Department of Health and Human Services
DEPARTMENTAL APPEALS BOARD
Civil Remedies Division
In the Case of: Nguyen Kim Phan, M.D., Petitioner,
- v. -
The Inspector General. )
DATE: August 4, 1992
Docket No. C-92-026
Decision No. CR219
DECISION
In a letter dated September 26, 1991, the Inspector General (I.G.) notified
Petitioner, Nguyen Kim Phan,
M.D., that he would be excluded from participating in the Medicare and federally
assisted State health care
programs for a period of five years. 1/ The I.G. advised Petitioner that this
action was being taken because
Petitioner was convicted in State court of a criminal offense related to the
delivery of an item or service
under Medi-Cal. 2/ The I.G. informed Petitioner that exclusions from Medicare
and State health care
programs after such a conviction are made mandatory by section 1128(a)(1) of
the Social Security Act
(Act). Section 1128(c)(3)(B) of the Act provides that the minimum period of
exclusion shall be not less
than five years.
Petitioner timely requested a hearing, and the case was assigned to me for
hearing and decision. I
conducted a prehearing conference on December 16, 1991, at which time the I.G.
moved for summary
disposition. By my prehearing Order of December 23, 1991, I established a schedule
to allow the parties to
file their submissions on the I.G.'s motion for summary disposition. In his
response to the I.G.'s motion for
summary disposition, Petitioner requested oral argument. I granted Petitioner's
request and conducted oral
argument on July 17, 1992.
I have considered the arguments, the evidence and the applicable law. I conclude
that there is no dispute as
to any material fact and that summary disposition is therefore appropriate.
I also conclude that the five
year exclusion imposed and directed by the I.G. against Petitioner is mandated
by law, under section
1128(a)(1) of the Act, and that the exclusion imposed is the minimum mandatory
period required by
section 1128(c)(3)(B) of the Act.
ISSUES
The issues in this case are whether Petitioner:
1. was convicted of a criminal offense within the meaning of section 1128(a)(1)
of the Act;
and
2. was properly excluded from the Medicare and Medicaid programs for a five
year period,
pursuant to section 1128(c)(3)(B) of the Act.
FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
1. Nguyen Kim Phan, M.D. (Petitioner) is a physician licensed to practice medicine
in the State of
California. I.G. Ex. 4/3; P. Br. 16. 3/
2. Petitioner was investigated by the Bureau of Medi-Cal Fraud of the California
Department of Justice for
allegedly improperly and fraudulently billing Medi-Cal for his services. I.G.
Ex. 1.
3. On April 10, 1990, Petitioner was charged in the Alameda County Municipal
Court (California) with
two felony counts for willfully, unlawfully, and with intent to defraud filing
false Medi-Cal claims, in
violation of California Welfare and Institutions Code, section 14107. I.G. Ex.
3.
4. On April 12, 1990, Petitioner pled guilty to both felony counts listed in
the April 10, 1990 felony
complaint (complaint). Petitioner's guilty plea was accepted by the California
Superior Court, Alameda
County. I.G. Exs. 5/6, 6, 7.
5. Petitioner's conviction was reduced to a misdemeanor at the sentencing proceedings
of June 7, 1990.
The court sentenced Petitioner to probation for three years, a fine of $5,000.00,
restitution of $194.00, and
150 hours of volunteer community service. I.G. Exs. 6, 7.
6. Medi-Cal is the name given to the Medicaid program in California and is
a State health care program as
defined by section 1128(h) of the Act. P. Br. 17; I.G. Br. 6, 12-13.
7. The Secretary of Health and Human Services (the Secretary) delegated to
the I.G. the authority to
determine, impose, and direct exclusions pursuant to section 1128 of the Social
Security Act. 48 Fed. Reg.
21622 (May 13, 1983).
8. On June 4, 1991, the I.G. excluded Petitioner from participating in the
Medicare and Medicaid
programs for a period of five years. I.G. Ex. 8.
9. Petitioner was convicted of a criminal offense related to the delivery of
an item or service under
Medicaid, within the meaning of section 1128(a)(1) of the Act. FFCL's 3-6.
