David S. Muransky, D.C., DAB No. 1227 (1991)

Department of Health and Human Services

DEPARTMENTAL APPEALS BOARD

Appellate Division

In the Case of: David S. Muransky, D.C.,
Docket No. C-229
Petitioner,
Decision No. 1227
- v. -
The Inspector General.

DATE: February 13, 1991

FINAL DECISION ON REVIEW OF ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE DECISION

David S. Muransky, D.C., (Petitioner) requested review by the Appellate
Panel of a September 5, 1990 decision by Administrative Law Judge Steven
T. Kessel (ALJ). The decision sustained the determination of the
Inspector General (I.G.) to exclude Petitioner from participation in the
Medicare program for five years and to direct his exclusion from state
health care programs, such as Medicaid, for the same length of time.
Petitioner's exclusions were based on section 1128(a)(1) of the Social
Security Act (Act), which provides as follows:

(a) Mandatory Exclusion.--The Secretary shall exclude the
following individuals and entities from participation in any
program under title XVIII and shall direct that the following
individuals and entities be excluded from participation in any
State health care program . . . .

(1) Conviction of program-related crimes.--Any
individual or entity that has been convicted of a criminal
offense related to the delivery of an item or service under
title XVIII or under any State health care program.

Section 1128(c)(3)(B) of the Act further provides:

In the case of an exclusion under subsection (a), the minimum
period of exclusion shall be not less than five years . . . .

Petitioner is a chiropractor practicing in Florida. During 1984 and
1985 the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the I.G. conducted a joint
investigation of Medicare claims submitted by several chiropractors,
including Petitioner, in south Florida. The investigation of Petitioner
was completed in 1985. On September 27, 1985 the carrier for the
Medicare Part B Insurance program in Florida, Blue Cross and Blue Shield
of Florida, Inc., notified Petitioner that payments on all assigned
Medicare claims submitted by him would be suspended immediately because
of evidence of misrepresentation of claims.

As a result of the same FBI-I.G. investigation, two other chiropractors
were convicted and/or pled guilty to submitting false claims in 1987.
Later that year the I.G. subsequently excluded these chiropractors from
participation in the Medicare program.

It was not until November 15, 1988, however, that Petitioner was charged
in a criminal information in the United States District Court for the
Southern District of Florida with four counts of unlawfully devising a
scheme and artifice to defraud and to obtain money from the Medicare
program through its carrier, Blue Shield, by means of false and
fraudulent pretenses, representations, and promises. The basis for the
charges was that in 1984 and 1985 Petitioner had submitted claims for
spinal manipulations which Petitioner did not perform. On March 31,
1989, the United States District Court for the Southern District of
Florida entered a judgment showing that Petitioner pled guilty to all
four counts. The court sentenced Petitioner to three years probation,
and ordered him to pay a fine of $4,000, restitution of $245.76, and a
special assessment fee of $50.

On June 26, 1989, the I.G. notified Petitioner that, as a result of his
conviction of a criminal offense related to the delivery of an item or
service under Medicare, the Department of Health and Human Services was
required to exclude him from eligibility in the Medicare and Medicaid
programs. The I.G. also notified Petitioner that he had the opportunity
to provide information the I.G. should consider in establishing the
period of exclusion. Petitioner supplied such information on July 31,
1989. On January 19, 1990, the I.G. notified Petitioner that due to his
conviction he was excluded from participation in the Medicare and
Medicaid programs for a period of five years.

On appeal to this Panel, Petitioner alleged that his exclusion was
inequitable and unreasonable. Petitioner contended that because of an
unexplained delay by the United States Attorney in prosecuting the
charges against him, he unfairly received a five-year exclusion while
other chiropractors convicted through the same investigation were
speedily prosecuted, received three-year exclusions, and have now
resumed practice under the Medicare program. Petitioner further claimed
that the severity of his exclusion was disproportionate to the small
monetary damages the Medicare program incurred and that his actions did
not threaten or harm the beneficiaries of the Medicare program.
Petitioner asserted that the I.G.'s imposition of a five-year exclusion
failed to distinguish between different levels of culpability and was
therefore unreasonable. Petitioner also argued that his due process
rights had been violated since the imposition of a five-year exclusion
in 1990 after he had already been suspended by the Medicare state
carrier in 1985 is arbitrary and capricious.

