The Maine Wire
  • News
  • Commentary
  • The Blog
  • About
  • Investigations
  • Support the Maine Wire
  • Store
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending News
  • Skin-Deep Standards Signal Hypocrisy As Elizabeth Warren Set To Rally With Graham Platner In Portland
  • Embattled California Democrat U.S. Rep Accused Of Rape, Drummed Out Of Governor’s Race, Resigning
  • Maine Republican Lawmakers Rally Support for Referendum on Girls’ Sports, Criticize Ballot Language Ahead of Hearing
  • Police Raid Auburn Hotel and Arrest Two Lewiston Residents on Drug Charges
  • Bell-to-Bell Cell Phone Bans Coming Soon to All Maine School Districts
  • Massachusetts Greenwashes Government Overreach To Shrink Miles Traveled In Personal Vehicles
  • New York Fugitive Wanted In Connection with Gang Shootings Found in Waterville
  • Windham Woman Arrested After Trying to Conceal Drugs During Traffic Stop
Facebook Twitter Instagram
The Maine Wire
Tuesday, April 14
  • News
  • Commentary
  • The Blog
  • About
  • Investigations
  • Support the Maine Wire
  • Store
The Maine Wire
Home » News » Commentary » Maine’s Fraud Machine Keeps Running…But Now Even Augusta Is Hitting the Brakes
Commentary

Maine’s Fraud Machine Keeps Running…But Now Even Augusta Is Hitting the Brakes

Jon FetherstonBy Jon FetherstonApril 3, 2026Updated:April 3, 202611 Comments5 Mins Read3K Views
Facebook Twitter Email LinkedIn Reddit
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

When is anyone going to be held accountable?

That is the question hanging over Maine’s home health and MaineCare scandals, and it is a question the public has every right to keep asking.

When are we going to see someone from Gateway Community Services in handcuffs? When do the owners of Legit Home Health Care appear in court? When does Paradise Residential get raided by authorities? When do the people behind home health care companies accused of overbilling MaineCare, and, more importantly, failing to provide decent human services to some of the state’s most vulnerable people, face real consequences?

Charged with something.
Anything?

For months, allegations of fraud, abuse, and neglect have piled up. The billing numbers keep climbing. The red flags keep multiplying. And still, the public sees the same pattern over and over again: headlines, outrage…then silence.

No visible accountability. No perp walk. No courtroom reckoning. No public sign that the people accused of exploiting the system are paying any price.

Why?

And now there is even more reason for Mainers to be furious, because even the state itself is quietly acknowledging the scope of the problem.

Effective April 13, 2026, the Maine Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Aging and Disability Services will temporarily freeze enrollment of new providers in four of MaineCare’s most heavily scrutinized programs, Sections 18, 20, 21, and 29.

These are not minor programs. These are the backbone of Maine’s home and community-based services system for vulnerable residents, including adults with intellectual disabilities, autism, traumatic brain injuries, and related conditions.

And they are also the programs that have seen explosive growth—and mounting allegations of fraud.

Section 21 alone, which funds autism group homes, has drawn intense scrutiny following the rise of providers such as Paradise Residential Services, a Portland-based company that billed more than $16 million between 2021 and 2024 before being de-authorized by the state.

Think about the contradiction.

Publicly, state leaders have insisted there is nothing unusual to see. They have downplayed concerns. They have criticized journalists and investigators raising questions.

Privately, however, the state is freezing new entrants into these programs, effectively admitting that oversight capacity is overwhelmed and that the system cannot keep up.

You don’t freeze access to entire programs if everything is running smoothly.

You do it when something is wrong.

And that move comes on top of already devastating audit findings.

Maine’s 2024 Single Audit found 19 significant deficiencies in internal control and material noncompliance in major federal programs, including Medicaid and SNAP.

Then came the March 26, 2026 audit recap, which painted an even uglier picture. Auditors flagged 19 material weaknesses, benefits issued after recipients had died, nearly two-thirds of contracts signed late, and the failure to complete a single one of 88 required nursing home audits.

Hundreds of thousands of dollars in questioned costs were identified, with warnings that the true number could be much higher.

Add to that a January 2026 federal audit showing $45.6 million in improper MaineCare payments for autism services in just one year. According to federal reviewers, every claim examined had problems.

That is not a rounding error.

That is a systemic failure.

And the numbers keep growing.

In Fiscal Year 2018, the four programs now being frozen cost taxpayers about $356 million combined. By Fiscal Year 2025, that total had exploded to $858 million.

More than double.

That is not just growth. That is acceleration.

And yet…still…no handcuffs.

Still no prosecutions.
Still no courtroom accountability.
Still no visible consequences for those accused of exploiting the system.

Meanwhile, ordinary Mainers are left asking a very basic question:

If you or I did this, what would happen to us?

Would we get years of patience? Layers of bureaucracy shielding us? Endless process while the money kept flowing?

Of course not.

We would be investigated. Charged. Marched into court.

That is why this scandal cuts so deeply. It is not just about money—though the money matters. It is about trust.

The message Maine people are getting is simple: there appears to be one set of rules for politically protected operators feeding at the public trough, and another for everybody else.

Taxpayers pay.
Vulnerable people suffer.
And the bureaucracy keeps growing.

At some point, repeated failures stop looking like incompetence.

When audits keep failing…
When costs keep exploding…
When enrollment freezes are quietly implemented…
And when millions continue flowing without visible consequences…

People stop believing the system is broken.

They start believing it is working exactly as designed for the people benefiting from it.

And the rest of us?

We are just the ones footing the bill.

Until the public sees real accountability, raids, indictments, prosecutions, courtroom appearances, and the permanent removal of bad actors from taxpayer-funded programs, there is no reason to believe Augusta is serious about fraud, serious about protecting vulnerable people, or serious about respecting the taxpayers forced to fund this mess.

