Posted on 06/12/2013 9:38:19 AM PDT by grundle
Republican members of the House Energy and Commerce Committee are looking into allegations that the Internal Revenue Service seized 60 million medical records from a California health care provider.
(T)he Committee on Energy and Commerce is investigating allegations that the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), in the course of executing a search warrant at a California health care providers corporate headquarters in March 2011, improperly seized the personal medical records of millions of American citizens in possible violation of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, members of the committee wrote in a letter Tuesday to Acting IRS Commissioner Daniel Werfel.
The letter to Werfel, which requires a response by June 25, comes on the heels of a lawsuit filed by an unnamed healthcare provider against the IRS in California Superior Court. The lawsuit alleged that 15 IRS agents improperly stole medical records during search of the facility in March 2011, according to a report about the incident from Court House News.
The search warrant the agents were executing, the committee noted in citing the Court House News report, was allegedly limited to financial records of a former employee of the company, not medical records.
In light of these allegations and in anticipation of the IRSs increased role in implementing health care under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, we are writing to request information regarding your agencys ability to both protect the confidential medical information of millions of Americans and respect the safeguards imposed by HIPAA [Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act], the letter reads.
The IRS did not immediately respond to request for comment.
(Excerpt) Read more at dailycaller.com ...
According to the Supreme Court decision at the heart of the new NSA scandal, just pretend that you have no expectation of privacy for that information you “voluntarily” gave to a third party as a necessary part of the normal business relationship, and that you “assumed the risk” that, for no reason whatsoever, it would inevitably be given to the government. That lays the foundation for the proper way to steal any and all personal information.
My original thought was Kaiser and Blue Cross since this seems to have been accomplished in California and they are two of the larger insurers in the state. However, the current population is only about half of the number that were confiscated so one would think that it has to be more than just California.
Would need to know if they are counting one record as one visit or one record as total visits by one person. Based on the information available, it’s beyond speculation and just wild guessing, IMO.
Rush very briefly mentioned this theft without giving any details.
Aw c'mon, Flag_This, ammo can make it fun! ........................................................................................................... FRegards
Just took the politically valuable ones, no doubt.
And, apparently, every member of SAG. Hello to Hollywood!
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