Giokaris v. Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 29, 2026
Docket1-25-2167
StatusUnpublished

This text of Giokaris v. Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation (Giokaris v. Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Giokaris v. Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation, (Ill. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

2026 IL App (1st) 252167-U FIRST DISTRICT, SIXTH DIVISION May 29, 2026

No. 1-25-2167

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1). _____________________________________________________________________________

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT _____________________________________________________________________________

DEMETRIOS J. GIOKARIS, M.D., ) ) Appeal from the Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Circuit Court of ) Cook County, Illinois. v. ) ) ILLINOIS DEPARTMENT OF FINANCIAL ) No. 2025CH02275 AND PROFESSIONAL REGULATION, ) MARIO TRETO, JR., and CAMILLE LINDSAY, ) The Honorable ) Cecilia A. Horan, Defendants- Appellees. ) Judge Presiding.

_____________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE GAMRATH delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice C.A. Walker and Justice Pucinski concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: We reverse the final administrative decision of the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation denying appellant a hearing on the merits of his petition and remand for a hearing.

¶2 Dr. Demetrios J. Giokaris appeals from the circuit court’s order affirming the

Department of Financial and Professional Regulation’s final administrative decision, which

denied him a merits hearing and indefinitely suspended his medical license for failing to report

(1) an adverse action taken against him and (2) an investigation arising from the denial of his No. 1-25-2167

application for reinstatement to the Illinois Medicaid Program. We reverse and remand for a

hearing on the merits.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 Giokaris is an Illinois physician who obtained his medical license in 1983. On four

occasions, his Physician and Surgeon License and his Controlled Substance License were

suspended for improper prescribing of controlled substances or failing to comply with regulatory

requirements. In 1996, he withdrew from participation in the Medicaid Program. He applied for

reinstatement on April 6, 2022.

¶5 While that application was pending, the Department filed another administrative

complaint alleging that Giokaris certified causes of death without verifying the accuracy of the

diagnoses. He and the Department entered a consent order imposing a 30-day suspension,

indefinite probation for at least three years, a $5,000 fine, CME requirements, and monitoring.

Sections C(iv) and C(v) of the consent order required Giokaris to notify the Department within

10 days of “any adverse action” against him related to the practice of medicine and any

“investigation” initiated by another entity. Under section L, if the Director imposed a summary

indefinite suspension for violating the order, Giokaris would be afforded a hearing on the merits

within 30 days if he filed a written petition within 30 days contesting the factual basis for that

suspension.

¶6 On October 18, 2024, the Illinois Department of Health and Family Services Office of the

Inspector General (IDHFS/OIG) denied Giokaris’s Medicaid reinstatement application after the

Medical Quality Review Committee (MQRC) found his medical care exceeded patient needs,

was of grossly inferior quality, and posed a risk of harm. Giokaris received the denial letter on or

-2- No. 1-25-2167

about October 29, 2024, and requested an administrative hearing on the denial of his application.

That appeal is still pending and not before us.

¶7 On December 5, 2024, Camille Lindsay, Acting Director of the Division of Professional

Regulation, indefinitely suspended Giokaris’s medical license for a minimum of twelve months

for failing to report the Medicaid reinstatement denial and the MQRC review. The suspension

relied on an affidavit from Temple Hall of the Probation Compliance Unit stating that both the

denial and the underlying MQRC review/investigation were reportable under the consent order.

¶8 Giokaris timely filed a petition to contest the suspension and requested a hearing under

section L of the consent order. Giokaris argued that Hall’s affidavit was so conclusory and

devoid of factual detail that it failed to establish a violation, and that Hall did not aver he was

ever notified of the denial or the MQRC investigation. He also contended that the MQRC review

did not constitute an investigation, the denial of his reinstatement application was not an adverse

action related to his practice of medicine, and the sanction imposed was disproportionate.

¶9 A formal hearing was scheduled for January 23, 2025. After submission of witness and

exhibit lists, Giokaris sought issuance of subpoenas. The Department opposed most requests as

irrelevant, and, on January 17, 2025, the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) denied them. In

accordance with administrative procedures, Giokaris requested a second hearing regarding the

issuance of the subpoenas to be held before a different ALJ. The initial ALJ granted this request

and struck the hearing on the petition. The hearing on the subpoenas took place on January 23,

2025, which was the date originally scheduled for the petition hearing. During this hearing,

Giokaris’s counsel acknowledged that Giokaris received the IDHFS/OIG denial letter on or

about October 29, 2024, and was aware of MQRC’s probe into his medical practice. The ALJ

and counsel for the Department suggested this admission eliminated all factual disputes raised in

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Giokaris’s petition and questioned whether a hearing on the merits was even necessary.

Nonetheless, a hearing was still contemplated at that point. However, to remain timely under the

consent order, it would have had to be held on or before January 29, 2025. After hearing

argument on the subpoenas on January 23, the ALJ took the matter under advisement and set a

status date of January 27, 2025.

¶ 10 On January 23, 2025, with the 30-day deadline approaching, Giokaris filed a motion to

reschedule the hearing for a date on or before January 29. The Department filed a response on

January 27, arguing that Giokaris should not be afforded a hearing. The Department contended

that because Giokaris had admitted to the relevant facts, there was no longer a factual basis to

contest the summary suspension, rendering his remaining arguments purely legal in nature. That

same day, the ALJ ruled on the subpoenas, denying several of Giokaris’s requests but allowing a

subpoena for Hall, who appeared on the Department’s witness list. Consequently, as of January

27, a hearing was still anticipated, although a specific date had not yet been established.

¶ 11 However, on January 28, one day before the 30-day period elapsed, the ALJ entered an

order denying Giokaris’s motion to reschedule. The ALJ agreed with the Department’s position

that there were no factual matters in dispute and proceeded to rule on the petition. The ALJ

found that Giokaris violated the consent order by not reporting the MQRC review/investigation

and Medicaid application denial as an adverse action. Accordingly, it denied his request for a

merits hearing, denied his petition contesting the suspension, and removed the matter from the

call.

¶ 12 Giokaris sought administrative review in the circuit court, asserting breach of section L,

due process violations, and erroneous statutory interpretation. The circuit court affirmed the

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