United States v. Benjamin Martinez

921 F.3d 452
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 16, 2019
Docket17-20063
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 921 F.3d 452 (United States v. Benjamin Martinez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Benjamin Martinez, 921 F.3d 452 (5th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

LESLIE H. SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judge:

All the defendants were convicted of conspiracy to commit health care fraud and several substantive counts of health care fraud. Individual defendants were convicted of different additional offenses. Defendants appeal, challenging the sufficiency of the evidence, the jury instructions, the exclusion of certain evidence, and one of the sentences. We AFFIRM.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

This case involves a scheme to defraud Medicare orchestrated by two men: Zaven "Mike" Pogosyan and Edvard Shakbazyan. From 2008 to 2010, Pogosyan opened three purported medical clinics in the Houston, Texas area: the Jefferson Clinic, the Pease Clinic, and the Silver Star Clinic. 1 Pogosyan *463 hired defendants Dr. Nguyen, Dr. Martinez, and Dr. Simmons to serve as "Medical Directors" for these clinics. The hiring of a physician for each clinic was essential to the scheme because a clinic cannot become a Medicare provider without an application submitted by a physician or a non-physician practitioner. See 42 C.F.R. § 424.510 . Medicare will only issue the requisite provider number and remit funds to a bank account in the same name as that physician. Id.

The Jefferson clinic opened first. In September 2008, Pogosyan placed an advertisement on Craigslist for a Medical Director position. Dr. Nguyen answered the listing and was hired at a salary of $10,000 per month. At the direction of Pogosyan, Dr. Nguyen signed a Medicare enrollment application and opened a checking account in his own name for the receipt of Medicare payments. Dr. Nguyen then provided Pogosyan with signed blank checks, functionally giving Pogosyan control over the account.

Shakbazyan and Pogosyan hired and trained Seryan Mirzakhanyan to administer diagnostic tests. 2 Defendant Anna Bagoumian was hired in April 2009 to work as a receptionist and to perform these same tests. None of these people were licensed medical professionals or had any medical training. After Bagoumian was hired, Mirzakhanyan became responsible for billing Medicare, a task that was previously handled by Pogosyan.

Shakbazyan and Pogosyan used marketers to locate and recruit "patients" with the promise of cash payments. One of these marketers was Frank "Bones" Montgomery. 3 Montgomery coached patients on what symptoms to describe to the doctor. Montgomery was paid $150 in cash by Pogosyan, Mirzakhanyan, or Bagoumian for each patient he delivered to the clinic. The marketers would generally keep $50 and give $100 to the patient.

These kickback exchanges were often concealed. Montgomery, for example, would typically retrieve an envelope with the cash from behind the medicine cabinet in a bathroom next to Dr. Nguyen's office. On occasion, Pogosyan or Bagoumian handed him the envelope directly. Patients were instructed to not mention the payments to the doctor, and Montgomery always drove to a secondary location before paying them.

At the Jefferson clinic, Dr. Nguyen saw patients-most of whom had been brought to the clinic by marketers-and typically ordered an extensive battery of diagnostic tests. For a significant number of patients, the clinic submitted claims to Medicare for one or more of the following procedures: anorectal manometry, anal electromyography ("anal EMG"), and rectal sensation tests (collectively, "rectal tests"). 4

These three procedures are highly specialized and in most clinics are rarely performed. 5 All three tests are used for assessing *464 a patient that is suffering from either incontinence or constipation. For obvious reasons, these tests tend to be both uncomfortable and presumably memorable for the patient.

Despite the frequency of the billing to Medicare, no rectal tests were ever performed on a patient. The Jefferson clinic possessed medical equipment associated with these tests, but it was seemingly only used by Pogosyan or Bagoumian to fabricate test results that were placed in patient files.

After the clinic submitted claims to Medicare, payment would be remitted to the account opened by Dr. Nguyen. Pogosyan created a "management company" called Uni Office Manage, Incorporated, and instructed Mirzakhanyan to open bank accounts in its name. After Medicare paid claims, Pogosyan used the blank checks provided by Dr. Nguyen to transfer most of the money into the Uni Office accounts. 6

Pogosyan and Shakbazyan also instructed Mirzakhanyan to withdraw cash from the Uni Office account twice per week in amounts between $5,000-$9,000. 7 Bagoumian would also occasionally cash checks and return the money to Pogosyan and Shakbazyan. The cash was used for the kickback scheme and for Shakbazyan and Pogosyan's regular trips to Las Vegas.

The Jefferson clinic abruptly closed in June 2009. Pogosyan, Shakbazyan, Mirzakhanyan, and Bagoumian shredded the entirety of the Jefferson clinic's records in a single afternoon. Pogosyan then immediately opened a new clinic on Pease Street in Houston. Dr. Nguyen and Bagoumian moved to this new clinic, but Mirzakhanyan did not.

Dr. Nguyen continued to see patients at the Pease clinic, but did not enroll with Medicare as the provider. Instead, Pogosyan placed another advertisement on Craigslist, which led to the hiring of Dr. Martinez in July 2009. At the time, Dr. Martinez lived in Dallas and was finishing the second year of his residency. After interviewing, he agreed to travel to Houston once per month to review patient files in exchange for a monthly salary of $7,000. Like Dr. Nguyen, Dr. Martinez signed a Medicare enrollment form, opened a bank account, and turned over the checkbook to Pogosyan.

In November 2009, Pogosyan posted a second job listing for a "Medical Director" to review patient files once a month. This time Dr. Simmons responded to the posting on Craigslist. For a salary of $8,000 per month, he performed the same role as Martinez, periodically reviewing patient files from the Pease clinic. Like Dr. Nguyen and Dr. Martinez, he signed a Medicare enrollment form, opened a bank account, and signed blank checks for Pogosyan's use.

Other than the addition of Dr. Martinez and Dr. Simmons as "reviewing" doctors, the Pease clinic largely operated in the same manner as the Jefferson clinic. Bagoumian and Pogosyan employed marketers to pay patients to visit the clinic. Dr. Nguyen saw patients and claims were submitted *465 for, among other things, rectal tests that were not actually performed. 8

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
921 F.3d 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-benjamin-martinez-ca5-2019.