United States v. Brian Conner

456 F. App'x 300
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedDecember 5, 2011
Docket10-7579
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 456 F. App'x 300 (United States v. Brian Conner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth 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. Brian Conner, 456 F. App'x 300 (4th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

Affirmed by unpublished PER CURIAM opinion.

Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.

PER CURIAM:

Brian Conner appeals a district court order denying his motion for relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 based on his claim that he received ineffective assistance of counsel at sentencing. Finding no reversible error, we affirm.

I.

In 1990, Conner, a certified emergency medical technician, became the owner, operator, and president of Convalescent Transports, Inc. (“CTI”). The North Carolina corporation was in the business of providing ambulance and wheelchair transportation services for, among others, medical patients covered by Medicare and Medicaid. Both Medicare and Medicaid have explicit regulations concerning the conditions under which they will provide reimbursement for ambulance transportation services. The regulations essentially require a showing of medical necessity.

Sometime after October 1991, Conner began submitting false claims to Medicare and Medicaid for ambulance transportation services that CTI rendered. Employees were told to transport all dialysis patients by ambulance, and employees were instructed to falsify the ambulance call reports to make it appear that transportation by ambulance was medically necessary.

On the basis of this conduct, Conner was charged by superseding indictment with 350 counts of health care fraud, conspiracy to commit health care fraud, and obstruction of the criminal investigation of health care fraud. See 18 U.S.C. §§ 371, 1347, 1518. The district court dismissed four counts on the government’s motion, and the case proceeded to trial. A jury found Conner guilty of all remaining counts.

After the convictions, a presentence report (“PSR”) was prepared. It included a recommendation for a two-level enhancement for abuse of a position of trust, see U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual § 3B1.3 (2005), and a loss determination of more than $2,500,000 but not more than $7,000,000, which would have resulted in an 18-level enhancement to the applicable base offense level, see U.S.S.G. § 2Bl.l(b)(l)(J). Conner objected to both of these enhancements.

*302 At Conner’s sentencing hearing, the government presented detailed testimony concerning the loss amount. The government showed that CTI had received $6,822,690.54 between 1997 and 2002 in reimbursements on 35,328 claims for non-emergency dialysis transports. The government determined how much of these payments constituted the government’s loss by sampling and extrapolation. In this regard, “RAT-STATS,” a computer program developed by the United States Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General, was used to perform three different steps: (1) determining the sample size needed to represent the data; (2) randomly generating the list of particular claims to review as part of the sample; and (3) extrapolating from the reviewed claims. The first two steps produced a sample of 230 of the claims paid to CTI for transportation of patients in connection with dialysis. Government agents then attempted to retrieve the records corresponding to these claims but were only able to find documentation for 165 of them. These records were, in turn, reviewed by a medical fraud investigator.

Treating the 65 claims with no documentation (“the missing-records claims”) as invalid, the investigator testified that of the 230 claims, only 14 were justified by medical necessity, and the average overpayment was $188.03 per claim. Multiplying the per-claim average by the total number of claims (35,328) yielded a total overpayment of $6,642,582 for the 230 claims. Based on this amount, the government’s statistics expert, Suzanne Moody, testified that RAT-STATS indicated that, with a 90% confidence interval, the range of overpayment was between $6,330,298 and $6,954,866. Moody also testified alternatively that if the 65 missing-records claims were treated as fully valid, the lower end of the overpayment range would drop to $3,738,866.

G. Christopher Kelly, who represented Conner at trial and at sentencing, raised several objections to the government’s loss amount, including arguments that the calculations were partly based on claims that were not part of the scheme and that the loss amount included all payments made for non-medically-necessary services rather than only those payments that had been procured by fraud. Kelly also maintained that the government’s extrapolation methodology was not reliable and specifically focused on the missing-records claims. Kelly questioned Moody regarding how changing the overpayment amounts of only roughly 28% of the claims (65 out of 230) could reduce the estimated loss amount by about 41%. Kelly later argued to the district court that Moody had not provided a satisfactory explanation.

Kelly also questioned the government’s witnesses concerning the government’s inability to locate the documentation regarding the missing-records claims. Kelly subsequently asserted that the government had not exercised due diligence in trying to locate the 65 missing-records claims and that this was an additional reason that the government’s methodology was flawed. Kelly added that the government had the opportunity to do more sampling and make its estimates much more reliable and precise but had failed to do so. Kelly contended that the appropriate loss amount would be the amount proven by the evidence presented at trial, which he claimed would have been less than $30,000.

In the end, the district court accepted the reliability of the sampling process. However, the court also accepted Kelly’s argument that the government had failed to show that it exercised sufficient diligence in searching for the documentation related to the 65 missing-records claims or alternatively in reviewing substitute *303 claims. In an effort to ensure that Conner was not penalized by the government’s lack of diligence, the court calculated the loss based on the assumption that the 65 missing-records claims were entirely valid. The district court also agreed with Kelly that trips transporting patients to and from hospitals were not properly included and thus counted such claims as valid as well. With those two assumptions, the court found a loss amount of $3,613,165.00, nearly $3 million less than the government’s proposed amount. Unfortunately for Conner, this quite substantial reduction still left him the same loss range of more than $2.5 million and not more than $7 million. See U.S.S.G. § 2Bl.l(b)(l)(J). Thus, the associated 18-level enhancement and the two-level abuse-of-position-of-trust enhancement, which the court also applied over Kelly’s objection, left Conner with a total offense level of 32. This level, in conjunction with Conner’s Criminal History Category of I, yielded a guideline range of 121 to 151 months’ imprisonment. The district court sentenced Conner at the highest point in that range.

We affirmed Conner’s sentence on appeal, holding, as is relevant here, that the government’s extrapolation provided adequate support for the district court’s loss determination. See United States v. Conner, 262 Fed.Appx. 515, 518-19 & n. 5 (4th Cir.2008).

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Bluebook (online)
456 F. App'x 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-brian-conner-ca4-2011.