ATTORNEY GENERAL TONG ANNOUNCES CONNECTICUT FALSE CLAIMS ACT SETTLEMENT WITH FORMER AUTISM SERVICES PROVIDER AND OWNER FOR FALSE MEDICAID BILLING

1 view
Skip to first unread message

Yu, Janice

unread,
Jul 2, 2026, 12:26:19 PM (8 days ago) Jul 2
to AG-Pres...@list.ct.gov

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Thursday, July 2, 2026

 

ATTORNEY GENERAL TONG ANNOUNCES CONNECTICUT FALSE CLAIMS ACT SETTLEMENT WITH FORMER AUTISM SERVICES PROVIDER AND OWNER FOR FALSE MEDICAID BILLING

 

(Hartford, CT)- Attorney General William Tong today announced a $710,815.34 settlement with Trading Spaces ABA, LLC, a defunct former provider of autism behavioral services, and its owner Glenroy Patterson, resolving allegations under the Connecticut False Claims Act that Trading Spaces and Patterson knowingly submitted or caused the submission of false or fraudulent claims for payment to the Connecticut Medical Assistance Program (CMAP), which includes the Connecticut Medicaid program, for autism treatment services that were not provided.

 

An investigation led to allegations in the State’s civil enforcement action regarding Patterson’s and Trading Spaces’ billing conduct between January 2017 and December 2021. During this period, Patterson was licensed and enrolled as a provider in the CMAP as a Board-Certified Behavioral Analyst and was the sole owner of Trading Spaces, an autism specialty group located in Glastonbury.  The State’s civil lawsuit alleged Patterson and Trading Spaces billed and received reimbursement from the CMAP for providing behavioral treatment services to beneficiaries under 21 years of age diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder, even though there were no patient records or notes to support those claims.  

 

“Medicaid fraud steals from taxpayers and threatens care for people who need it most. We will hold anyone who cheats this program accountable,” said Attorney General Tong. 

 

The civil settlement follows a criminal investigation and prosecution by the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit in the Office of the Chief State’s Attorney.  Patterson pleaded no contest to charges relating to defrauding the Connecticut Medicaid program, and was sentenced in Hartford Superior Court on June 4, 2026, at which time Patterson paid $102,084.17 in criminal restitution. The civil settlement amount represents treble damages and civil per-claim penalties under the Connecticut False Claims Act based on the claims and patients that were the subject of the criminal conviction.  

 

Attorney General Tong thanked the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit and the State of Connecticut Department of Social Services Special Investigations Division for their assistance with this investigation. 

 

Assistant Attorney General Karla Turekian and Investigator Timothy Edwards, working under the direction of Deputy Associate Attorney General Gregory O’Connell, Chief of the Government Fraud Section, assisted the Attorney General in this matter.

 

###

 

 

Janice Yu
Digital Director/Deputy Director of Communications

Office of the Attorney General
Hartford, CT 06106
Cell: +1 860-604-8967 |URL: https://ct.gov/ag/

Confidential Information: The information contained in this e-mail is confidential and protected from general disclosure. If the recipient or the reader of this e-mail is not the intended recipient, or person responsible to receive this e-mail, you are requested to delete this e-mail immediately and do not disseminate or distribute or copy. If you have received this e-mail by mistake, please notify us immediately by replying to the message so that we can take appropriate action immediately and see to it that this mistake is rectified.

 



To unsubscribe, send an email from the account that received this message to list...@list.ct.gov with a blank subject and "unsubscribe AG-PressRelease" as the message body.

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages