United States v. Bernard Shelton

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 1, 2026
Docket24-1971
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Bernard Shelton (United States v. Bernard Shelton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Bernard Shelton, (6th Cir. 2026).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b) File Name: 26a0189p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

┐ UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, │ Plaintiff-Appellee, │ > Nos. 24-1846/1971 │ v. │ │ BERNARD W. SHELTON, │ Defendant-Appellant. │ ┘

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan at Detroit. No. 2:17-cr-20701-1—Denise Page Hood, District Judge.

Argued: February 5, 2026

Decided and Filed: July 1, 2026

Before: DAVIS, RITZ, and HERMANDORFER, Circuit Judges. _________________

COUNSEL

ARGUED: George B. Donnini, BUTZEL LONG, P.C., Troy, Michigan, for Appellant. Wayne F. Pratt, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: George B. Donnini, Joseph E. Richotte, BUTZEL LONG, P.C., Troy, Michigan, for Appellant. Wayne F. Pratt, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellee. _________________

OPINION _________________

DAVIS, Circuit Judge. A jury convicted Michigan physician Bernard Shelton on twenty- one counts of unlawfully distributing controlled substances to his patients. The evidence presented at trial established that over the course of several years, Shelton prescribed medications to an assortment of patients, some of whom he did not examine and all of whom Nos. 24-1846/1971 United States v. Shelton Page 2

presented with various indicators for illicit drug-seeking rather than medical treatment. Shelton’s prescribing practices led to at least one death. So he received an enhancement for the count involving that patient. On appeal, Shelton challenges the sufficiency of the evidence against him as well as the authority of the Attorney General of the United States to regulate drug dispensing. And relatedly, because the district court’s jury instruction on the required state of mind relied in part on the regulatory standard, Shelton challenges the instruction. He also argues that the district court’s mask mandate for testifying witnesses violated the Confrontation Clause. We conclude that ample evidence supports his conviction; the jury instructions were not confusing, misleading, or otherwise infirm; and the mask mandate was not reversible error. So we AFFIRM.

I.

A. Factual Background

Shelton practiced medicine as a solo practitioner at his medical clinic in St. Clair Shores, Michigan. As an internist, Shelton was authorized by the Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”) to prescribe controlled substances. And during the time relevant to his convictions, Shelton derived over 90% of his Medicare income and close to 100% of his Medicaid income from patients prescribed controlled substances.

Over time, patients learned that they could “get a script pretty easily” from Shelton. (Jury Tr. Trans., R. 163, PageID 2410). Indeed, for years, Shelton prescribed, on average, over 150,000 dosage units of controlled substances per month. In late September 2015, two DEA agents visited Shelton to ask about his general practices and one of his patients (who, unbeknownst to Shelton, was an undercover investigator). That visit triggered a change. In the month before the DEA’s visit, Shelton had prescribed over 120,000 dosage units. But after the visit, he wrote on average about 74,000 units per month for the rest of 2015 and 2016. During that visit, Shelton acknowledged that he had been “prescribing quite a bit of controlled substances.” (Shelton Interview, R. 285-11, PageID 7626). He said he had been “slowly weeding out” patients for the past two years. (Id.). Yet the prescriptions he wrote for seven Nos. 24-1846/1971 United States v. Shelton Page 3

individuals between 2014 and 2016—James Howard, Dennis Hoey, Bonnie Eubanks, Amber Lang, George Regul, April Powell, and Ronald Hannaford—tell a different story.

That story centers on drug diversion, a process whereby legitimate pharmaceuticals are moved “into an illegitimate market.” (Jury Tr. Trans., R. 170, PageID 2881). Two of the ways drug diversion can happen is by a patient “selling them on the street” or “taking them to feed an addiction.” (Id.). Certain conduct, or “red flags,” hint that a patient is diverting their prescription medication. (Id. at PageID 2886). One red flag is a “dirty MAPS.” (Id.). The Michigan Automated Prescription System (“MAPS”) compiles a list of controlled substances filled for a particular patient. A patient’s MAPS data is considered “dirty” when the patient sees multiple doctors and fills various prescriptions for controlled substances at different pharmacies. Laymen call it “doctor shopping.” (Id. at PageID 2887). It is also a red flag for a patient to ask for a specific drug by name, instead of waiting for the doctor to decide what to prescribe. Such conduct is particularly concerning when a patient asks for a “highly abused narcotic by name.” (Id. at PageID 2886–87). Other red flags include doctors writing prescriptions for “highly abused” drug combinations like “a narcotic and a benzodiazepine” and failing to perform physical examinations. (Id. at PageID 2886). Falsified records are also a major concern; accurately capturing each visit is critical for patient care and reminds doctors “about what’s going on and what to look for and what may come next.” (Jury Tr. Trans., R. 171, PageID 3134–35). Patients having an address outside the nearby area is another potential red flag, as is a patient obtaining prescription medications from a source other than their prescribing doctor. Likewise, a failed urine test raises concern. A failed test occurs when a patient tests negative for drugs the doctor has prescribed, and the negative screen can mean that the patient was selling rather than taking their prescription medication, or the patient was taking it too quickly (a sign of drug abuse).

Shelton’s prescription practices raised one red flag after another. To start, he often prescribed drugs to patients with signs of doctor shopping. For instance, Howard’s MAPS report showed that he had visited five other doctors for controlled substance prescriptions, excluding Shelton. Lang’s records showed a similar pattern; she visited nine other doctors before she started seeing Shelton. In 2013 and 2014, Lang was still receiving controlled-substance Nos. 24-1846/1971 United States v. Shelton Page 4

prescriptions from at least two other doctors while also receiving them from Shelton. Shelton appreciated the danger of prescribing to doctor-shoppers, claiming that his office did not “take those patients” and “reject[ed] [them] immediately.” (Shelton Interview, R. 285-11, PageID 7619). Yet, despite that declaration, Shelton took on apparent doctor-shoppers Howard and Lang as patients.

Shelton also prescribed controlled substances to patients who asked for specific drugs by name. Take Howard. When he visited Shelton, Shelton asked what he could prescribe Howard to “help [him] out,” and Howard asked for Xanax and Norco. (Partial Trans., R. 285-2, PageID 7570). Shelton obliged. Proceeding in this fashion prevents the doctor from deciding the best course of treatment for the patient. Shelton also repeatedly issued prescriptions for medications that were highly abused or, when combined, could have deadly consequences. For instance, Shelton prescribed “patient after patient” the “holy trinity”—a cocktail comprised of an opioid, a benzodiazepine, and a sedative that, according to the government’s medical expert, Dr. Daniel Berland, is “never appropriate.” (Jury Tr. Trans., R. 171, PageID 3128, 3131). Shelton prescribed this combination to Lang, Powell, and Hannaford. And he prescribed other patients, including Eubanks, dangerous combinations like Xanax and an opioid that can cause “respiratory suppression” and “[d]eath by asphyxiation.” (Id. at PageID 3127).

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