© 2024 KRWG
News that Matters.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

New Mexico And Insurance Firm Reach $18.5M Deal On Taxes

Hector Balderas

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — New Mexico's largest health insurance provider will pay $18.5 million to resolve unpaid taxes to the state dating back more than a decade under a legal settlement with state prosecutors, New Mexico Attorney General Hector Balderas announced Monday.

Three state insurance regulators who came forward as whistleblowers and exposed the case will split 3.7 million of the settlement.

Balderas had accused the for-profit insurance subsidiary Presbyterian Health Plan of using an illegal accounting procedure to avoid paying millions of dollars in taxes and surcharges on insurance premiums dating back to 2003-2004.

Presbyterian Healthcare Services CEO Dale Maxwell confirmed the settlement agreement and said fraud allegations against the company were dismissed.

"The important thing for us is the fraud allegations have been completely dropped," Maxwell said. "Presbyterian did not commit fraud. We have worked together with the regulatory agency that oversees our premium tax payments, and we did that in good faith."

The legal dispute hinged on Presbyterian's revisions five years ago to prior tax obligations. The arrangement was finalized at a time when oversight of insurance taxation was being transferred from the state's Public Regulation Commission to an independent Office of the Superintendent of Insurance — only to be challenged in court years later.

The settlement represents a larger amount than the roughly $14.6 million in unpaid premium taxes and fees due from Presbyterian, as described in a recent state-commissioned audit of underpaid insurance premium taxes across the industry.

Presbyterian and state officials said the settlement resolves those debts — but not an additional $14 million estimated underpayment related to tax credits that offset Presbyterian's contributions to a high-risk insurance pool for people who are denied insurance or considered uninsurable.

Maxwell said those estimated underpayments are related to a recent regulatory change that delays insurance-pool tax credits until the year after payments to the insurance pool.

The state's case against Presbyterian stemmed from a whistleblower lawsuit filed by three employees at the Office of the Superintendent of Insurance who highlighted uncollected insurance premium taxes. Balderas' office took over the case earlier this year.

The original plaintiffs are due to receive 20 percent of the settlement, according to the agreement and terms of the state's Fraud Against Taxpayers Act.

New Mexico collects hundreds of millions of dollars each year through a 3 percent tax on insurance premiums and additional surcharges.

Presbyterian's $18.5 million settlement payment will not interfere with its ability to provide health care coverage across the state and fulfill its mission, Maxwell said.