State ex rel. King v. Advantageous Cmty. Servs., LLC

2014 NMCA 76
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 28, 2014
Docket31,782
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2014 NMCA 76 (State ex rel. King v. Advantageous Cmty. Servs., LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. King v. Advantageous Cmty. Servs., LLC, 2014 NMCA 76 (N.M. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

I attest to the accuracy and integrity of this document New Mexico Compilation Commission, Santa Fe, NM '00'04- 10:42:42 2014.07.28

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

Opinion Number: 2014-NMCA-076

Filing Date: April 28, 2014

Docket No. 31,782

STATE OF NEW MEXICO, ex rel. GARY KING, ATTORNEY GENERAL,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

ADVANTAGEOUS COMMUNITY SERVICES, LLC, a New Mexico limited liability company,

Defendant-Appellee.

APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY Valerie A. Huling, District Judge

Gary K. King, Attorney General Santa Fe, NM Amy Landau, Assistant Attorney General Albuquerque, NM

for Appellant

Lewis and Roca LLP Jason C. Bousliman Albuquerque, NM

for Appellee

OPINION

VIGIL, Judge.

{1} The district court dismissed the State’s medicaid fraud claims against Defendant Advantageous Community Services, LLC, doing business as Imagine, LLC, (Imagine) after the State’s investigator procured a false and fictitious document relating to a central issue

1 in the case. The investigator provided the document to the State’s lawyer without disclosing that the document was false, and the lawyer then used it in a deposition of Imagine’s owner and corporate representative. Concluding that the district court did not abuse its discretion, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

{2} Imagine contracts with individual caregivers to provide home-based healthcare services to Medicaid recipients through the Medicaid Developmental Disabilities Waiver Program. New Mexico Department of Health (DOH) regulations require home-based healthcare providers like Imagine to submit criminal history screening applications to DOH for each of its caregivers. Once the criminal application is submitted, DOH then conducts a state and nationwide criminal background check. Upon completion of the background check, DOH sends a “clearance letter” stating whether a caregiver has any reported disqualifying convictions. In its suit the State alleges that Imagine knowingly submitted bills for services provided by six caregivers whose criminal histories did not meet the screening requirements and that, therefore, Imagine violated the the Medicaid Fraud Act, NMSA 1978, §§ 30-44-1 to -8 (1989, as amended through 2004). According to the State, the Medicaid payments Imagine received from the State and paid to the six caregivers constituted overpayments, which the State had a right to recoup as damages, in addition to civil penalties.

{3} The State compared the date on the clearance letter for each of the six caregivers to the date each caregiver was hired to support its claims that caregivers were providing services that were billed to Medicaid before DOH confirmed that they had a clear criminal history. Thus, the clearance letter issued for each caregiver is critical to the State’s theory of liability. On the other hand, Imagine contends that DOH regulations permit caregivers to work under conditional supervised employment while DOH conducts the screening and that the regulations only require that criminal history screening applications be submitted for each caregiver within the first twenty days of employment. Therefore, according to Imagine, the dates Imagine submitted the criminal history screening applications and/or whether applications were submitted at all would have been relevant to whether any violations occurred, not the date on the clearance letters marking completion of the screening process.

{4} The Assistant Attorney General (the AAG) prosecuting the case asked an investigator for the Attorney General’s Office (the investigator) working in the medicaid fraud unit to prepare packets of documents relating to each of the six caregivers to be used at the deposition of Dr. Arminder Kaur, the owner and corporate representative of Imagine. She specifically asked the investigator to include a copy of the clearance letter from DOH for each caregiver to be included in the packet. However, the investigator was unable to locate copies of the actual clearance letters Imagine had previously produced for two of the caregivers, so he called Walter Rodas at DOH to see if DOH had copies. Mr. Rodas told the investigator that DOH did not keep hard copies of the letters on file, so the investigator asked Mr. Rodas to “reprint” copies of the 2006 clearance letters from its electronic data

2 base.

{5} Mr. Rodas told the investigator that it would not be possible to reprint accurate copies of the letters because the computer system had updated several fields in the clearance letter template. The investigator nevertheless told Mr. Rodas to go ahead and print the letters with the updated data. Mr. Rodas faxed the letters to the investigator with a cover sheet stating,

Per your request, attached find copies of the clearance letters for [the two caregivers]. These letter[s] were issued for Imagine back in 2006. In addition to the discrepancies I mentioned to you already over the phone, our letter template pulls information current on our system. That is why the letters are issued and addressed to Melissa McCue, but she may have not been the contact person at Imagine back then. Also, the letters are signed by Gil Mendoza, but he was not the manager of this department in 2006; nor was Ms. Martinez the governor at that time either. Unfortunately, we do not have access to the original letters any longer and this is the best I can do to assist you from our computer records.

The investigator put the false letter in the packet for each caregiver and delivered the packets to the AAG. However, he left the fax cover sheet explaining that the letters were not authentic copies on his desk, and he did not tell the AAG that he had been unable to locate copies of the actual clearance letters that were sent to Imagine.

{6} One of the created letters is attached to this Opinion as Appendix 1, and a copy of the actual clearance letter sent to Imagine in 2006 for the same employee is attached to this Opinion as Appendix 2. Though the dates of the two letters are the same, and the “Control No.” for the employee match, the letters are obviously otherwise very different.

{7} At Dr. Kaur’s deposition she testified that, as far as she knew, Imagine was in compliance with the criminal history screening requirements at the time of the alleged violations. Her former business partner’s son, Karan Sangha, and former employee, Diane Nunn, were in charge of ensuring compliance with the criminal history screening requirements, and they had assured her that Imagine was at all times in compliance. Dr. Kaur added that Karan Sangha and Diane Nunn later left to form their own home healthcare business, taking with them the documentary evidence of Imagine’s compliance. After they left, Melissa McCue, another employee at Imagine, took over the caregiver criminal history compliance duties. When presented with Exhibit 15 (Appendix 1) and asked why it was addressed to Melissa McCue in October of 2006, Dr. Kaur’s reaction was surprise. A clearance letter sent to Imagine in 2006 should have been addressed to Karan Sangha, and Exhibit 15 also had Imagine’s new office address rather than the address it had in 2006.

{8} Imagine filed a motion for sanctions against the State for using a fabricated document at the deposition, as well as a motion for summary judgment on the merits. The district court

3 held an evidentiary hearing to address the motion for sanctions at which the foregoing facts were developed. The AAG also answered questions posed by the district court, denying that she knew the letter was false when she utilized it in the deposition and admitting she did not observe the discrepancy of the incorrect governor on the letterhead.

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2014 NMCA 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-king-v-advantageous-cmty-servs-llc-nmctapp-2014.