NAPHSIS Conference June 2005
Questionable Certificates • Different ink in legal and medical sections • Signature of physician differs in both sections • Confidential medical report appears altered • Dates of signature, other dates not consistent • Typed vs. handwritten sections of certificate NAPHSIS Conference June 2005
Investigation • Contact hospital or physician • Obtain copy of death certificate • If alteration confirmed, obtain written statement • Contact funeral home • Obtain written statements from staff and agents • Determine Health Code violation • Issue Notice of Violation (NOV) • Submit NOV and evidence to Tribunal NAPHSIS Conference June 2005
Notice of Violation NAPHSIS Conference June 2005
NYC Health Code Violations • § 3.19-Forgery of Signature [N=39] • § 3.21-Alterations to death certificate (including cause of death) [N=27] • § 205.03 (c) - Failure to report death certificate within 72 hours [N=1] • § 205.23 (a) – Removal of human remains without filing death certificate and obtaining permit [N=1] • § 205.25 (a) – Cremation of human remains without permit [N=1] NAPHSIS Conference June 2005
Summary of Violations • Funeral Homes Issued Notices of Violations = 40 • Total Cases = 52 • 1 violation = 36 • 2 violations = 15 • 3 violations = 1 • Number of Violations = 69 NAPHSIS Conference June 2005
Outcome of Adjudications NAPHSIS Conference June 2005
Range of Fines by Type of Violation • § 3.19-Forgery of Signature • $250 - $2000 • § 3.21- Alterations to death certificate (including cause of death) • $1000 - $2000 • § 3.19 and § 3.21 • $300 - $2000 • § 205.03 (c) - Failure to report death within 72 hours and§ 205.23 (a) – Removal of human remains without filing a death certificate and obtaining a permit • $2000 NAPHSIS Conference June 2005
Factors Impacting Adjudication - 1 • Judge’s level of knowledge • Funeral home admission or denial • Custodial responsibility of death certificates • Trade firm staff • Format and language of NOV • Laws, codes, regulations regarding confidentiality of death certificates NAPHSIS Conference June 2005
Factors Impacting Adjudication - 2 • Evidence, testimony and cross examination • Written statements from facility/MD/FD • Extent of investigation • Legal representation • Challenging the health department • Did registration staff commit violation? NAPHSIS Conference June 2005
Summary • Administrative Tribunal is an informal and relatively quick judicial proceeding • No attorney general or district attorney needed • Funeral directors alter death certificates to minimize rejection risk • EDRS should minimize, if not prevent, alterations and forgeries NAPHSIS Conference June 2005