10. There are no disputed issues of material fact in this case, and summary
disposition is appropriate.
FFCL's 1-9.
11. The exclusion imposed and directed against Petitioner by the I.G. is for
five years, the minimum
period required by the Act. Sections 1128(a)(1) and (c)(3)(B) of the Act; FFCL's
1-10.
12. The exclusion imposed and directed against Petitioner by the I.G. is mandated
by law. Sections
1128(a)(1) and (c)(3)(B) of the Act; FFCL's 1-11.
RATIONALE
Petitioner is a licensed physician who maintains a medical practice in the
State of California. The I.G.
alleges that the following scenario developed on and after October 14, 1987:
Petitioner was visited in his office by an undercover agent from the California
Bureau of Medi-
Cal Fraud (agent). The agent was posing as a Medi-Cal recipient. The agent brought
his own Medi-Cal
card and two other Medi-Cal cards, one for his fictitious wife and another for
his fictitious daughter. After
complaining of a sore throat and cough, the agent was examined by Petitioner,
who subsequently
prescribed medication for the agent. The agent then asked Petitioner for additional
prescriptions for his
fictitious wife and daughter, who were said to have similar symptoms. Petitioner
gave the agent
prescriptions for his fictitious wife and daughter, although he never saw them.
I.G. Ex. 1/29-31.
The undercover agent again visited Petitioner's office on January 19, 1988.
The agent was briefly
examined after complaining of a cough, and Petitioner wrote him a prescription.
Petitioner also wrote the
agent a prescription for his fictitious wife, again without examining any such
person. I.G. Ex. 1/34-36.
Petitioner subsequently submitted claims to Medi-Cal for services rendered
on October 14, 1987,
January 19, 1988 and other dates, for treatment for the undercover agent's fictitious
family members. I.G.
Exs. 1/44-45, 4/1.
On April 10, 1990, Petitioner was charged with two felony counts of willfully,
unlawfully, and with intent
to defraud filing false or fraudulent Medi-Cal claims, in violation of section
14107 of the California
Welfare and Institutions Code. On April 12, 1990, Petitioner's guilty plea was
accepted. On June 7, 1990,
Petitioner was sentenced by the Superior Court, Alameda County, State of California.
At the sentencing
proceedings, the court reduced Petitioner's conviction from a felony to a misdemeanor
and sentenced
Petitioner to probation for three years, a $5,000 fine, $194 in restitution,
and 150 hours of community
service. I.G. Exs. 3, 6-7.
1. Petitioner's contention that he was improperly denied discovery is without merit.
In his brief, Petitioner contends that 42 C.F.R. 1005.3(a)(3) guarantees him
the right to conduct discovery
of documents and that he has not been given this right. Petitioner further contends
that he has not had the
opportunity to discover if there are any exculpatory documents in the I.G.'s
possession and that "this
complete denial of discovery has fundamentally denied the Petitioner one of
the few rights specifically
afforded petitioners in the administrative process." P. Br. at 5.
At the July 17, 1992, oral argument, Petitioner reiterated his contention that
he was improperly denied the
opportunity for discovery. Petitioner stated that if he is granted discovery
in this case, he will be able to
show significant wrongdoing and entrapment on the part of the State of California
-- conduct that he
contends would compel me to find Petitioner's conviction to be invalid. Petitioner
alleged that the I.G.
attached to his motion for summary disposition investigative materials that
went beyond the information
upon which Petitioner's conviction was based. He further contended that if I
were to examine the facts
underlying Petitioner's guilty plea, they would show that Petitioner could have
pled guilty to another
offense which Petitioner contends was not program related under section 1128(a)(1)
of the Act.
In Behrooz Bassim, M.D., DAB 1333 at 5-9 (1992), an appellate panel of the
DAB held that the new
regulations, which became effective on January 29, 1992, may not be applied
to cases pending as of the
date of their publication, if they deprive parties of previously vested rights.
However, to the extent that
specific provisions of the regulations govern merely the procedural aspects
of the hearing process and do
not strip parties of preexisting substantive rights, application of those provisions
to pending cases would
not create manifest injustice to the parties and would not be an unlawful retroactive
application of the
regulations. Accordingly, I conclude that application of the discovery provisions
contained in 42 C.F.R.
