United States v. Luis Jacinto Marti

294 F. App'x 439
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 18, 2008
Docket07-11422
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 294 F. App'x 439 (United States v. Luis Jacinto Marti) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh 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. Luis Jacinto Marti, 294 F. App'x 439 (11th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

SILER, Circuit Judge:

Dr. Luis Jacinto Marti was convicted on one count of conspiring to defraud the United States, commit health care fraud, and pay and receive health care kickbacks. He was also convicted on fifteen substantive counts of health care fraud and aiding and abetting. The crux of Marti’s appeal is that the evidence against him was insufficient because his signature was forged on the documents that form the basis of the charges. Marti seeks reversal of his convictions on the following grounds: (1) insufficient evidence; (2) prejudice from “fatally flawed” substantive counts; (3) improper admission of evidence regarding civil violations; (4) improper admission of evidence regarding “superbills”; and (5) improperly charging the jury on deliberate ignorance. The district court rejected these arguments and denied Marti’s post-trial motion for acquittal or new trial. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

Marti was indicted on one count of conspiracy to defraud the United States, commit health care fraud, and pay and receive kickbacks under 18 U.S.C. § 371, and fifteen counts of health care fraud and aiding and abetting under 18 U.S.C. §§ 2 and 1347. The indictment charged three other individuals with the same violations: One-lio Baez, Juan Carlos Mateo, and Jorge Valido. The other defendants pled guilty prior to trial. The district court described the charged conspiracy as follows:

The Government alleged that Marti and [the other defendants] were part of a Medicaid fraud scheme in which Medicaid recipients were induced through payments of kickbacks and bribes to visit particular physicians and medical clinics. Physicians at these particular clinics would prescribe unnecessary and expensive medications, such as Intravenous Immune Globulin (“IVIG”) drugs, which are drugs commonly prescribed for HIV-positive or AIDS patients. These prescriptions, paid for by Medicaid, would be filled and picked up at the particular pharmacy that filled the prescription. The drugs would then be resold to other pharmacies.
Marti was charged as one of the doctors who issued a number of these prescrip *442 tions. Baez was charged as the organizer of the scheme. Mateo was charged as a patient recruiter and Valido, another doctor, was charged for issuing the prescriptions, and he was also charged as the owner and operator of the Char-itte Medical Center where Marti once worked as a physician.

Order Denying Marti’s Motion for Judgment of Acquittal at 1-2.

Both Baez and Valido testified on behalf of the government at Marti’s trial. Baez admitted his involvement in the conspiracy, but testified that he did not know Marti and had never spoken or met with him. Baez paid others to recruit Medicaid patients and take them to participating clinics to obtain prescriptions for IVIG drugs. Valido was a physician in Cuba before he immigrated to the United States in 1994. In early 2000, although not a licensed physician in the United States, Valido opened a clinic called the Charitte Medical Center (“Charitte”). Marti was the only physician employed at the clinic and thus was the only person at Charitte who could issue prescriptions. He was present only once or twice per week to review the patient files and sign prescriptions. He spent an hour or two at the clinic each time he visited and was paid $750 per week for his services. The clinic also employed two physician’s assistants, who were responsible for seeing the patients, and they left prescriptions already written out for Marti to sign when he dropped by.

In October 2000, Valido obtained a restricted license to practice medicine, which required that he work under the direct supervision of a fully licensed physician. Marti volunteered to be Valido’s supervising physician. Regulations required Marti and Valido to practice in the same clinic for the first year of Valido’s restricted license. Despite this requirement, Valido closed Charitte and began practicing at a clinic in South Miami, while Marti practiced at an office in Hialeah. During the first year of Valido’s restricted license, Marti visited Valido’s clinic once or twice. Valido continued to issue medically unnecessary prescriptions for Medicaid patients at the South Miami clinic. However, Vali-do could not issue prescriptions himself during the first four months of his restricted license, and thus Marti was the only physician at Valido’s clinic who could sign prescriptions.

Regulations also prohibited Marti from receiving compensation for supervising Valido. Over objection, Valido briefly testified that he completed insurance company “superbills” for the patients he saw at his office. He then gave the superbills to Marti, and Marti submitted them. The two would then split the money received from the insurance companies.

In August 2001, Marti telephoned Valido because he received a subpoena for the files of eighteen or twenty of Valido’s patients. Valido brought copies of the files to Marti at his home. Marti reviewed the files and instructed Valido three times to make corrections or alterations to the files before Marti delivered the files to the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit.

In 2004, Marti testified in his deposition that the majority of the patients were seen by Valido under his supervision. Marti identified his signature in several patients’ files from Charitte. Six of the charts on which Marti identified his signature were for patients who had been prescribed unnecessary IVIG drugs and who correspond with the charges in the indictment. 1 Marti *443 further stated that he would not have signed a patient’s chart unless he had personally observed Valido’s interaction with the patient. Marti now admits he was untruthful in this deposition about his supervision of Valido.

Dr. Michael Wohlfeiler testified as an expert for the government. He reviewed the files of the patients who were the basis of the substantive counts in the indictment, and he concluded that none of the files supported or established the medical necessity of using IVIG drugs. The files were poorly documented, lacking in the necessary tests to establish whether IVIG treatments were appropriate, and lacking records of the administration of IVIG drugs, which must be given intravenously with someone monitoring the patient’s vital signs during the treatment.

Marti asserts that unauthorized recommendations for IVIG drugs were written in the files after he had signed them. Wohlfeiler testified that many of the documents recommending IVIG drugs appeared to be signed by someone other than Marti. The lead investigator in the case, Lt. Eller, later conceded that no analysis of the documents had been done before the government presented evidence to a grand jury. At the time of trial, Eller acknowledged that he did not know whether the prescription documents that form the basis of the substantive charges contain Marti’s genuine signature.

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Related

United States v. Bryant
885 F. Supp. 2d 749 (D. New Jersey, 2012)
United States v. Luis Jacinto Marti
317 F. App'x 948 (Eleventh Circuit, 2009)

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Bluebook (online)
294 F. App'x 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-luis-jacinto-marti-ca11-2008.