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Brought to you by the Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency
Federal Reports
Report Date
Agency Reviewed / Investigated
Report Title
Type
Location
U.S. Agency for International Development
Incomplete Evaluations and Cut in Funding From Another Donor Could Impede USAID/Cambodia's HIV/AIDS Efforts
Audit of the Justice Management Division’s Information Security Program Pursuant to the Federal Information Security Modernization Act of 2014 Fiscal Year 2017
Audit of the Justice Management Division’s Automated Electronic Guard Information System Upgrade Pursuant to the Federal Information Security Modernization Act of 2014 Fiscal Year 2017
The Office of Inspector General assessed NASA's management of GISS (located in New York City) and its prominent role in Earth science research and the development of global climate models.
Our survey of FY 2017 applications and approvals determined that ARC review of applications and approvals were generally accomplished in a timely manner and justifications were noted for delayed approvals.
A ticket agent resigned on April 5, 2018, prior to an administrative hearing, for stealing money from a cash drawer at Amtrak’s Los Angeles Union Station. Our investigation determined that the employee would wait until train conductors electronically scanned passengers’ tickets and would then reset the ticket’s status as if it had not been scanned at all. This process of resetting the tickets’ status allowed the tickets to be refunded or exchanged. Subsequently, the employee processed the tickets for cash refunds, taking and keeping the money from the cash drawer.
Medicare paid a total of $17.6 million in telehealth payments in 2015, compared with $61,302 in 2001. Medicare telehealth payments include a professional fee, paid to the practitioner performing the service at a distant site, and an originating-site fee, paid to the facility where the beneficiary receives the service. A Medicare Payment Advisory Commission study of 2009 claims found that Medicare professional fee claims without associated claims for originating-site facility fees were more likely to be associated with unallowable telehealth payments. We analyzed 2014 and 2015 (our audit period) telehealth claims and found that more than half of the professional telehealth claims paid by Medicare did not have matching originating-site facility fee claims. Therefore, we focused our review on telehealth claims billed through a distant site that did not have a corresponding originating-site fee.