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A federal judge in Wilmington Wednesday granted the government’s appeal to a Nevada magistrate judge’s decision to allow pretrial release to a man charged in a multimillion dollar Medicaid scheme with roots in Roanoke Rapids and Ahoskie.

A synopsis of the proceedings filed in the federal court record shows District Judge Richard E. Myers Jr. granted the government’s appeal after hearing statements from both parties in the case of Timothy Mark Harron.

After granting the appeal, Harron was remanded to custody. His arraignment is scheduled for the October 20 term of court in Wilmington before Myers.

A written order is scheduled to follow but was not immediately entered into the case file.

Wednesday’s hearing was based on a motion filed by United States Attorney Robert J. Higdon Jr. in May which contended Harron would present a danger if allowed pretrial release. Higdon is the United States attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina.

Harron and his wife Latisha were named in a 75-count indictment charging them with the following:

54 counts of wire fraud, each of which carry a maximum punishment of 20 years in prison

6 counts of aggravated identity theft, each of which carry a maximum punishment of not less than, nor more than, 2 years in prison consecutive to other sentences

Conspiracy to commit money laundering, which carries a maximum punishment of 10 years in prison

11 counts of conducting transactions in criminally derived property with fraud and money laundering, which carries a maximum punishment of 10 years in prison.  

Mrs. Harron is also charged with making false statements relating to healthcare matters, which carries a maximum punishment of five years in prison

The Harrons operated Agape Healthcare Systems in Roanoke Rapids and Assured Healthcare Services in Ahoskie.

Higdon said in a statement released in May the case represented “one of the most brazen and egregious cases of home health Medicaid fraud ever seen in this district.”

The indictment alleges a $13 million fraud that funded what Higdon called a gluttonous, social media-marketed lifestyle — one filled with private jets, penthouses and luxury resorts.  

He said at the time, “Most reprehensible is the fact that this crime is alleged to have been carried out on the backs of our most vulnerable: the poor, the deceased, the elderly, and the disabled.”

The Harrons had taken up residency in Las Vegas after marrying in 2018, but continued running the alleged scheme across the globe, Higdon’s motion on Mr. Harron’s detention said. 

Higdon said the fraud had been ongoing since at least 2013, and was committed from around the world, including Nevada, North Carolina, Virginia, Connecticut, French Polynesia, Tahiti, the Dominican Republic, and other locations. 

Mrs. Harron is scheduled for arraignment during the November 17 term of court in Wilmington at 10 a.m. before Meyers.