Saturday, May 16, 2026

Brooklyn Woman Charged with Attempting to Steal Opioid Prescriptions from Hempstead Assisted Living Facility

 

Tianah Allen a.k.a. Tianah Eusebe allegedly used residents’ names to submit fraudulent prescriptions for oxycodone while working as a medication supervisor at a Hempstead assisted living facility

DEA New York Enforcement Division Special Agent in Charge Farhana Islam and Nassau County District Attorney Anne T. Donnelly announced that a Brooklyn woman was charged with attempted criminal possession of a controlled substance and forgery for allegedly sending falsified oxycodone prescriptions to a pharmacy to obtain the pills while she was working at an assisted living facility in 2025. 

Tianah Allen a.k.a Tianah Eusebe, 34, was arraigned before Judge William Bodkin on charges of two counts of Attempted Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance in the Third Degree (a C felony); three counts of Attempted Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance in the Fourth Degree (a D felony); and Forgery in the Second Degree (a D felony). 

Tianah Allen a.k.a Tianah Eusebe pleaded not guilty and was released on her own recognizance. She is due back in court on May 26, 2026. If convicted, she faces up to 1 to 5 ½ years in prison. 

“This arrest of Tianah Allen aka Tianah Eusebe, who was employed as a medication supervisor at a health care facility, who has been charged with falsifying oxycodone prescriptions in patients’ names, including a former patient who was deceased, is deeply troubling” stated DEA New York Enforcement Division Special Agent in Charge Farhana Islam. “Healthcare professionals and caregivers are entrusted with protecting those in their care, not exploiting them for personal gain. The DEA and our law enforcement partners remain committed to identifying and holding accountable anyone responsible for fueling the ongoing opioid crisis.”

“The defendant used her position managing medications at an assisted living facility to allegedly steal powerful narcotics using residents’ names,” said DA Donnelly. “When people place their parents or grandparents into long-term care, they should only have to worry about their loved ones’ comfort and well-being. The defendant’s alleged actions are a complete breach of that trust. My office seeks to hold anyone accountable who violates the professional conduct our community deserves.”

A Donnelly said that, according to the investigation, the defendant had been working as a medication supervisor at Island Assisted Living in Hempstead since August 12, 2024.

On or about March 3, 2025, the facility’s administrator initiated an internal investigation into claims that some residents’ prescriptions were being mishandled by medication staff. 

Following the internal investigation, the defendant was fired and the administrator contacted the Hempstead Police Department.

Shortly thereafter, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) New York Enforcement Division’s Long Island SPEAR Team launched an investigation, which included the NCDA, the New York State Department of Health’s Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement (BNE), and the Nassau County Police Department’s Narcotics Vice Squad.  

The joint investigation revealed that, on February 25, 2025, while working at Island Assisted Living, the defendant allegedly submitted two prescriptions to a pharmacy without authorization. The prescriptions were each for ninety 10mg oxycodone pills. 

One of the prescriptions was written for a resident who had a drug abuse history and therefore no recent narcotics prescriptions. The other prescription was written for a resident who passed away before the medication was delivered to the facility. 

Surveillance video obtained as part of the investigation captured the defendant sorting through a recent delivery of residents’ medications at the facility. The defendant was seen on surveillance video allegedly placing oxycodone pills into a brown paper bag, carrying it out of the office, and taking it to her vehicle.

At a later date, surveillance video again captured the defendant sorting through a recent delivery of residents’ medications at the facility. The defendant was seen on surveillance video allegedly placing oxycodone pills into an envelope, putting the envelope into her purse, and carrying her purse out of the office to her car. 

Subsequently, on March 1, 2025, surveillance video captured the defendant allegedly forging a prescription for herself for ninety 10mg oxycodone pills and submitting the prescription to the facility’s pharmacy.  

The defendant was arrested by NCDA detective investigators on May 14, 2026. 