1005.7 to this case is not an unlawful retroactive application of the new regulations,
to the extent they do
not deprive the parties of preexisting substantive rights to a full hearing.
a. Petitioner's request for discovery is untimely.
The parties in this case were given a full opportunity to brief the issue of
the application of the new
regulations to this case. In my Order of February 18, 1992, I established a
schedule through which the
parties could, if they desired, submit briefs as to the effect of the new regulations.
The I.G. submitted a
timely brief, and Petitioner chose to brief the effect of the new regulations
in his response to the I.G.'s
motion for summary disposition. Petitioner did not request discovery in the
prehearing conference or at
anytime before filing his response brief. Petitioner's request is therefore
untimely.
b. Petitioner has failed to meet his burden of showing that discovery should be allowed.
The regulation states: "Except as otherwise limited by this part, all
parties may . . . Conduct discovery of
documents as permitted by this part." 42 C.F.R. 1005.3. Section 1005.7(a)
states: "A party may make a
request to another party for production of documents for inspection and copying
which are relevant and
material to the issues before the [administrative law judge (ALJ)]." Section
1005.7(e)(3) further provides
that "[T]he burden of showing that discovery should be allowed is on the
party seeking discovery."
Petitioner contends that the denial of his right to discovery has prejudiced
him because of certain
exculpatory evidence that may be in the possession of the I.G. P. Br. at 1,
4. At the July 17, 1992, oral
argument, Petitioner was asked to identify the exculpatory evidence that he
contended was in the
possession of the I.G. Petitioner admitted that he did not know of any such
exculpatory evidence in the
I.G.'s possession. However, Petitioner did contend that if he were allowed to
review all of the I.G.'s files,
he could show that the I.G. and the State of California acted in an outrageous
and improper manner in
conducting an undercover operation against him. However, whether the actions
of the State of California
in securing the conviction were outrageous or improper is not a matter that
is properly before me.
Petitioner has made no showing of any improper conduct by the I.G. or the State
of California. However,
even if he were able to make such a showing, it would not have relevance to
the issues of whether
Petitioner was convicted of a criminal offense related to the delivery of an
item or service under Medicare
and whether the minimum mandatory provisions apply.
The I.G. argues that Petitioner has failed to identify with any reasonable
specificity the documents he
seeks, why such documents are relevant and material to the issues before me,
and why such documents
cannot be secured by other means. I.G. R. Br. at 13. The I.G. further argues
that I should deny Petitioner's
request for discovery because Petitioner has failed to carry his burden of showing
that discovery should be
allowed. Id. The I.G. also denies that he has any exculpatory documents. Id.
I conclude that Petitioner has not made a showing that any exculpatory documents
in the possession of the
I.G. would bear on the issue of the I.G.'s authority to exclude him under section
1128(a) of the Act. It is
evident that Petitioner is attempting to use the limited right of discovery
provided in the regulations as a
means to oppose the I.G.'s motion for summary disposition. Petitioner has made
no showing that discovery
is needed in connection with any issue that is before me to decide. If anything,
exculpatory evidence goes
to the issue of the reasonableness of the exclusion.
As this case involves a minimum mandatory exclusion only, I have no authority
to rule on the length of the
exclusion. Moreover, it is evident that the principal purpose of Petitioner's
discovery request is to obtain
documents which will show misconduct leading up to his state conviction. This
effort clearly is a collateral
attack on the underlying proceeding upon which this derivative action is based.
Such collateral attacks
have been uniformly rejected in determining whether the I.G. has authority to
exclude under the Act. Ian
C. Klein, D.P.M., DAB CR177 (1992); Olufemi Okunoren, M.D., DAB CR150 (1991).
Lastly, even if I were to assume that Petitioner could obtain evidence through
discovery that would show
he engaged in activities that could have resulted in his conviction for an offense
that is not program related,
that possibility does not change the fact that he was convicted of a program
related crime under section
1128(a)(1) of the Act. It is this conviction that provides the I.G. with the
authority to exclude him. Thus,
Petitioner has not met the burden of showing that discovery should be allowed.
