United States v. Maynard

278 F. App'x 214
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 15, 2008
Docket07-2889
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 278 F. App'x 214 (United States v. Maynard) 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. Maynard, 278 F. App'x 214 (3d Cir. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

CHAGARES, Circuit Judge.

A jury convicted Paul Maynard of dispensing prescription painkillers outside the usual course of professional medical practice. Maynard now appeals, contending that the jury’s verdict was not supported by sufficient evidence. Because there is ample record evidence that could support the jury’s conclusion, we will affirm.

I.

Maynard was a licensed physician who practiced medicine on St. Thomas. In 2001, a pharmacist on St. Thomas became suspicious after filling a large number of prescriptions for Dilaudid, a narcotic painkiller, that Maynard had written for one of his patients. The pharmacist alerted law enforcement agencies, who began an undercover investigation into Maynard’s practices. On January 25, 2002, DEA Special Agent Michael Poist and U.S. Coast Guard Special Agent Scott Miles went to see Maynard in an attempt to obtain a prescription. After completing forms with fake names, the two entered Maynard’s office together, and Poist told Maynard that he wanted a prescription for Vicodin. Maynard asked Poist what was wrong, and Poist replied that “sometimes I had a sore neck and my wrist hurt sometimes.” (Feb. 7, 2007 Trial Tr. at 56.) Maynard took Poist’s blood pressure, listened to his chest, and took his weight — but did not examine his neck or wrist at all. Maynard then asked Poist and Miles if they “were going to do a deal with the pills. And we just told him no, that we were going to party with them.” (Id. at 57.) Maynard told the agents to be “careful,” and then issued the prescription. The agents paid Maynard $100 cash.

Four days later, the two agents went back to Maynard’s office. The receptionist told them that it was “too soon” to get another prescription for Poist — so Agent Miles filled out the papeiwork instead, and the two agents went in, again together, to see Maynard. Maynard said that it was too early for Poist to get another prescription, and so Miles asked if he “could get some.” (Id. at 62.) Maynard asked Miles what ailed him, and Miles replied that he had a toothache. Maynard at first told Miles to go see a dentist, but then said that he would have to do a physical on Miles. The physical consisted — in total— of taking Miles’s blood pressure. Maynard then issued Miles a prescription for Vicodin. Again, the agents paid Maynard $100 cash.

On August 19, 2002, Poist returned to Maynard, this time without Miles. Maynard said to Poist, “You’re not really sick, are you?” (Id. at 70.) Poist replied that he was there to get his prescription filled again. Maynard did not perform any examination on Poist, but simply wrote out a prescription for Vicodin. Ten days later, Poist returned to Maynard’s office. Again Maynard performed no examination, and again he gave Poist a prescription for Vicodin. This time, however, Poist asked Maynard if he “could get some Valium too, just so that I could sleep better,” and Maynard complied. (Id. at 73.)

Detective Mark Joseph of the Virgin Islands Police Department also visited Maynard in an undercover capacity. On August 6, 2002, Joseph told Maynard that he was having problems with his girlfriend and that his back hurt. After a cursory examination, during which Maynard weighed Joseph, took his blood pressure, and listened to Joseph’s chest and back with a stethoscope, Maynard wrote Joseph a prescription for Vicodin. Maynard did *216 not discuss Joseph’s personal history or medical history, did not take x-rays, and did not refer Joseph to a specialist. Three weeks later, Joseph went back to Maynard. Maynard asked him whether his back still hurt, and Joseph said it did not. Maynard wrote him another prescription for Vicodin anyway. On each visit, Joseph paid Maynard cash in his office.

On September 11, 2003, Maynard was indicted on charges of dispensing and distributing controlled substances outside the scope of professional medical practice, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). Maynard went to trial in February 2007, and during the trial, the jury heard surreptitious recordings made by the agents during their visits to Maynard’s office.

The jury also heard from two expert witnesses. Paul Doering, a Distinguished Service Professor of Pharmacy Practice at the University of Florida, described an analysis he performed of prescriptions Maynard wrote for seven of his patients. Doering concluded that Maynard often issued a patient a subsequent prescription before the previous prescription had run its course, and also frequently prescribed combinations of medicines that could have adverse interactions with one another. He testified that, looking at Maynard’s practices “from the perspective of a pharmacist, I’m concerned about the early refills. I’m concerned about the combination and quantities of medications that were issued.” (Feb. 9, 2007 Trial Tr. at 61). He described Maynard’s prescription practices as “not in the best interest of the patient.” (Id. at 62.)

The Government also called Dr. Theodore Parran, a physician specializing in addiction medicine, who is a professor at Case Western Reserve School of Medicine and the founder and director of Case Western’s Addiction Fellowship Program. Dr. Parran testified that Schedule II and III narcotic pain relievers such as Vicodin, Percoset, or Oxycontin “tend to be used last” by doctors, because they can be addictive, and because they are often unnecessary. (Id. at 114.) Accordingly, only when all other avenues of pain relief have been exhausted, and the patient is in so much pain that they “still can’t function, that typically in the usual course of medical practice is when narcotic pain relievers are added in.” (Id.) Dr. Parran opined that “[t]he practice of medicine involves eliciting a full set of data from a patient, both the history data, the old medical records data, what other doctors have done before, and the physical exam data.... [T]hat’s really what doctoring is all about.... [T]hat’s expected as a routine course of medical practice.” (Id. at 115-17.)

Dr. Parran testified that “prescribing controlled drugs on the first visit, especially very potent Schedule II narcotics on the first visit is pretty uncommon in medical practice.” (Id. at 122.) Dr. Parran also stated that to see two unrelated patients at the same time, in the same office visit, “breaks every ethical code of confidentiality of the doctor/patient relationship that exists. That’s ... by definition unacceptable in the practice of medicine.” (Id. at 124.) In Dr. Parran’s opinion, “[t]here was not a single physical exam done on an undercover agent which would ... be construed as a physical exam in the usual course of medical practice for a pain complaint. There was not a single history elicited from a patient that could be construed as consistent with what would be necessary. And there was not a single neurologic exam done.” (Id. at 138.)

Dr. Parran reviewed prescriptions issued by Maynard, patient records from Maynard’s office, and reports or undercover recordings from 19 visits made by Government agents in this case. He made *217

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278 F. App'x 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-maynard-ca3-2008.