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  1. Jan Becker Contact Phone
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Jan Becker Contact
  1. Contact Becker I would like to hear more about: By submitting this form, I provide my signature, expressly consenting to calls, emails and/or texts regarding my educational options from Becker and its affiliates and contractors using an automated dialing system to the number and email address provided.
  2. Jan Becker is Co-Founder of Apex.AI Inc and Managing Director of Apex.AI GmbH and Co-Founder and Director of the Autoware Foundation. Prior to founding Apex.AI, Jan was Senior Director Automated Driving at Faraday Future and previous to that Director at Robert Bosch LLC responsible for Automated Driving in North America. Jan developed ME302B: Driver Assistance.
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Over the past two months, Becker's has reported on six surgeons appointed to leadership roles: Drs. Benedict Nwachukwu, Steve Shin & more: 5 orthopedic surgeons making headlines Alan Condon - Thursday, January 21st, 2021. Skilled nursing residents and staff of Peter Becker Community received their first dose of the Pfizer vaccine on Sunday, January 3, 2021. The second shot will be administered in approximately 3 weeks. The 95% efficacy of this vaccine makes us all very excited to move forward in implementation of the vaccines.

A New Jersey physician was sentenced to 33 months in prison for his role in a $24 million telemedicine scheme, the U.S. Justice Department said Jan. 27.

In addition to his prison term, the judge ordered Bernard Ogon, MD, to pay restitution of $24.3 million and forfeit $75,000. He must also serve three years of supervised release.

Prior to the sentencing date, Dr. Ogon pleaded guilty to one count of healthcare fraud conspiracy in a New Jersey federal court.

According to prosecutors, Dr. Ogon signed prescriptions for compounded medicines without speaking to patients, conducting a medical evaluation or forming a relationship. Dr. Ogon reportedly often signed preprinted prescription forms and was paid $20 to $30 per prescription.

Additionally, prosecutors claim Dr. Ogon would send the prescriptions to specific compounding pharmacies involved in the conspiracy, rather than providing the patient with the prescription and letting them fill it.
The scheme caused losses to healthcare benefit programs of more than $24 million, according to the Justice Department.

More articles on legal and regulatory issues:
Ex-Broward Health exec facing bribery, money-laundering charges
Judge rejects whistleblower's kickback suit against Health First
Cleveland Clinic loses bid to dismiss proposed class-action lawsuit alleging deceptive billing

Jan Becker Contact Details

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