Enough hearings.
Enough statements.
Enough process.
Enough delay.

Mainers want to know one simple thing:

When does somebody finally answer for this?
When do the gloves come off…and the handcuffs go on?

Because until someone does, the fraud machine keeps running.

Previous ArticlePresident Trump Briefed After F-15 Strike Eagle Fighter Jet Downed; U.S. Forces Recover One Crew Member In Ongoing SAR Mission
Next Article Opinion: Why Bobby Charles Is the Kind of Leader Maine Needs Now
Jon Fetherston

Latest News

Skin-Deep Standards Signal Hypocrisy As Elizabeth Warren Set To Rally With Graham Platner In Portland

April 13, 2026

Embattled California Democrat U.S. Rep Accused Of Rape, Drummed Out Of Governor’s Race, Resigning

April 13, 2026

Maine Republican Lawmakers Rally Support for Referendum on Girls’ Sports, Criticize Ballot Language Ahead of Hearing

April 13, 2026
4 1 vote
Article Rating
Subscribe
Login
Notify of
guest

guest

11 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Islander
Islander
10 days ago

“When is anyone going to be held accountable?” NEVER

13
SMarkB
SMarkB
10 days ago

Why? Simple when the Foxes are in charge of the Henhouse, the Hens disappear.When democrupts are in charge, taxpayers money disappears. No corrupt scam is of the table.

14
Nadia
Nadia
10 days ago

If we stopped paying state and federal taxes, maybe they’d run out of our tax money and be forced to clean up their act. Oh, wait…we’d all be hauled into court and end up in jail, right? They can steal from us blatantly but we’re forced to work in order to support them. This is called slavery.

19
Handy N Handsome
Handy N Handsome
9 days ago

Follow the money….always.
You’ll find it eventually finds its way to democrat/communist coffers.

12
Tootaloo
Tootaloo
9 days ago

The gov should be held accountable too for doing nothing about it.

13
Dennis
Dennis
9 days ago

Any action taken would be seen as discrimination against Somali’s. And, we cannot have that can we?

5
Dr. Ed
Dr. Ed
9 days ago

The question I ask, and I’ve been asking for 40 years now, is when will we see the arrest of the Nazis at DHHS? When will we see them held accountable for what they’ve been doing, as long as it happened without them.

They staple an autism label on anybody in sight, how much is this autism care? It’s for people who don’t have autism in the first place.???

4
VGS
VGS
9 days ago

The revelations of overbilling/overpaying by Maine is a big reason Mainers are paying such high taxes, and further explains why Mills is constantly seeking additional ways to tax Mainers. Janet Mills is busy campaigning and is going to walk away from the Governorship. She isn’t going to do anything that will further compromise her Senate bid. Has anyone heard from Aaron Frey ? Wouldn’t these fraud cases fall under his jurisdiction? The bottom line is, the person at the top is responsible for the continuance of the fraud for years. Janet Mills is the person at the top. Whether by incompetence or by intentional avoidance, she should be ejected from office now, not after the ballots have rejected her in the Senate race.

13
LuntersHaptop
LuntersHaptop
9 days ago

Torches and pitchforks?

4
JCB
JCB
8 days ago

“Legit Home Health Care”… Okay, I’m convinced. Nothing to see here!

0
Robert Schmidt
Robert Schmidt
4 days ago

“state leaders have insisted there is nothing unusual to see….there appears to be one set of rules for politically protected operators feeding at the public trough, and another for everybody else.” The Intercept.

True. Nothing unusual. Business as usual in the SWAMP. Deloitte and Deloitte IES is the biggest fraud and has been business as usual since Obama expanded Medicaid, CHIP, WIC, SNAP, TANF, Sec8, LIHEAP, etc. in ME and 25 states. Here in GA (and in ME?) Deloitte Integrated Eligibility System enrolls the DEAD and DUPlicates. Sue Smith, Susan Smith, Susan-Jones Smith have the same DOB, SSN, address are are the same person. But Deloitte IES EMPI Enterprise Master Person Index gives her 3 ID, 3 benefit plans. Deloitte EMPI does not fit any definition of a Master Person Index and is therefore FRAUD.
Deloitte is paid CAPITATION for this FRAUDulent data. Deloitte garbage data makes possible the Waste Fraud Abuse of other IT vendors, Providers, recipients. It makes staff of these and State and Federal Agencies inefficient to handle the garbage data.

Somalis are just part of “nothing unusual to see” in the swamp.

Bob Schmidt 475 Mt Vernon Hwy NE Sandy Springs GA 30328 470 827-7942

1
Recent News

Skin-Deep Standards Signal Hypocrisy As Elizabeth Warren Set To Rally With Graham Platner In Portland

April 13, 2026

Embattled California Democrat U.S. Rep Accused Of Rape, Drummed Out Of Governor’s Race, Resigning

April 13, 2026

Maine Republican Lawmakers Rally Support for Referendum on Girls’ Sports, Criticize Ballot Language Ahead of Hearing

April 13, 2026

Police Raid Auburn Hotel and Arrest Two Lewiston Residents on Drug Charges

April 13, 2026

Bell-to-Bell Cell Phone Bans Coming Soon to All Maine School Districts

April 13, 2026
Newsletter

News

  • News
  • Campaigns & Elections
  • Opinion & Commentary
  • Media Watch
  • Education
  • Media

Maine Wire

  • About the Maine Wire
  • Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • Submit Commentary
  • Complaints
  • Maine Policy Institute

Resources

  • Maine Legislature
  • Legislation Finder
  • Get the Newsletter
  • Maine Wire TV

Facebook Twitter Instagram Steam RSS
  • Post Office Box 7829, Portland, Maine 04112

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

wpDiscuz