United States v. Matthew Kolodesh

787 F.3d 224, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 8813, 2015 WL 3407281
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 28, 2015
Docket14-2904
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 787 F.3d 224 (United States v. Matthew Kolodesh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third 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. Matthew Kolodesh, 787 F.3d 224, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 8813, 2015 WL 3407281 (3d Cir. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

JORDAN, Circuit Judge.

Matthew Kolodesh appeals from his conviction and sentence following a trial in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania based on his involvement in a Medicare fraud scheme. We will affirm.

I. Background 1

Kolodesh owned a home-health services company called Community Home Health, Inc. Around 1999, he approached one of his employees, Alex Pugman, with the idea of starting a company to provide home-based hospice care. Pugman, who had a background in hospice care, agreed. Kolodesh funded the new company, which they named Home Care Hospice, Inc., and Pugman managed the day-to-day operations. Kolodesh’s wife, Malvina Yako-bashvili, and Pugman were listed as owning equal shares in the company; however, Kolodesh was intimately involved in forming and overseeing the management of Home Care Hospice.

As early as 2000 or 2001, Kolodesh, Pug-man, and Pugman’s wife, Svetlana Ganet-sky, who was also employed by Home Care Hospice, began giving gifts and cash “kickbacks” to doctors in exchange for patient referrals. (App. at 979-82.) In addition, at Kolodesh’s suggestion, Pugman placed some doctors or their employees on the Home Care Hospice payroll with sham job titles. Those sham employees were then issued paychecks, in exchange for patient referrals.

About 90% of the revenue generated by Home Care Hospice came from Medicare reimbursements. Medicare, as is well known, is a federal health benefits program providing financial assistance to senior and disabled citizens to cover medical costs. Fischer v. United States, 529 U.S. 667, 671, 120 S.Ct. 1780, 146 L.Ed.2d 707 (2000). “Medicare attains its objectives through an elaborate funding structure,” id. at 673, 120 S.Ct. 1780, one aspect of which involves reimbursement to health care providers for medical treatment costs incurred in furnishing services to Medicare recipients, id. at 677, 680, 120 S.Ct. 1780. Providers are reimbursed by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (“CMS”) through a “fiscal intermediary,” which is a private entity that contracts with CMS to help it administer the Medi *230 care program by determining payment amounts and making payments. 42 U.S.C. §§ 1395h(a), 1395kk-1(a); 42 C.F.R. § 405.902; see also Fischer, 529 U.S. at 677, 120 S.Ct. 1780.

At some point, Home Care Hospice began to submit to CMS fraudulent claims for reimbursement. Medicare provides reimbursement only for hospice patients certified as terminally ill and places time limits on the validity of such certifications, 42 C.F.R. §§ 418.21-22, but, at Kolodesh’s suggestion, Home Care Hospice began submitting reimbursement claims for patients who did not qualify for hospice care. Kolodesh and Pugman had the employees of Home Care Hospice falsify patient records to conceal the fraud. Home Care Hospice employees also falsified records to show patients as eligible for and receiving continuous care — a more time-intensive and thus more expensive level of care— when those patients were neither eligible for nor received such care.

To surreptitiously extract value from Home Care Hospice, Kolodesh and Pug-man would, among other things, have contractors, such as Alexy Drobot, the person who serviced the copy machine for the business, submit fake invoices that Home Care Hospice would pay, and then the contractor would give most of the money to Kolodesh and Pugman, while keeping a portion for himself.

Kolodesh, Pugman, Ganetsky, and a number of others were charged for their roles in the scheme to defraud Medicare. Kolodesh in particular was charged with one count of conspiracy to defraud a health care benefit program, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1349, twenty-one counts of healthcare fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1347, two counts of mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341, and eleven counts of money laundering, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1957. At the conclusion of a five-week trial, in which Pugman and Ganetsky testified for the government after having pled guilty, the jury convicted Kolodesh on all counts. Kolodesh filed a motion for a new trial and, later, a supplemental motion for a new trial, both of which the District Court denied. On May 28, 2014, the District Court sentenced him to a total of 176 months’ imprisonment, with three years of supervised release. The Court also ordered restitution in the amount of $16.2 million. Kolodesh filed this timely appeal.

II. Discussion 2

The arguments on appeal focus on allegations of prosecutorial misconduct, certain evidentiary issues, and supposed errors in responding to a .request from the jury and in sentencing. 3 We address each in turn.

A. Prosecutorial Misconduct 4

Kolodesh argues that the government committed prosecutorial misconduct *231 in two ways. First, he says the prosecutor improperly introduced and repeatedly referred to an inaccurately transcribed, irrelevant, and unduly prejudicial portion of a recorded conversation between Kolodesh and Pugman. Second, he says the prosecutor improperly elicited testimony about Russian stereotypes, which undermined the fairness of the trial.

1. Transcript of Wiretapped Conversations

At trial, the government relied heavily on transcripts of conversations that had been recorded through wiretaps that the FBI placed at Home Care Hospice. One such conversation between Kolodesh and Pugman related to a letter that a Medicare fiscal intermediary, Cahaba Government Benefit Administrators, LLC (“Cahaba”), sent to Home Care Hospice. The letter requested patient data for the 2006-2007 fiscal year to determine whether Home Care Hospice’s claims had exceeded the cap for new patients, the cap being a limit on the total annual amount CMS would reimburse for each hospice patient. The letter requested the number of new patients admitted during a defined period, but, depending on how the letter was interpreted, the period could be understood to be twelve or thirteen months. Knowing that they had overbilled Medicare, Kolo-desh and Pugman decided to submit thirteen months of data and to misrepresent several patients as new when they had been previously discharged but since readmitted.

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Bluebook (online)
787 F.3d 224, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 8813, 2015 WL 3407281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-matthew-kolodesh-ca3-2015.