A Burbank man was sentenced Tuesday to two years, three months in federal prison for participating in a scheme to defraud Medicare out of at least $14 million via hospice and diagnostic testing services that were often never provided.
Alex Alexsanian, 48, was also ordered to forfeit $3 million derived from the scheme.
He pleaded guilty in January to one count of money laundering conspiracy.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office said Alexsanian directed a foreign national to open a radiology clinic and acquire Medicare provider Console Hospice in Van Nuys, then provide control of those companies and their bank accounts and the foreign national’s personal bank accounts to the defendant.
Alexsanian conspired with the foreign national — who has since left the country — and others to have the clinic and Console Hospice submit fraudulent claims to Medicare for services never rendered, prosecutors said.
Co-defendant Sophia Shaklian, 38, of the Larchmont neighborhood of Los Angeles, pleaded guilty in November 2025 to a single count of health care fraud and was sentenced to nearly three years behind bars.
A 24-count grand jury indictment filed two years ago in Los Angeles federal court charged both defendants with taking part in the scheme.
Prosecutors said Shaklian, often using aliases, managed and submitted claims for seven health care providers enrolled with Medicare and located in Los Angeles County. The businesses included a hospice company she owned and several diagnostic testing companies.
From March 2019 to August 2024, the companies submitted fraudulent claims to Medicare for services that were never provided and not needed, and received more than $14 million for those claims, federal prosecutors said.
Shaklian laundered Medicare funds by transferring them to accounts in the name of a fake identity, documents show.
The defendants laundered the Medicare reimbursements they received, as well as funds deposited into their accounts, through the phony identity, and used them to, among other things, buy more than $6 million in gold bars and coins, prosecutors said.