2. I do not rely on the investigative reports of the I.G. in making my determination,
because Petitioner's
conviction is, on its face, program-related.
At oral argument, Petitioner contended that he was entitled to cross-examine
the I.G.'s agents who
compiled the investigative reports. However, the issue before me is whether
Petitioner's criminal
conviction was program related such that the mandatory minimum provisions of
section 1128(a)(1) apply.
I do not rely on the investigative reports in this case because the court documents
alone, on their face,
prove that Petitioner's criminal conviction was related to the Medi-Cal program.
Petitioner contends that I have the authority to consider information and circumstances
beyond the scope of
his conviction. Petitioner further contends that I could use that authority
to examine the underlying facts
and circumstances and determine that Petitioner could have easily pled guilty
to an offense that was not
program related. Petitioner cited Francis Craven, DAB CR143 (1991), to support
his position.
However, Petitioner did not seem to understand that where, as here, the court
documents unequivocally
show that Petitioner's criminal conviction is program related, I have no authority
to contradict that
information and substitute my personal judgment. Petitioner's cite to Craven
is inapposite, because, in
Craven, Petitioner's conviction was not, on its face, related to the Medicare
program. In Craven, the ALJ
looked to the facts and circumstances surrounding the conviction to determine
that the petitioner was
convicted, in connection with the delivery of a health care item or service,
of a criminal offense relating to
fraud, theft, embezzlement, breach of fiduciary responsibility, or other financial
misconduct. 4/
Petitioner's argument is that he could have pled guilty to another offense,
because the underlying facts are
more correctly classified under a different section of California's criminal
statutes. I have no authority to
decide to what offenses Petitioner could have pled guilty. My decision is based
solely on the record of
Petitioner's conviction. That record shows that the offense to which Petitioner
did plead guilty is program
related.
Petitioner conceded at the July 17, 1992, oral argument that he pled guilty
to Medi-Cal fraud. Petitioner
also conceded at oral argument that Medi-Cal is a State Health care program
within the meaning of section
1128(h) of the Act. The guilty plea, in which Petitioner admits to criminal
actions involving Medi-Cal,
proves that Petitioner was convicted of program related crimes under section
1128(a)(1) of the Act.
Petitioner's conviction is, therefore, on its face, program related. There is
no merit to Petitioner's
contention that I can set aside his criminal conviction and make my own determination
as to the criminal
offense of which Petitioner could have been convicted. I do not have that authority.
3. Summary Disposition is appropriate in this case.
Petitioner contends that an in-person hearing is required in order for me to
fairly and properly resolve this
case. The I.G. counters that Petitioner has not identified any material issues
that are in dispute, and that,
therefore, summary disposition is appropriate in this case. I.G. R. Br. at 1,
9-16.
Under section 205(b)(1) of the Act, Petitioner has a right to a hearing to
review the I.G.'s determination to
exclude him. That right includes issues pertaining to the I.G's authority to
exclude and the reasonableness
of the period of exclusion. The Act does not require that Petitioner be afforded
an in-person hearing.
Summary disposition is an appropriate procedure to follow where there are no
material facts in dispute and
the only issues involve questions of law. Michael I. Sabbagh, DAB CR20 at 11
(1989). James F. Allen,
M.D.F.P, DAB CR71 (1990) and John W. Foderick, M.D., DAB CR43 (1989), aff'd
DAB 1125 (1990)
(summary disposition may be entered over the objection of a petitioner where
an ALJ finds no dispute as to
any material fact).
In this case, Petitioner asserts that the I.G.'s statement of facts creates
a dispute as to material facts because
it does not disclose that the California Department of Health Services suspended
Petitioner from the Medi-
Cal program with the express proviso that he could re-apply to the program after
one year. P. Br. at 2. If
he were allowed to testify at a hearing, Petitioner asserts he could prove that
there were numerous
occasions when he refused to work with one of the State's undercover agents.
P. Br. at 1. Finally,
Petitioner accuses the I.G. of misstating the original number of charges against
him. P. Br. at 2.
