Gulf Coast Pharmaceuticals Plus v. United States

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Mississippi
DecidedApril 26, 2023
Docket1:22-cv-00263
StatusUnknown

This text of Gulf Coast Pharmaceuticals Plus v. United States (Gulf Coast Pharmaceuticals Plus v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gulf Coast Pharmaceuticals Plus v. United States, (S.D. Miss. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF MISSISSIPPI SOUTHERN DIVISION

GULF COAST § PLAINTIFF PHARMACEUTICALS PLUS § § v. § Civil No. 1:22-cv-263-HSO-RPM § UNITED STATES OF AMERICA § § DEFENDANT

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA’S MOTION [9] TO DISMISS BEFORE THE COURT is Defendant the United States of America’s Motion [9] to Dismiss Plaintiff Gulf Coast Pharmaceuticals Plus’s Complaint [1], which seeks the return of property pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 41(g). This Motion [9] is fully briefed. After due consideration of the Motion [9], the pleadings, and relevant legal authority, the Court finds that Defendant the United States of America’s Motion [9] to Dismiss should be granted, and that this civil action should be dismissed with prejudice. I. BACKGROUND The present case arises out of the seizure by Defendant the United States of America (“Defendant” or “the Government”) of Plaintiff Gulf Coast Pharmaceuticals Plus’s (“Plaintiff” or “GCPP”) property from its premises, pursuant to a search warrant issued in a separate criminal case pending in this Court against GCPP’s operator, Kenneth Bryan Ritchey (“Ritchey”). See generally United States v. Kenneth Bryan Ritchey, Criminal No. 1:21-cr-6-HSO-RPM (S.D. Miss. 2023); Compl. [1] at 2- 3. On April 15, 2020, the Government obtained a search warrant (the “first warrant”) to search the premises of GCPP for “[a]ll items relating to violations of the statutes listed on the warrant whether printed or electronic format for the period of December 1, 2019, through and including the present.” Id. at 11; Ex. [1-1]

at 64 (sealed). The first warrant found that probable cause existed relating to the hoarding of designated scarce materials, in violation of the Defense Production Act, 50 U.S.C. §§ 4512, 4513 (“DPA”). Id. at 1. The alleged criminal scheme identified in the first warrant is referred to as the “PPE scheme.” Compl. [1] at 12. During the first search, the Government seized both physical and electronic property. Mem. [10] at 2. Although certain physical items were removed, the Government imaged all digital data contained on GCPP’s computers and security

system on site, leaving the devices and original records at the premises in GCPP’s possession. Id. at 2-3. The Government notes that all property specifically requested by GCPP on the grounds that they were essential and necessary for its business were promptly returned to it, and that no other items were ever specifically requested. Id. at 3. The Government further asserts that it provided GCPP with digital copies of the property imaged during the first search on June 2, 2020. Id.

On August 18, 2021, the Government obtained a second search warrant (the “second warrant”) authorizing the search of electronic data it had seized pursuant to the first warrant, for “fruits, contraband, evidence and instrumentalities of violations of” 18 U.S.C. §§ 1035, 1343, 1347, and 1349, “occurring on or about August 31, 2014 through the date of collection on April 17, 2020,” pertaining to “Health Care Fraud, Wire Fraud, Conspiracy, and False Statements relating to Health Care Matters.” Ex. [1-2] at 11 (sealed). The alleged criminal scheme identified in the second warrant is referred to as the “invoice backdating scheme.” Compl. [1] at 12.

In this case, GCPP claims that the Government’s searches exceeded the scope of the warrants and that GCPP’s property should be returned to it pursuant to Rule 41(g). The Government states, and GCPP does not dispute, that it has retained approximately seven banker’s boxes of paper records, in addition to electronic copies of data seized pursuant to the first warrant. Mem. [10] at 1-2; Mem. [13] at 1. Notably, the Government has provided GCPP with copies of all seized property still in its possession. Id.

Ritchey was ultimately indicted on six counts relating to both the PPE scheme and the invoice backdating scheme. Id.; see Redact. Sup. Indict. [33], United States v. Kenneth Bryan Ritchey, Criminal No. 1:21-cr-6-HSO-RPM (S.D. Miss. Sep. 21, 2021). On March 22, 2023, Ritchey pled guilty to Count 4 of a Superseding Indictment [33], which charged him with conspiracy to defraud the United States in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371. Plea Agree. [136], United States v. Kenneth Bryan

Ritchey, Criminal No. 1:21-cr-6-HSO-RPM (S.D. Miss. Mar. 22, 2023). GCPP’s Complaint [1] in the present case, filed prior to Ritchey’s guilty plea, alleges: (1) that the first search warrant failed to establish probable cause because health and medical resources necessary to respond to the spread of COVID-19 had not been designated as “scarce materials” subject to the DPA until March 30, 2020; (2) that the Government exceeded the temporal scope of the first warrant by seizing electronic data from before December 1, 2019, and retaining it for over a year; and (3) that the Government executed warrantless searches of GCPP’s property through the actions of unindicted co-conspirators of Ritchey, whom Plaintiff claims acted as

the Government’s “agents.” Id. at 13-18. The Complaint [1] seeks: (1) an order declaring that the Government exceeded the scope of the first warrant and directing it to “return and/or delete all copies of all records that were created prior to December 1, 2019 and after April 15, 2020;” (2) an order “declaring that the magistrate incorrectly found that probable cause existed that a violation of the DPA occurred prior to March 30, 2020,” and directing the Government to “immediately return and/or delete all copies of such

records that were created prior to March 30, 2020;” (3) an order declaring that the Government illegally retained all of the records that were not within the scope of the first warrant, whether that scope began on December 1, 2019, or March 30, 2020, and directing the Government to immediately return and/or delete all copies of such records; (4) an order declaring that the warrantless searches conducted by certain co-conspirators constituted government searches, “subject to the warrant

requirement of the Fourth Amendment and that all of the evidence obtained by the government as a result of those searches must be returned and/deleted immediately;” and (5) “an order forbidding the government from using any illegally obtained records in any Court, for any purpose.” Id. at 34-35. On January 5, 2023, the Government filed the present Motion [9] to Dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), arguing that while GCPP’s Complaint [1] was “nominally about recovering property,” it was substantively “about suppression of evidence obtained in a criminal investigation that culminated in the prosecution of Gulf Coast’s operator, Kenneth Ritchey.” Mem. [10] at 1. The

parties agree that because GCPP has not been indicted for a crime, the Court should apply the pre-indictment standard in deciding Plaintiff’s petition for return of property under Rule 41(g).1 See Mem.

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Gulf Coast Pharmaceuticals Plus v. United States, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-coast-pharmaceuticals-plus-v-united-states-mssd-2023.