Based on our review of the ALJ's decision and the record below, the
parties' written submissions before us, and the following analysis, we
conclude that the ALJ's decision was correct. In sustaining the I.G.'s
determination to exclude Petitioner, the ALJ made 16 findings of fact
and conclusions of law (FFCLs). Although neither Petitioner nor the
I.G. specifically challenged any of these FFCLs before this Panel, we
have determined that FFCL No. 12 contains an unprejudicial factual error
relating to a date. We therefore amend FFCL No. 12 to read as follows:

12. On January 19, 1990, the I.G. notified Petitioner that he
was being excluded from participation in the Medicare and
Medicaid programs as a result of his conviction of a criminal
offense related to the delivery of an item or service under
Medicare. Stipulation of Facts, No. 10.

We affirm and adopt all the other FFCLs as stated in the ALJ's decision.
We find that there was undisputed evidence in the record before the ALJ
to support Petitioner's mandatory exclusion from the Medicare and
Medicaid programs and that Petitioner's arguments raise collateral
matters that the ALJ properly refused to consider or are without merit.

I. Any delay in the prosecution of Petitioner is irrelevant to the
merits of his exclusion by the I.G.

Petitioner alleged that the length of his exclusion, five years,
resulted from a delay by the United States Attorney in prosecuting his
case. Petitioner referred to other chiropractors who had been speedily
prosecuted and who received, as a result of their convictions,
exclusions of only three years. Petitioner contended that the Assistant
United States Attorney's four-year delay in prosecuting him resulted in
his receiving a five-year exclusion because of an intervening change in
section 1128 of the Act. According to Petitioner, this disparity of
treatment by the I.G. in the duration of the exclusion is inequitable.

The two other chiropractors cited by Petitioner in his brief before this
Panel received three-year exclusions from the I.G. in 1987. Prior to
the enactment of the Medicare and Medicaid Patient and Program
Prevention Act of 1987, Public Law 100-93, which amended section 1128(a)
of the Act, there was no specified minimum period for the duration of an
exclusion. The other two chiropractors were convicted and subsequently
excluded under this former version of section 1128. Petitioner's
conviction in 1989, on the other hand, placed him under the provisions
of the new version of section 1128(a) with its mandatory minimum period
of exclusion of five years.

Before the ALJ, Petitioner did not explicitly make this same argument.
There Petitioner argued that the I.G.'s imposition of a five-year
exclusion was an unconstitutional retroactive application of the new
version of section 1128(a) to the facts of his particular case. The ALJ
found that, while the events which led to Petitioner's conviction
occurred in 1984 and 1985, Petitioner was not convicted until March 31,
1989. The ALJ further found that the new version of section 1128(a) was
not retroactively applied to Petitioner as Petitioner was in fact
convicted after Congress amended section 1128(a). Therefore, the ALJ
concluded, the I.G.'s determination to assess a five-year exclusion was
authorized by Congress.

While Petitioner did not re-assert this argument on the retroactivity of
the new version of section 1128 before us, we consider his position that
delay by the prosecutors unfairly placed him under the new version of
section 1128(a) to be in the same vein. We view Petitioner's
contentions that some delay by his prosecutors led to a longer period of
exclusion than received by others as an attack on the process
surrounding his conviction that is not properly before this Panel. This
Board has previously held that arguments before a Panel about the
process leading to a petitioner's criminal conviction are completely
irrelevant to an exclusion proceeding. Andy E. Bailey, DAB No. 1131
(1990), p. 3.

There is nothing in the record before us to show that the I.G. was in
any way responsible for any delay that might have occurred in
prosecuting Petitioner. 1/ Within three months of Petitioner's
conviction in March 1989, the I.G. notified Petitioner of his imminent
exclusion. After receiving Petitioner's arguments concerning the
possible severity of any exclusion, the I.G., in a timely fashion,
notified Petitioner of his exclusion. We thus find no unreasonable
delay by the I.G. in its treatment of Petitioner. If Petitioner wishes
to pursue this argument, he should find a more suitable forum. See
Bailey, p. 3, n. 3.