Petitioner admits he was convicted of two charges involving Medicaid. I.G.
R. Br. at 10. 5/ As to the other
alleged disputed facts, they are not material, as the only material facts relate
to whether Petitioner was
convicted of a criminal offense in accordance with section 1128(a)(1).
Petitioner has failed to raise any issue of material fact. In determining whether
there is a dispute as to a
material fact so as to preclude summary judgment, "[O]nly disputes over
facts that might affect the
outcome of the suit under the governing law will properly preclude the entry
of summary judgment.
Factual disputes which are irrelevant or unnecessary will not be counted."
Travers v. Sullivan, No. CS-91-
232-JLQ (E.D. Wash. 1992). In ruling on the I.G.'s motion for summary disposition,
I have to decide only
whether Petitioner was convicted of a program-related crime, thereby mandating
the five year exclusion
imposed by the I.G. Id.
The facts raised by Petitioner are not material or relevant to my determination
of whether Petitioner was
convicted of a program related offense within the meaning of section 1128(a)(1).
"Petitioner must do more
than just claim there are disputed material facts, he must offer challenges
to the facts which are relevant
and material." John W. Foderick, M.D., DAB 1125 at 10 (1990). Petitioner
has not identified any material
facts that are in dispute. Petitioner relies solely on his contention that,
if I permitted him to conduct
discovery, he might be able to document the alleged prosecutorial misconduct
of the State. Apparently, he
would use this to attack the validity of his conviction. However, it is the
fact of Petitioner's conviction, not
its validity, that triggers the mandatory minimum exclusion of section 1128(a)(1).
The I.G. has proved, and Petitioner has admitted, that he was convicted of
a criminal offense and that the
offense involved claims to Medi-Cal. Thus, the elements of section 1128(a)(1)
are present. Some of the
factual issues addressed by Petitioner arguably could be material in the determination
of the reasonableness
of the length of a permissive exclusion, but are not relevant to a mandatory
exclusion. Resolution of this
case by summary disposition is therefore appropriate.
a. There is no merit to Petitioner's contention that the evidence presented
by the I.G. is
inadmissible hearsay.
Petitioner contends that the I.G.'s exhibits should not be relied upon because
they contain "multiple heresy
[sic]." P. Br. 1. Petitioner also contends that there are "genuine
disagreements as to the facts." P. Br. 2.
Petitioner asserts that he is entitled to an in-person hearing at which he could
cross-examine the declarants
whose statements are contained in the investigative reports, letters, and memoranda
submitted by the I.G.
as exhibits.
It is well settled that hearsay is admissible in administrative proceedings,
as long as it is credible,
trustworthy, reliable, and used in a fair manner. Richardson v. Perales, 402
U.S. 389 (1971); Jimmy Paul
Scott, Ph.D, DAB CR8 (1986), citing Catholic Medical Center v. NLRB, 589 F.2d
1166 (2d Cir. 1978);
NLRB v. McLure Associates, Inc., 556 F.2d 725 (4th Cir. 1975). Petitioner was
not denied due process by
not having the opportunity to cross-examine the declarants of the statements
in the I.G. exhibits. In making
my determination that Petitioner's conviction is program related within the
meaning of section 1128(a)(1), I
do not rely on the reports, letters, and memoranda to which Petitioner objects.
My finding is based solely
on the court documents, submitted by the I.G., that indicate Petitioner was
convicted of defrauding the
Medi-Cal program. Since Petitioner has admitted that Medi-Cal is a state health
care program as defined
by section 1128(h), Petitioner has, by implication, admitted that he was convicted
of a criminal offense
involving Medicaid.
Petitioner's reliance on a hearsay objection is misleading as well as being
misplaced. Apparently what he
really wants is to call the I.G.'s investigators as witnesses to establish certain
facts he deems favorable to
his case. As discussed previously, these facts, even if proven, at best have
to do with the length of his
exclusion. As this is a minimum mandatory exclusion, I have no discretion as
to its length and thus the
proposed testimony is not relevant.
3. Petitioner was convicted of a criminal offense related to the delivery of
an item or service under
the Medicaid program within the meaning of section 1128(a)(1) of the Act.