NCDA thanks the DEA New York Enforcement Division's Long Island SPEAR Team, BNE, the Hempstead Police Department, and NCPD Narcotics Vice Squad for their partnership in this investigation. 

The case is being prosecuted by Pharmaceutical Diversion and Cybercrimes Unit Chief Heather Kalachman of the Organized Crime and Rackets Bureau under the supervision of Bureau Chief Patrick Brand, and under the overall supervision of Executive Assistant District Attorney for the Investigations Division Rick Whelan. The defendant is represented at arraignment by Christopher Cox of the Legal Aid Society of Nassau County.

The charges are merely accusations, and the defendant is presumed innocent until and unless found guilty. 

Falsified Prescription

DEC AND DOH ANNOUNCE 16 NEW MUNICIPALITIES RECEIVE FREE TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TO PROTECT DRINKING WATER SOURCES

 

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State Agencies Update Drinking Water Source Protection Framework to Better Assist Communities at No Cost

New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) Commissioner Amanda Lefton and State Department of Health (DOH) Commissioner Dr. James McDonald announced 16 new municipalities will receive free technical assistance to help protect public drinking water sources through the Drinking Water Source Protection Program (DWSP2). The multi-agency initiative, led by DEC and DOH in collaboration with the Departments of Agriculture and Markets (AGM) and State (DOS), empowers municipalities to take critical actions to improve and protect public drinking water sources and the environment. 

“With the success of the Drinking Water Source Protection Program, New York under Governor Hochul is helping more communities across the state receive free technical assistance that protects public drinking water and conserves water supplies for future generations,” DEC Commissioner Lefton said. “DEC and our partner agencies’ are commitment to delivering critical programs like this one aimed at protecting drinking water at its source.” 

“Technical support through the Drinking Water Source Protection Program enables municipalities to navigate the planning process for critically important projects that will safeguard the health of their community,” State Health Commissioner Dr. James McDonald said. “We are proud to offer this assistance at no cost, and we thank our partners for their collaborative leadership in protecting drinking water sources and public health.” 

In addition, to better assist communities, DEC and DOH completed revisions on the latest version of the Drinking Water Source Protection Program Framework 2025,a guidance document that technical assistance providers will use to help each community create and implement a local drinking water source protection program. The Framework is publicly available on the official DWSP2 website. 

Communities enrolled in the program will work with technical assistance providers to develop and initiate implementation of a unique drinking water source protection program at no cost to the participating municipalities. 

The program is designed to build off previous work, help align priorities, and fill gaps within a municipality’s current and future source water protection efforts. 

Participating municipalities receive free technical assistance in assessing modern day vulnerabilities and engaging in preventative actions to protect drinking water sources from contamination, identifying effective actions to address potential contaminant sources, and implementing source water protection actions. 

The program helps ensure meaningful collaboration during plan development and initial implementation between municipalities, members that represent the source water and their technical assistance providers. The 16 new municipalities include the cities of Dunkirk, Elmira, Glen Cove, Little Falls and Saratoga Springs, the towns of Cazenovia, Keene and Saugerties, and the villages of Chester, Fonda, Middleburgh, Saugerties, Voorheesville, Woodbury, Delhi, and Montgomery. A full list of participating communities can be found on the DWSP2 website. 

In addition to the development of a plan, each community will initiate implementation activities focused on preventing and minimizing pollution of source waters. Municipalities have many tools available to reduce the likelihood of pollutants reaching the source water area for their public water supply. 

For example, a municipality may: 

  • Conduct education and awareness campaigns to inform community members of best management practices and increase their engagement in source water protection;
  • Work with landowners to place easements on parcels of land, or purchase properties near a drinking water source;
  • Apply for available State and federal resources, programs, and funding to assist with the cost of implementation activities;
  • Establish protective buffers (e.g., riparian) or develop and implement local protective zoning (e.g., aquifer protection overlay districts) around their source that controls activities or land uses that can threaten the water supply; and 
  • Partner with neighboring municipalities in an intermunicipal agreement, which can protect water quality and other natural resources across multiple jurisdictions by coordinating local government efforts to address contamination threats. 

During implementation, DWSP2 communities continue working with their technical assistance provider to address priority issues outlined in the DWSP2 plan. The municipality’s Program Management Team and works alongside their technical assistance provider to implement and prioritize the community’s source water protection needs. Implementation of a community’s program is just as critical as developing their plan and is one of the more rewarding aspects of DWSP2. 

DWSP2 has achieved significant advances in protecting drinking water resources across New York State since launched in 2021. Including today’s announcement, 117 municipalities are working on proactive protection of source water. Municipalities can learn from examples set by the City of Ithaca), Town of Bethlehem,) and Village of Athens. 

Communities interested in learning more about the Drinking Water Source Protection Program can visit the DWSP2 webpage or contact source.water@dec.ny.gov. If interested in participating in the program, please fill out this Interest Form to set up a community-specific presentation detailing ways DWSP2 can help you protect your source waters. 

New York's Commitment to Water Quality

New York State continues to increase its nation-leading investments in water infrastructure, with a total of $6 billion invested in water infrastructure since 2017. Governor Hochul’s 2026–27 Executive Budget proposes a record $425 million for the State's Environmental Protection Fund (EPF), a critical resource for environmental programs such as land acquisition, farmland protection, invasive species prevention and eradication, recreation access, water quality improvement, and environmental justice projects. The Executive Budget also includes a historic $3.75 billion five-year commitment to clean water infrastructure. 

This funding is in addition to other substantial water quality investments, including the voter-approved $4.2 billion Clean Water, Clean Air and Green Jobs Environmental Bond Act, which is advancing historic levels of funding to update aging water infrastructure and protect water quality, strengthen communities' ability to withstand severe storms and flooding, reduce air pollution and lower climate-altering emissions, restore habitats, and preserve outdoor spaces and local farms. These investments will create jobs, strengthen community resilience, and improve environmental sustainability. By taking these steps, Governor Hochul is ensuring a healthier and more sustainable future for all New Yorkers.

Bronx Borough President Vanessa L. Gibson - JOIN US: BRONX WEEK FINALE PARADE & CONCERT (FEATURING REMY MA)

 



Michigan Home Health Care Agency Owner Convicted of $1.6M Medicare Fraud Scheme and Kickback Conspiracy

 

A federal jury in the Eastern District of Michigan convicted a Michigan nurse and home health care agency owner for operating a $1.6 million scheme to defraud Medicare.

According to court documents and evidence presented at trial, Ruby Scott, 55, of Farmington Hills, Michigan, owned and operated Delta Home Health Care LLC (Delta). From 2018 through 2021, Scott bribed a discharge nurse at a Detroit hospital to identify Medicare patients and fax their confidential records to Delta, unbeknownst to the patients. Scott had developed the kickback relationship with the hospital discharge nurse at a home health company she had previously co-owned, but she offered the nurse an additional $100 patient to induce her to refer patients to her new company. Scott paid the discharge nurse over $130,000 by CashApp, PayPal, check, and cash. Scott used these stolen profiles to bill Medicare for home health services, exploiting the diagnostic and personal information of patients who were unaware their data had been compromised.

The evidence at trial showed that Scott paid the discharge nurse approximately $300 for each patient Scott successfully billed to Medicare. In billing claims for patients who were obtained through kickbacks, as well as other claims between 2018 and 2024, Scott falsely represented to Medicare that a doctor had certified patients as meeting the Medicare requirements to receive home health services, including being homebound, when evidence proved no doctor had ever evaluated these patients for home health services. In many instances, Scott used the identities of real doctors to fabricate the existence of these evaluations when, in reality, these doctors had never even met the patients and did not know that Scott was using their information to fraudulently bill Medicare. A witness testified one patient for whom Delta received thousands of dollars in payments had never received services from Scott’s company. Delta failed to maintain patient files for over one-third of the patients for which it submitted claims to Medicare, for whom Medicare paid Delta over $1.2 million. Scott caused approximately $1.6 million in losses to Medicare, which a witness testified drains the Medicare trust fund and could make it difficult for Medicare to pay on claims that are true and accurate.