II. The duration of the exclusion was proper.

Petitioner contended that a five-year exclusion was unreasonable in
light of the circumstances of his case. Petitioner claimed that the ALJ
had the authority to decide the reasonableness of the length of an
exclusion based on the facts of a particular case. Petitioner stated
that the amount of the billing errors was a small sum ($245.76), his
offenses did not threaten the health or safety of Medicare
beneficiaries, and the offenses arose because he signed forms prepared
by his staff. Petitioner asserted that the I.G.'s enforcement of
violations of Medicare regulations fails to distinguish between major
violations, such as gross negligence, and minor levels of culpability,
such as billing errors. Petitioner argued that a five-year exclusion
was grossly disproportionate to his offense, especially in light of his
prior unblemished record and high standing in his community.

While not explicitly making the argument, Petitioner here seemed to be
suggesting that the ALJ should have invoked the permissive exclusion
sanction provided for in section 1128(b) of the Act. Under this
provision there is no specified minimum period of exclusion for certain
specified convictions. Yet, in referring to the above listed allegedly
mitigating circumstances, Petitioner admitted that he had stipulated
that there is a statute requiring a mandatory five-year exclusion for
convictions relating to the type of offenses to which he pled guilty.
This statute, section 1128(c) of the Act, does not provide for any
discretion by the I.G. in establishing the minimum length of an
exclusion. For a conviction related to the delivery of a Medicare item
or service, "the minimum period of exclusion shall be not less than five
years . . . ." Contrary to Petitioner's assertions, the ALJ has no
authority to lower this minimum period of exclusion. The ALJ could not
have considered whether a permissive exclusion under section 1128(b)
would have been appropriate in lieu of a mandatory exclusion under
section 1128(a). See, e.g., Jack W. Greene, DAB No. 1078 (1989), pp.
9-11, aff'd, 731 F.Supp. 838 (E.D. Tenn. 1990).

We find nothing disproportionate in the duration of the exclusion
imposed on Petitioner. Petitioner pled guilty to submitting bills for
services he did not perform. Congress amended section 1128 to require
excluding such individuals from participating in Medicare and Medicaid.
The goal was not only to protect program beneficiaries, but also to
protect the federal fisc. See, e.g., Napoleon S. Maminta, DAB No. 1135
(1990), pp. 12-15. As to Petitioner's claim that the I.G.'s imposition
of a five-year exclusion fails to distinguish between major and minor
violations of the Medicare regulations, we consider it sufficient to
note that the five-year period is the minimum exclusion and that in
cases involving major violations the I.G. has the discretion to exclude
a provider for any greater period of time.

Accordingly, we find no error in the ALJ's affirmation of Petitioner's
five-year exclusion.


III. Petitioner's suspension by the state Medicare carrier does not
prevent the I.G. from excluding him from participation in the Medicare
and Medicaid programs.

Petitioner did not deny that he was convicted of a criminal offense
related to the delivery of an item or service under the Medicare
program. Rather, Petitioner's argument against his exclusion is that
he had already been suspended by Blue Shield for five years, since
September 1985, for the same acts that brought about his exclusion.
According to Petitioner, a mandatory exclusion of an additional five
years is unreasonable on its face and patently inequitable in light of
the exclusions received by the other convicted chiropractors.
Petitioner claimed that the remedial purpose of an exclusion had already
been served by Petitioner's suspension from the Medicare program by Blue
Shield for over five years. He maintained that any further barring of
his property interest in participation in the Medicare program would
violate the due process clause of the fifth amendment to the United
States Constitution. Petitioner contended that there is an abuse of due
process and equal protection when the government withholds payments for
an unlimited number of years, without affording him a hearing, and then
seeks to impose an additional five-year exclusion.

Petitioner apparently does not grasp the distinction between a
suspension by a state Medicare carrier of the payment of Medicare claims
and an exclusion from the Medicare program. When Blue Shield suspended
Petitioner in September 1985, the effect of that suspension was the
deferral of payment on any current or future assigned claims by
Petitioner for rendered Medicare services pending investigation of the
circumstances giving rise to the suspension. See 42 C.F.R. 405.371(b).
Blue Shield did not bar Petitioner from continuing to treat Medicare
beneficiaries or state that it would stop processing any suspended
claims. Blue Shield would have ultimately made payment on assigned
claims filed during the period of the suspension once it was determined
that the claims were for necessary covered services and that no
overpayment to Petitioner would result from payment of the claims. From
Petitioner's arguments we assume that once he received notice of his
suspension by Blue Shield, he ceased, at his own choosing, to provide
treatment to Medicare beneficiaries. See Petitioner's Exhibit F. He
was, however, under no compulsion, legal or otherwise, to stop treating
Medicare beneficiaries.

An exclusion, on the other hand, effectively bars Petitioner from
participating in the Medicare program and precludes payment for any
Medicare claims, irrespective of the nature or the necessity of the
services rendered. While prior to the 1987 amendments, the statute and
the regulations did refer to suspension from participation in the
Medicare program, it was clearly intended to be a different action from
that contemplated by 42 C.F.R. 405.371(b).

Petitioner's position that the I.G.'s imposition of a five-year
exclusion on top of his suspension is in effect barring Petitioner from
participation in the Medicare program for 10 years is, therefore,
incorrect. Petitioner's non-participation in the Medicare program from
the point of his suspension by Blue Shield to the date of his exclusion
was a voluntary decision by Petitioner. If Petitioner was "barred" from
participating in the Medicare program while he was under suspension by
Blue Shield, it was Petitioner himself who did the barring.

We see nothing unreasonable or inequitable in the I.G.'s exclusion of
Petitioner. The I.G. is not barring Petitioner from participation in
the Medicare program for 10 years. The I.G. is merely carrying out the
specific directive of section 1128 of the Act that a criminal conviction
related to the delivery of a Medicare item or service mandates a
five-year exclusion. By his plea of guilt to submitting fraudulent
Medicare claims, Petitioner must be excluded from the Medicare program
for the minimum period of five years. The fact that this five-year
exclusion will ensue immediately after Petitioner has voluntarily
withdrawn himself from the Medicare program for approximately five years
simply has no bearing on the legality of the I.G.'s action. Even if we
have the authority to decide constitutional claims, it is obvious that
there is no basis for concluding that any of Petitioner's constitutional
rights were violated by the I.G.'s imposition of an exclusion. 2/


Conclusion

Based on the foregoing analysis, we affirm the ALJ's decision upholding
the exclusion of Petitioner for five years. In so doing, we affirm each
and every one of the ALJ's findings of fact and conclusions of law (with
FFCL No. 12 amended as specified) and adopt them as our own.

___________________________ Theodore J.
Roumel U.S. Public Health Service

___________________________ Alexander G.
Teitz

___________________________ Judith A.
Ballard Presiding Panel Member.1.
Petitioner in his reply cited Thomas C.
Chestney, D.M.D., DAB Civ. Rem. C-53
(1989), apparently to support his argument
that the exclusion period should not be
unduly prolonged. This decision was
discussed at length in Samuel W. Chang,
M.D., DAB No. 1198 (1990), where the Board
said that even though the I.G.'s exclusion
notice was delayed in issuance, the ALJ
could not decrease the minimum five-year
exclusion length fixed by statute, nor
could he decide when the exclusion was to
begin. In any event, neither these two
cases nor Ram v. Heckler, 792 F. 2d 444
(4th Cir. 1986) (also cited by Petitioner
and discussed in Chang), are relevant
because there is no contention here that
the I.G. did not move promptly after the
conviction, nor that Petitioner did not
receive prompt disposition before the ALJ.

2. Petitioner acknowledged the Board's inability to weigh
constitutional claims when he requested that his "case be certified for
direct expedited appeal to Federal District Court where the
constitutional issues may be resolved." Reply Brief, p. 5. The Board's
procedures do not provide for any such certification, but the Board has
resolved Petitioner's appeal