People of Michigan v. Xun Wang

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 10, 2018
Docket336673
StatusUnpublished

This text of People of Michigan v. Xun Wang (People of Michigan v. Xun Wang) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People of Michigan v. Xun Wang, (Mich. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED May 10, 2018 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 336673 Ingham Circuit Court XUN WANG, LC No. 15-000754-FH

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: METER, P.J., and GADOLA and TUKEL, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Following a bench trial, defendant was convicted of two counts of Medicaid fraud, MCL 400.607(1) (false claim), and one count of the unlawful practice of a health profession, MCL 333.16294. She was sentenced to 60 months’ probation, allowing for release from probation upon payment of fines and costs, and to concurrent terms of 365 days in jail, held in abeyance and to be suspended upon completion of probation. Defendant was ordered to pay $106,454.00 in costs and fines. Defendant appeals as of right. We affirm defendant’s convictions, but vacate in part defendant’s sentence, and remand for resentencing.

I. FACTS

Defendant is from China and earned a medical degree there. After moving to the United States in 2001, defendant earned a Ph.D. in basic medical science from Purdue University’s veterinary school, and thereafter worked as a medical researcher at the University of Michigan’s medical school. In 2013, she began a student rotation through the AmeriClerkships program working at Livernois Family Clinic (Livernois), which was owned by Dr. Murtaza Hussain. Defendant eventually was hired by the clinic. Defendant’s job was to meet with patients, gather each patient’s medical history, and document the illness presented and her observations. Once the interview with the patient was complete, she would enter her notes into the clinic’s computer and also meet with Hussain to make a diagnosis. Defendant testified that if a patient needed a prescription, she would report to Hussain the patient’s history, along with the medication and dosage she recommended, and Hussain would determine whether to write the patient a prescription.

In 2014, the state’s Department of the Attorney General conducted an investigation of Livernois. As part of the investigation, Drew Macon and Lorrie Bates, special agents with the Attorney General’s Office, separately went to Livernois posing as patients with Medicaid -1- benefits. Macon testified that after checking in at the reception desk and presenting his Medicaid card, defendant took his blood pressure, weighed him, and took a brief medical history, but did not perform a physical examination. According to Macon, he requested prescriptions for vitamin D, an inhaler, Klonopin,1 and Adderall. 2 After taking his history, defendant left the room and returned after several minutes, and requested his previous medical records because he was a new patient. Macon testified that he received prescriptions for vitamin D, Klonopin, and the inhaler. To obtain the Adderall prescription, he had to call the office back the next day to inform the staff of the dosage he took; when he did so, he was informed that he could pick up that prescription later in the week. Macon stated that his patient chart indicated that he had been seen by Hussain, but that he did not see Hussain that day.

Bates was also seen by defendant. Bates testified that she told a medical technician at the clinic that she was suffering from headaches and had trouble sleeping, and that after taking her medical history, the technician told her that “the doctor would be in shortly.” The next person to enter the room was defendant. According to Bates, defendant, was wearing a white lab coat and had a stethoscope, and introduced herself as Dr. Hussain’s assistant. Defendant told Bates that she would provide something for the headaches, and then left the room for approximately five minutes. When defendant returned, she told Bates that a prescription had been sent to a pharmacy, and according to Bates, defendant then “took a flashlight and shined that into my eyes and put my arms out in front of me and then after that she had me sit down and then grab ahold of her and try to pull her forward towards me and then she had me sit down in my chair and she grabbed my legs and told to me to push out towards her.”

According to Bates, defendant explained that she was not the doctor, that Hussain was, and that he was not at the office that day. But when Bates asked defendant how long she had been a doctor, defendant stated that she had been a doctor for about one year. Bates testified that defendant again stated that she would call in a prescription for medication for the headaches, and then recommended melatonin to help her sleep. As they discussed the sleep issue further, defendant “pulled . . . what appeared to be a prescription pad out of [the] pocket of her lab coat and then began to write on it and at that point . . . she handed me a prescription” for Ambien.3 Bates testified that the note in her chart stated that she had been seen by defendant and Hussain.

Defendant was charged with two counts of Medicaid fraud, MCL 400.607(1) (false claim), and one count of unlawful practice of medicine, MCL 333.16294. At trial, Dr. Catherine Reid, a consulting physician in the Office of Medical Affairs, testified that she had reviewed the videos taken of the appointments with Bates and Macon. Reid opined that defendant was

1 Klonopin is the trade name of clonazepam, which is a Schedule 4 controlled substance. MCL 333.7218(1)(a). 2 Adderall is an amphetamine, which are Schedule 1 controlled substances. MCL 333.7212(1)(c). 3 Ambien is the trade name for zolpidem, which is a schedule-4 controlled substance pursuant to Mich Admin Code R 338.3123(1). Bloomfield Twp v Kane, 302 Mich App 170, 184; 839 NW2d 505 (2013).

-2- engaged in the practice of medicine. The basis for this opinion was that in Bates’ video, defendant walked in after the technician stated that the doctor would be in shortly, defendant was wearing a white lab coat with a stethoscope around her neck, defendant took a detailed medical and social history, asked specific questions with respect to Bates’ headache, and then offered her medication. Reid stated that the exam performed on Bates, involving the light in her eyes as well as pushing and pulling on her arms and legs, was “an exam a physician would do.”

Dr. Hussain testified that he discussed defendant’s findings with her with respect to “almost every case.” After defendant would enter her notes into the computer, he would review them, make changes if necessary, and then “sign” the notes, at which point the computer system would automatically generate a diagnosis code for Medicaid.4 According to Hussain, he left signed prescription pads at his office and his office could call him to determine if they could give the patient a prescription if he was not in the office. He said that defendant was not permitted to write a prescription without consulting him and that he was available by phone for defendant to contact him.

Darius Baty worked at Livernois in August 2014 and was familiar with Medicaid billing at Livernois. Baty testified that “[a]fter the patient was evaluated and diagnosed, Doctor Hussain would circle on the face sheets exactly the codes for the procedures that he completed and then he would also update the progress notes within the computer.” Baty would then ensure that the codes matched the progress notes and then submit the information to a third-party biller. Baty testified that defendant did not participate in the billing process. Defendant testified, however, that she was aware that some of the patients who came to Livernois were Medicaid patients.

At the conclusion of the trial, the trial court found that the evidence demonstrated that defendant had “made, presented, or caused to be made or presented a claim to the state or its agent” for Medicaid, that the claim was false, and that defendant knew that it was false.

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People of Michigan v. Xun Wang, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-xun-wang-michctapp-2018.