The jury convicted Scott of five counts of health care fraud, conspiracy to defraud the United States and pay illegal health care kickbacks, and four counts of paying illegal health care kickbacks. She is scheduled to be sentenced on Sept. 24 and faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison as to each health care fraud count, a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison as to each kickback count, and a maximum penalty of five years in prison as to the conspiracy count. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

Assistant Attorney General Colin M. McDonald of the Justice Department’s National Fraud Enforcement Division; Special Agent in Charge Reuben Coleman of the FBI Detroit Field Office; and Special Agent in Charge Thomas Ethridge of the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG) made the announcement.

The FBI Detroit Field Office and HHS-OIG investigated the case.

Trial Attorneys Kelly M. Warner and Ahmad Huda of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section are prosecuting the case.

On April 7, the Department of Justice announced the creation of the National Fraud Enforcement Division (“Fraud Division”). The Fraud Division is laser-focused on investigating and prosecuting those who commit fraud against the American people. The Department’s work to combat fraud supports President Trump’s Task Force to Eliminate Fraud, a whole-of-government effort chaired by Vice President J.D. Vance to eliminate fraud, waste, and abuse within Federal benefit programs.

The Department of Justice’s Health Care Fraud Strike Force Program, currently comprised of nine strike forces operating in federal districts across the country, has charged more than 6,200 defendants who collectively billed federal health care programs and private insurers more than $45 billion since 2007. In addition, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, working in conjunction with the Office of the Inspector General for the Department of Health and Human Services, are taking steps to hold providers accountable for their involvement in health care fraud schemes. More information can be found at www.justice.gov/criminal-fraud/health-care-fraud-unit.

Weekly News from State Senator Gustavo Rivera!

 

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SENATOR RIVERA IN THE COMMUNITY

SENATOR RIVERA SUPPORTS IMMIGRANT FAMILIES IN THE BRONX

This week, the Norwood News reported that a father who had been detained by ICE in early May while visiting family in Connecticut was recently released and reunited with his family in the Bronx. Thanks to our dedicated Community Outreach team, who met the father’s fiancée while canvassing and connected her with Hands Off NYC, the family was able to receive guidance and support during the process. Senator Rivera remains committed to standing with our neighbors and supporting immigrant communities. Read the Norwood News article here.

SENATOR RIVERA JOINS BRONX BOROUGH PRESIDENT GIBSON IN MOURNING THE DEATH OF 1-YEAR OLD IN FIRE AT BAINBRIDGE AVENUE

SENATOR RIVERA HOLDS NEW HEALTH COMMITTEE MEETING

This week, Senator Rivera held his seventh Health Committee meeting of the year. All 20 bills on the agenda passed including his:


✅ S.3100A - Expands coverage for the treatment of asthma to include a second rescue and maintenance inhaler, along with any medically necessary devices for children under nineteen years of age.


✅ S.5229A - Provides for updates to rates for residential health care facilities.



✅ S.5401 - Establishes the clinical trial access and education fund to provide grants to eligible applicants to provide certai

SENATOR RIVERA RECEIVES 32BJ SEIU'S HEALTH CARE CHAMPION AWARD

This week, Senator Rivera joined 32BJ SEIU during their Health Care Champion Awards celebration. He was honored to receive an award for himself and on behalf of Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart Cousins. Thank you to Manny Pastreich, President of 32BJ SEIU, for the recognition During this special event, Senator Rivera was reminded that there are so many people in our State, legislators and labor leaders alike, purposefully working to deliver healthcare affordability and support working New Yorkers.

UPCOMING COMMUNITY EVENTS & RESOURCES

NYC Small Business Month Expo

Thursday, May 28 | 9 a.m. - 4 p.m.

