Forensic accountant follows the money to help victims – Go Health Pro

Vivian says her job as a financial analyst performing forensic accounting is like piecing together a puzzle. Typically, the pieces are bank statements, business records, and other official documents.

It’s Vivian’s challenge to make the pieces fit.

Recently, Vivian helped TDI’s Fraud Unit stop two doctors – Desi and Deno Barroga of Dallas – who were overprescribing opioids and falsely billing health plans.

Fraud Unit investigators got Vivian subpoenas for the records she needed. Next, she combed through the doctors’ personal and business bank records to trace the $45 million they billed and the $9 million they were paid.

“It’s my job to find where that money is and where it’s going,” Vivian said

TDI’s investigators used what Vivian found to help federal agencies, including the FBI, build a criminal case. The doctors pleaded guilty and face up to 10 years in prison.

Aside from stopping criminals, the Fraud Unit also wants to get restitution for victims. Courts can order criminals to pay restitution.

Vivian said: “One way agencies can do that is by seizing their assets. To be able to seize those assets, we have to prove that they were bought with dirty money.”

Before joining TDI, Vivian traced properties and assets for an accounting firm. Her college degree was in finance with an emphasis on business evaluations.

She loves taking rows and columns of numbers on a spreadsheet and making sense of them.

“That’s what I love about this job: making sense of the numbers for everyone else. It’s my contribution to the team effort.”

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