Matter of Cutie v. Walsh

2024 NY Slip Op 50157(U)
CourtNew York Supreme Court, Washington County
DecidedFebruary 14, 2024
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2024 NY Slip Op 50157(U) (Matter of Cutie v. Walsh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, Washington County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Cutie v. Walsh, 2024 NY Slip Op 50157(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

Matter of Cutie v Walsh (2024 NY Slip Op 50157(U)) [*1]
Matter of Cutie v Walsh
2024 NY Slip Op 50157(U)
Decided on February 14, 2024
Supreme Court, Washington County
Muller, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on February 14, 2024
Supreme Court, Washington County


In the Matter of the Application of Daniel J. Cutie, Petitioner,

against

Frank T. Walsh, Jr., as Acting Inspector General
of the Office of the Medicaid Inspector General, Respondent.




Index No. EC2023-35149

Jacobson Goldberg & Kulb, LLP, Garden City (Jeffrey A. Granat of counsel), for petitioner.

Letitia James, Attorney General, Albany (Amanda Kuryluk of counsel), for respondent.
Robert J. Muller, J.

The New York State Department of Education (hereinafter DOE) oversees the licensing of pharmacists (see Education Law art 137). In this regard, the DOE is responsible for investigating any alleged misconduct within the pharmacy profession and assessing appropriate penalties (see Education Law art 130; 8 NYCRR 29.7).

The New York State Department of Health (hereinafter the DOH), on the other hand, oversees the administration and supervision of the Medicaid program (see Social Services Law § 363-a). In 2006, the Office of the Medicaid Inspector General (hereinafter OMIG) was established as an independent office within the DOH to "reorganize and streamline the state's process of detecting and combating Medicaid fraud and abuse and maximize the recoupment of improper Medicaid payments" (Public Health Law § 30). OMIG is responsible for administrative enforcement actions against any individual or entity that is suspected of engaging in fraud, waste, abuse, or other unacceptable practices in the Medicaid program (see Public Health Law § 31). In this regard, OMIG may sanction an individual or entity with exclusion from the program — where deemed appropriate — and determines any subsequent requests for reinstatement (see Public Health Law § 32 [6]; 18 NYCRR part 515).

Petitioner became a licensed pharmacist in 1989 and thereafter spent several years in [*2]retail pharmacy. In 2002, he opened Cutie Pharma-Care, Inc., a long-term care pharmacy in the Town of Greenwich, Washington County.[FN1] At all relevant times, petitioner was the supervising pharmacist of Cutie Pharma-Care.

In or around 2009, the DOE charged Cutie Pharma-Care with the following specification of professional misconduct:

"A. [O]n or about June 14, 2006, [Cutie Pharma-Care] committed unprofessional conduct by its agents and employees, as set forth below:
1. The pharmacy held for sale misbranded drugs[;]
2. Pharmacists received returned drugs from the facility accounts (such as adult homes) and . . . maintained the balance of the prescriptions among the pharmacy stock[;]
3. The pharmacy maintained outdated and/or misbranded drugs in stock[;]
4. The pharmacy maintained adulterated drugs[;]
5. Pharmacists dispensed prescriptions for controlled substances in excess of legal quantities[;]
6. Pharmacists dispensed oral prescriptions for controlled substances that lacked required information documents on the oral prescriptions and/or lacked the required hard cover prescription attached to the oral prescription or order[; and]
7. Pharmacists dispensed drugs without valid prescriptions . . . .
"B. [O]n or about September 20, 2007, [Cutie Pharma-Care] committed unprofessional conduct by its agents and employees in that[ t]he pharmacy held for sale misbranded drugs . . . " [NYSCEF document No. 25, at pp 42-44].

On May 28, 2009, petitioner signed a Consent Order with the DOE on behalf of Cutie Pharma-Care admitting guilt to charges A (2), (6) and (7) in full satisfaction of the specification. He agreed to a penalty of censure and reprimand, together with a 2-year period of probation and a fine of $10,000.00. As a result of this Consent Order, petitioner was also censured by OMIG, effective April 29, 2010 (see 18 NYCRR 515.3 [a] [2]).

In or around 2019, the DOE charged petitioner with a second specification of professional misconduct:

"[Petitioner], on or about and between August 28, 2018 and November 13, 2018, while employed and practicing as a supervising pharmacist at and part-owner of Cutie Pharma-Care . . . committed the following:
"1. [I]n his capacity as supervising pharmacist, [petitioner] permitted expired controlled substances to be stored within the narcotics inventory cabinet[;]
"2. [I]n his capacity as supervising pharmacist, [petitioner] permitted outdated, misbranded, and/or adulterated drugs to be maintained in stock[;]
"3. [I]n his capacity as supervising pharmacist, [petitioner] permitted his employees to remove returned medications from the 'medicine in time' blister packaging and return said product to stock bottles for future use[;]
"4. [I]n his capacity as supervising pharmacist, [petitioner] permitted his employees to remove co-mingled medications from the returned 'medicine in time' blister packaging and return said product to stock bottles for future use[;]
"5. [I]n his capacity as supervising pharmacist, [petitioner] permitted the failure to affix lot number(s) on the 'medicine in time' blister packs[;]
"6. [I]n his capacity as supervising pharmacist, [petitioner] permitted the co-mingling [of] medication of different strength dosages in the same stock bottles[;]
"7. [I]n his capacity as supervising pharmacist, [petitioner] permitted the co-mingling of medication of different types in the same stock bottle[;]
"8. [I]n his capacity as supervising pharmacist, [petitioner] permitted the employees under his supervision to fill stock bottles with more pills than labeled on the stock bottle;
"9. [Petitioner] accepted deliveries of medications at an unsecured porch of his private residence and/or directed and/or permitted an unlicensed employee . . . to accept medication deliveries at her private residence;
"10. [I]n his capacity as supervising pharmacist, [petitioner] on or about August 28, 2018, permitted the pharmacy to operate at greater than a two to one (2:1) ratio of unlicensed persons to assist the licensed pharmacists[;]
"11. [Petitioner,] or a licensed pharmacist under his supervision, dispensed or permitted the dispensing of a 'medicine in time' blister package of co-mingled medication that was prepared for patient 'G.W.,' a 93 year old patient . . . , which contained multiple 2.5 mg doses of methotrexate, a cancer and rheumatoid arthritis medication when the patient was actually prescribed and should have been dispensed 2.5 mg of metolazone, a diuretic medication[;]
"12.

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2024 NY Slip Op 50157(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-cutie-v-walsh-nysupctwash-2024.