Moore v. State Med. Bd. of Ohio

2019 Ohio 4330
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 22, 2019
Docket18AP-644
StatusPublished

This text of 2019 Ohio 4330 (Moore v. State Med. Bd. of Ohio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. State Med. Bd. of Ohio, 2019 Ohio 4330 (Ohio Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

[Cite as Moore v. State Med. Bd. of Ohio, 2019-Ohio-4330.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

John Pease Moore, III, M.D., :

Appellant-Appellant, : No. 18AP-644 v. : (C.P.C. No. 16CV-10523)

State Medical Board of Ohio, : (REGULAR CALENDAR)

Appellee-Appellee. :

D E C I S I O N

Rendered on October 22, 2019

On brief: George A. Katchmer, for appellant. Argued: George A. Katchmer.

On brief: Dave Yost, Attorney General, and Kyle C. Wilcox, for appellee. Argued: Kyle C. Wilcox.

APPEAL from the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas

NELSON, J. {¶ 1} The state medical board does not and is not designed to provide a venue in which a doctor may relitigate the merits of criminal offenses to which he has pleaded guilty in a court of law. Indeed, for purposes of a medical board licensure hearing, guilty pleas and judicial findings of guilt are "conclusive proof of all the elements" of crimes committed by the doctor. Ohio Administrative Code 4731-13-24. {¶ 2} So when John Pease Moore, III, M.D., tells us with regard to state crimes (committed years after a federal felony to which he also had pleaded guilty) that because "he pled to only seven fourth and fifth degree felonies," Appellant's Brief at 18, and because he thereby escaped "overwhelmingly more draconian charges," id. at 15, the medical board in considering whether license revocation was the appropriate board sanction should have No. 18AP-644 2

evaluated "the factors leading to his plea," id., and "the decision to plead," id. at 18, we are not persuaded. {¶ 3} Dr. Moore, III's argument that he should have been permitted during board licensure proceedings to call additional witnesses or offer additional document passages in an attempt to look behind his plea calculations and call into question the validity of the charges of which he was convicted is made no more forceful by his general failure to identify for us which witnesses or passages he means, what they would have said, or how they would have affected the outcome of the licensure determination. See id. at 1-19 (providing only one witness name, that of medical board investigator Michael Staples from whose words Dr. Moore proposed to show that "improper investigative techniques were used against him" in the (second) criminal case, see id. at 8, with hearing transcript citations limited exclusively to that matter, and giving not one reference to any specific evidentiary document); but see id. at 14 (making lone citation to administrative hearing officer's Report and Recommendation, specifying that Dr. Moore was permitted by contrast "to develop a full record explaining his conduct and reasons for acting as he did based on what was apparent to him at the time" of the offenses). {¶ 4} The decision of the common pleas court affirming as supported by reliable, probative, and substantial evidence and in accordance with law the unanimous order of the medical board that permanently revokes Dr. Moore's certificate to practice medicine and surgery in the State of Ohio admirably recites the facts of this case and explores the doctor's generally unsuccessful efforts at the administrative hearing to adduce evidence related to perceived flaws in the criminal case investigation (and trenching sometimes on what the hearing examiner found to be privileged investigatory material). August 27, 2018 Decision and Judgment Entry Affirming the October 19, 2016 Order of the State Medical Board of Ohio. {¶ 5} Among other matters, the record reflects that Dr. Moore first pleaded guilty to a felony in 2000, when he admitted to making False Statements Relating to Health Care Matters (involving "upcoding" on medical bills and misstatements to evade insurance limitations on chiropractic procedures) in violation of 18 U.S.C. 1035. He got a break: after the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio sentenced him to probation, the medical board stayed revocation of his license and suspended him from No. 18AP-644 3

practice for two years (a suspension ultimately served during 2007-2009, followed by a probationary period that ended in 2012). {¶ 6} Dr. Moore then developed a medical practice that included addiction treatment and pain management, administered from three offices. By 2016, he was back in court as a criminal defendant. He pleaded guilty to Medicaid fraud as a fifth-degree felony, two counts of trafficking in drugs as fourth-degree felonies (Ambien and Suboxone), two counts of trafficking in drugs as fifth-degree felonies (Ambien and Diazapam), and fifth-degree felonies of theft and permitting drug abuse. The Greene County Common Pleas Court convicted him of those offenses, sentenced him to 20 months imprisonment, and ordered forfeiture of close to $80,000. {¶ 7} Upon being granted early release from prison, he appeared with counsel at a medical board hearing he had requested to answer charges that he had been convicted of one or more felonies and had furnished drugs in violation of state law, each grounds for discipline up to licensure revocation pursuant to R.C. 4731.22(A) in light of 4731.22 (B)(9) and (B)(3), respectively. The Hearing Examiner's detailed 30-page November 4, 2016 Report and Recommendation summarizes with some care matters including: the evidence taken and excluded; Dr. Moore's position at that hearing; the hearing officer's view that "[e]vidence that is offered solely to negate or contradict an element of the offense to which Dr. Moore pled guilty is irrelevant because it is foreclosed by O.A.C. § 4731-13-24" and that "alleged wrongdoing by the State in investigating or prosecuting its case against Dr. Moore" also does not inform the "Board's decision as to the extent to which Dr. Moore's character and fitness merit his licensure as a physician, and what sanctions are merited by Dr. Moore's conduct"; the hearing officer's openness to hearing evidence offered by Dr. Moore "explaining his conduct or reasons for acting as he did, based on what was apparent to him at the time"; the hearing officer's assessment of various privilege claims; specific findings of fact and conclusions of law; an explanation for the hearing officer's lack of confidence that Dr. Moore "will not continue to commit criminal offenses in the course of his practice if permitted to do so"; and the recommendation that Dr. Moore's medical license be permanently revoked. {¶ 8} Over Dr. Moore's objections, the medical board voted unanimously on October 19, 2016 to adopt its hearing examiner's report and recommendation and to revoke No. 18AP-644 4

permanently Dr. Moore's certificate to practice medicine and surgery in Ohio. Dr. Moore filed an administrative appeal with the Franklin County Common Pleas Court pursuant to Ohio Revised Code Chapter 119; the trial court's careful decision affirmed the medical board's determination under the appropriate standard. {¶ 9} On appeal, Dr. Moore does not challenge the trial court's finding that "several of the [proposed] witnesses" had been "properly excluded by the Hearing Examiner" pursuant to the board's statutory investigatory privilege, R.C. 4731.22(F)(5), and to the common law qualified law enforcement investigatory privilege. August 27, 2018 Decision at 10-11. Nor does he mount any particularized challenge to the trial court's conclusion that "Dr. Moore's vague allegations of prejudice are insufficient to support his claim of a due process violation," id. at 10, or to its ruling that document passages that were neither admitted into the hearing record or specifically excluded were not properly before the board for its review, or were properly excluded as investigatory and privileged, id.

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Bluebook (online)
2019 Ohio 4330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-state-med-bd-of-ohio-ohioctapp-2019.