Navajo leaders seek tribal members caught up in sober-living Medicare scam in Arizona

Thomas Cody, executive director of the Navajo Nation Division of Social Services, talks during a news conference in Phoenix on Friday, May 19, 2023. Cody explained what tribal leaders are doing to find and get care for members now being displaced by scores of illegitimate sober living homes that are under investigation for Medicaid fraud by the Arizona Attorney General's Office. Behind him are Arizona State Sen. Theresa Hatathlie, left, and Rhonda Tuni, right, the executive director of the Navajo Department of Health. (AP Photo/Anita Snow)

PHOENIX (AP) — Navajo leaders on Friday unveiled an operation to find and get needed services to hundreds of tribal members they predict will soon be on the streets of metro Phoenix amid a state crackdown on Medicaid fraud that affected as many as 7,000 Native Americans recruited to illegitimate sober living homes in recent years.

Called Rainbow Bridge, the operation is in response to actions announced this week by the state of Arizona against more than 100 unlicensed and fraudulent sober living homes in the Phoenix metropolitan area.

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