60 Pine Street, Manhattan


Registration Link

Free resources, consultations, workshops, and networking to help solve the six top challenges NYC small business owners face – all in one place! 

  • Fund Your Business 
  • Grow Your Business 
  • Find & Retain Talent 
  • Build Your Customer Base 
  • Save Time & Money 
  • Access Legal Services...and more! 

Please Help Us Spread the Word


The following materials are available to make it as easy as possible to promote to your networks: 

Thank you for your partnership, see below for a list of helpful links, and we hope to see your constituents at the Expo on May 28!

New SNAP Work Requirements: What You Need to Know

New federal rules are changing SNAP work requirements for some New Yorkers. Starting this year, certain adults may need to work, attend job training, or volunteer to keep their benefits.


You may be affected if you are:

● Between ages 18–64

● Not living with a child under 14

● Not exempt due to a health condition or other reason



If these rules apply to you, you may need to take action each month to avoid losing your SNAP benefits.



Check your status and learn what to do: on.nyc.gov/snap.

JOIN A NYC PARKS RECREATION CENTER NEAR YOU!
  • Hunts Point Recreation Center | 765 Manida St., Bronx, N.Y.
  • Kwame Ture Recreation Center | 1527 Jesup Ave., Bronx, N.Y.
  • St. James Recreation Center | 2530 Jerome Ave., Bronx, N.Y.
  • St. Mary’s Recreation Center (reopening soon) | 450 Saint Ann’s Ave., Bronx, N.Y.
  • Williamsbridge Oval Recreation Center | 3225 Reservoir Oval E. Bronx, N.Y.

 

To find out more about what our centers offer and membership, pls use the following link - https://www.nycgovparks.org/programs/recreation-centers/membership

JOIN THE ANIMAL CARE CENTERS OF NYC HOSTS MOBILE ADOPTION & OUTREACH EVENTS

JOB OPPORTUNITY WITH THE NEW YORK CITY DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND MENTAL HYGIENE

The NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH)'s Division of Environmental Health/Bureau of Food Safety and Community Sanitation is actively recruiting qualified candidates for the high-priority vacancy of Public Health Inspector, Level I (Multiple Vacancies Available).


Candidates in possession of the minimum qualification requirements of a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college, including or supplemented by 30 semester credits in the physical and/or biological sciences, i.e., biology, botany, chemistry, geology, physics, or physiology are strongly encouraged to apply. For more information about this job opening and application, click link here.


In addition, DOHMH will hold an in-person hiring event in the second week of June. All interested candidates must immediately engage in the following three (3) steps:

 

1) Immediately complete the survey enclosed in this link https://nycdohmh.surveymonkey.com/r/TFVFXX7 by uploading your resume and unofficial school transcript for review by Hiring Managers.


2) Indicate your availability for the hiring event in the second week of June:

  • Event Schedule:
  • Session 1:
  • Registration: 8:45 AM – 9:30 AM
  • Presentation, Writing Sample, and PHS Talk: 9:30 AM (boardroom)
  • Interviews: 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM
  • Session 2:
  • Registration: 1 – 1:30 PM
  • Presentation, Writing Sample, and PHS Talk: 1:30 PM (boardroom)
  • Interviews: 2:00 PM – 4:00 PM

 

3) Register for our Career Information Session on Thursday 6/4/26 between 10:30AM – 12:00PM. Registration Link: https://events.gcc.teams.microsoft.com/event/297f7625-cb0a-4b59-99b5-1cd43bcad56d@69c73202-5c6f-48f1-a1ac-e1b0ef826a1e

 

Candidates who complete all three steps as described above and meet the minimum qualification requirements for the position will be sent a follow-up email invite for our upcoming In-Person Food Safety & Community Sanitation Hiring Event!


In the interim, should you require additional information about this job opportunity, please do not hesitate to contact bfscsrecruitment@health.nyc.gov or Recruit@health.nyc.gov.