While the Act does not specifically define the term "criminal offense related
to the delivery of an item or
service", a criminal offense related to the delivery of an item or service
has been held to fall within the
reach of section 1128(a)(1) where:
[T]he submission of a bill or claim for Medicaid reimbursement is the necessary
step, following
the delivery of the item or service, to bring the "item" within the
purview of the program.
Jack W. Greene, DAB 1078 at 7 (1989); aff'd sub nom. Greene v. Sullivan, 731
F. Supp 835, 838 (1990).
Under the rationale of Greene, a criminal offense is an offense which is related
to the delivery of an item or
service under Medicare or Medicaid where the delivery of a Medicare or Medicaid
item or service is an
element in the chain of events giving rise to the offense. Larry W. Dabbs, R.Ph.,
et al., DAB CR151
(1991). A criminal offense also has been held to meet the statutory test where
the unlawful conduct can be
shown to affect an identifiable Medicare or Medicaid item or service or to affect
reimbursement for such an
item or service. DeWayne Franzen, DAB CR58 (1989); Danny E. Harris, R.Ph., DAB
CR166 (1991). In
addition, a criminal offense has been held to meet the statutory test where
either Medicare or a Medicaid
program is the victim of the crime. Napoleon S. Maminta, M.D., DAB 1135 (1990).
Petitioner was convicted by a California court of fraudulently submitting claims
to the Medi-Cal program.
Under each of the tests set forth above for determining whether a criminal conviction
falls within the
purview of section 1128(a)(1), Petitioner's conviction is program related as
required by the Act. The court
document sentencing Petitioner specifically refers to his plea of guilty to
a violation of Section 14107 of
the Welfare and Institutions Code of California, as charged in the first and
second counts of the Complaint.
The Complaint specifically charges Petitioner with willfully, unlawfully, and
with intent to defraud
presenting false or fraudulent Medi-Cal claims. Thus, the conviction is related
to the Medicaid program.
In an apparent effort to avoid the consequences of his being convicted of a
program related crime under
section 1128(a)(1), Petitioner argues that he could have chosen to plead guilty
to other criminal offenses,
which he maintains would have resulted in a permissive rather than mandatory
exclusion. P. Br. at 13.
Although he admits that his conviction for violating California Welfare and
Institutions Code section
14107 falls "under the mandatory provisions", he contends that the
two other counts of the complaint, for
violations of Health and Safety Code section 11153(1), would be "permissive
in nature." Id. Petitioner's
position makes no sense. What Petitioner could have done is not relevant. What
he did was to plead to a
program related offense and that plea resulted in a conviction. What Petitioner
could have done is not
relevant to my determination in this case.
At oral argument, Petitioner contended that I have the authority to set aside
his conviction because of the
outrageous conduct of the State of California in conducting the undercover operation
against him.
Petitioner's argument amounts to a collateral attack on his guilty plea. The
proper forum for any challenge
to the validity of a plea is likely in the State court which accepted the plea,
but definitely not in this
proceeding. Charles W. Wheeler and Joan K. Todd, DAB 1123 (1990). Petitioner
may not use the
proceedings before me to collaterally attack the State action which gave rise
to the derivative federal
exclusion. Olufemi Okunoren, M.D., DAB CR150 (1991).
Petitioner contends that the distinction between the mandatory and permissive
exclusions of 1128(a) and
1128(b) is blurred, arbitrary, and unclear. P. Br. at 7-10. In effect, Petitioner
contends that his conviction
should have been considered under section 1128(b)(1) of the Act, which does
not require that the
conviction be program related. Again, Petitioner's position is bound in faulty
logic and law. As stated by
the appellate panel in Samuel W. Chang, M.D., DAB 1198 at 8 (1990):
The permissive exclusion provisions of section 1128(b) apply to convictions
for offenses other than
those related to the delivery of an item or service under either the Medicare
or Medicaid or other covered
programs. While it is not inconceivable that one of the provisions of section
1128(b) could have been
applied in the absence of section 1128(a), which provides that the Secretary
"shall" exclude individuals
where applicable, the permissive exclusion provisions of subsection (b) focus
on different circumstances
from those raised here, such as where an individual's conviction does not relate
to the Medicare or
Medicaid programs.
