Republican presidential candidate Ben Carson is standing by his “best friend” — a dentist who pleaded guilty to health-care fraud a few years before Carson advocated a no-mercy policy for such crimes.
Carson and Al Costa have been buddies for nearly two decades. Costa serves on the board of the Carson Scholars Fund and has helped Carson with real-estate investments that netted him hundreds of thousands of dollars.
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When Costa pleaded guilty, Carson urged the judge to keep him out of prison, even though he would later declare that such offenses deserved 10-year prison sentences.
“Al Costa is my best friend. Al Costa is my very best friend,” Carson said in a statement on Thursday after an Associated Press report raised questions about their relationship and the apparent double standard.
“I know his heart. I am proud to call him my friend. I have always and will continue to stand by him. That is what real friends do.”
The statement did not address whether Carson’s views on health-care fraud changed after Costa’s sentencing.
In his 2013 book “America the Beautiful,” Carson said physicians who “engage in fraud” should be subject to what he called “the Saudi Arabian solution.”
“Why don’t people steal very often in Saudi Arabia?” he wrote.
“Because the punishment is amputation of one or more fingers. I would not advocate chopping off people’s limbs, but there would be some very stiff penalties for this kind of fraud, such as loss of one’s medical license for life, no less than 10 years in prison, and a loss of all of one’s personal possessions.”
That’s a far cry from what he wanted when Costa admitted to breaking the law.
In 2007, the Pittsburgh-area dentist was accused of billing insurance companies for procedures that he did not actually perform on at least 50 patients between 1995 and 2001.
Federal prosecutors said Costa recruited new patients by offering them illegal incentives, like a waiver of co-pays, and then inflated the insurance bills to recoup that money. After building the business this way, he sold his share to a partner for more than $1 million, prosecutors said.
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Costa pleaded guilty to felony health care fraud, which carries up to 10 years in prison. In a bid for leniency, he collected letters of reference from well-connected friends, including Carson.
In an Oct. 31, 2007, letter written on his Johns Hopkins Medicine stationery, Carson said he and Costa had been friends for about a decade, shared the same principles and even vacationed together.
“I obviously get to meet and know many wonderful people, but there are none that are closer to me than Dr. Costa,” he wrote.
“Next to my wife of 32 years, there is no one on this planet I trust more than Al Costa.”
Carson also took the stand during Costa’s March 20, 2008, sentencing hearing.
“He’s one of my closest if not my closest friend. We became friends about a decade ago. We found that, you know, our value systems were almost identical. And you know, it’s very hard to find people like that these days,” Carson said.
“I’m a strong believer in God. I’m a strong believer in truth and being fair to people,” he continued.
Carson told the court that Costa was “the essential component” of his charity.








