PHILADELPHIA – Federal authorities said two former workers at a Philadelphia mental health clinic have been sentenced to federal prison for their roles in stealing money from the center.

U.S. Attorney William M. McSwain said Monday that Sandy Acosta and Amalia Rodriguez, former employees at the Juniata Community Mental Health Clinic (JCMHC) were sentenced to 8 months and 6 months in federal prison, respectively, as well as ordered to pay $793,000 in restitution to the Pennsylvania Attorney General in trust for a successor to JCMHC, jointly and severally with the financial obligations previously imposed on others responsible for the same fraud and theft. Acosta is a former Administrator of JCMHC and Rodriguez is a former billing clerk for JCMHC.

Previously, Renee Tartaglione, 61, who served as the president of JCMHC's board of directors, was sentenced to 82 months imprisonment for misappropriating funds of the clinic and falsifying her federal income tax returns by under reporting her income for tax years 2008, 2009, 2010, and 2012. "The defendants worked together to cheat economically disadvantaged people with mental health issues out of funds that were intended to provide treatment and other services," McSwain said. "Instead, the defendants used these funds for their own personal enrichment, depriving others of help that they desperately needed. This was a gross abuse of the trust placed in these defendants, and I am glad that my Office and our law enforcement partners have held them accountable for their crimes."

Acosta previously pled guilty to wire fraud, theft from a health care benefit program, aggravated identity theft, and conspiracy to commit money laundering. Rodriguez previously pled guilty to wire fraud, theft from a health care benefit program, and aggravated identity theft.

The charges arose out of the women's agreement to cash unearned checks from JCMHC and give the cash to Tartaglione.

"Sandy Acosta and Amalia Rodriguez facilitated Renee Tartaglione's theft of over $2 million from important taxpayer-funded programs for individuals in need of mental health treatment," said Assistant Attorney General Brian A. Benczkowski. "Their convictions and today's sentences demonstrate the Justice Department's commitment to work with our federal and state partners to hold accountable those who seek to line their own pockets by defrauding institutions that serve vulnerable individuals."

"Looting money from Medicare strains the system and cheats the taxpayers who fund it," said Michael T. Harpster, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI's Philadelphia Division. "This conspiracy diverted funds meant for mental health treatment for the community's underserved—a serious breach of trust, and of the law. The FBI is committed to fighting health care fraud, one case at a time, and seeing perpetrators held accountable." "Acosta and Rodriguez helped steal money that was allotted for the treatment of mental health patients; depriving them of much needed mental health services," said IRS-Criminal Investigation Special Agent In Charge Guy Ficco. "Their sentences are indications of how unacceptable their actions were. IRS-Criminal Investigation is proud to have joined forces with our law enforcement partners to bring these defendants to justice."