See, Charles W. Wheeler, DAB 1123 (1990); Leon Brown, M.D., DAB 1208 (1990);
Jack W. Greene,
supra.
Additionally, it is well settled that:
[t]he I.G. has no discretion to choose under which section to proceed. Where
a conviction falls
under section 1128(a)(1), the I.G. is required to impose a mandatory minimum
exclusion. The statute gives
the Secretary no option to choose between 1128(a) and 1128(b). Therefore, the
ALJ need not first consider
whether the offense falls under 1128(b).
Baron L. Curtis, DAB CR122 at 9 (1991), citing Samuel Chang at 8; Charles Wheeler,
DAB 1123 at 6
(1990); Leon Brown, M.D., DAB 1208 at 4 (1990). Thus, I conclude that Petitioner
was properly excluded
under the mandatory exclusion provisions of sections 1128(a)(1) and 1128(c)(3)(B).
4. The exclusion imposed and directed against Petitioner is mandated by law.
Sections 1128(a)(1) and 1128(c)(3)(B) of the Act require the I.G. to exclude
individuals and entities from
the Medicare and Medicaid programs for a minimum period of five years when such
individuals and
entities have been convicted of a criminal offense relating to the delivery
of a health care item or service.
Congressional intent is clear from the express language of section 1128(c)(3)(B):
"In the case of an
exclusion under subsection (a), the minimum period of exclusion shall be not
less than five years..."
The I.G. must apply the minimum mandatory exclusion of five years once a section
1128(a) violation is
established. Unlike cases brought under section 1128(b) of the Act, where I
have the authority to consider
the reasonableness of the exclusions and the trustworthiness of petitioners,
I have no discretion here and
must affirm the exclusion.
CONCLUSION
Based on the law and the undisputed material facts of this case, I conclude
that the I.G. properly excluded
Petitioner from the Medicare and Medicaid programs for a period of five years,
pursuant to sections
1128(a)(1) and 1128(c)(3)(B) of the Act. Accordingly, I grant summary disposition
in favor of the I.G.
Petitioner's request for an in-person hearing is denied.
_________________________
Edward D. Steinman
Administrative Law Judge
1. "State health care program" is defined by section 1128(h) of the
Social Security Act to cover three
types of federally-financed health care programs, including Medicaid. I use
the term "Medicaid" hereafter
to represent all State health care programs from which Petitioner was excluded.
2. Medi-Cal is the name used for the California State Medicaid program.
3. I admit all of the parties' exhibits into evidence. The parties' exhibits,
briefs, and my findings of fact
and conclusions of law will be referred to as follows:
I.G.'s Exhibits I.G. Ex. (number/page)
Petitioner's Exhibits P. Ex. (number/page)
I.G.'s Brief I.G. Br. at (page)
Petitioner's Brief P. Br. at (page)
I.G.'s Reply Brief I.G. R. Br. at (page)
My Findings of Fact and
Conclusions of Law FFCL (number)
4. Although the petitioner in Craven was convicted of two criminal offenses
relating to fraud,
conspiracy, and filing false tax returns, the I.G. based the petitioner's exclusion
solely on the conspiracy
conviction. In Craven, ALJ Stratton found that the petitioner's conviction for
conspiracy to defraud the
United States by attempting to impair or impede the lawful functions of the
IRS was a conviction relating
to fraud, theft, embezzlement breach of fiduciary responsibility, or other financial
misconduct, within the
meaning of section 1128(b)(1).
5. In Petitioner's letter of November 15, 1991 requesting a hearing, Petitioner
admitted that he was
convicted of a criminal offense under the California Medi-Cal program, but asserted
that Medi-Cal was not
the Medicare or Medicaid program within the meaning of 42 C.F.R. 1001.122. However,
Petitioner
subsequently admitted that Medi-Cal is the name given to the Medicaid program
in California and is a
State health care program as defined by section 1128(h) of the Act. P. Br. at
17.