United States v. Miller

891 F.3d 1220
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJune 6, 2018
Docket16-1231
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 891 F.3d 1220 (United States v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth 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. Miller, 891 F.3d 1220 (10th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

McKAY, Circuit Judge.

Defendant Joel Miller, a former small-town doctor, was charged with numerous counts of health-care fraud, money laundering, and distributing a controlled substance outside the usual course of professional treatment, as well as one count of making a false statement in an application he submitted to the Drug Enforcement Administration. The jury acquitted him on all of the financial charges as well as several of the drug-distribution charges, but found him guilty on seven counts of distributing a controlled substance in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841 (a) and one count of making a false statement to the DEA in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 843 (1)(4)(A). The district court granted Defendant's post-judgment motion for acquittal on one of the controlled-substances counts based on an error in the indictment. The court then sentenced him to forty-one months of imprisonment on the six remaining distribution counts, plus a consecutive sentence of nineteen months on the false-statement count, for a total sentence of sixty months of imprisonment. Defendant appeals his convictions and sentence.

On appeal, Defendant argues that (1) the government medical expert's testimony was not the product of reliable principles reliably applied to the facts of this case and accordingly should have been excluded under Rule 702; (2) the indictment was duplicitous on four of the six controlled-substances counts because each of these four counts included at least two different controlled substances that were prescribed on the same date to the same patient; (3) the trial evidence, jury instructions, and prosecutor's closing argument constructively amended the indictment on the false-statement count; (4) the false-statement count should not have been submitted to the jury because the statement at issue was not false as a matter of law; and (5) the sentence was procedurally unreasonable.

Before addressing the merits of any of these arguments, we first pause to explain the legal backdrop behind Defendant's controlled-substance convictions. Under § 841(a)(1), it is "unlawful for any person knowingly or intentionally" to dispense a controlled substance "[e]xcept as authorized by this subchapter." Medical practitioners are authorized to dispense *1226 non-schedule I drugs pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 829 (a) and (b). However, in order for a medical practitioners's prescription of controlled substances to be considered a lawful prescription under § 829, it "must be issued for a legitimate medical purpose by an individual practitioner acting in the usual course of his professional practice." 21 C.F.R. § 1306.04 (a). "When this limited statutory authority is exceeded, the criminal sanctions of § 841 apply." United States v. Fellman , 549 F.2d 181 , 182 (10th Cir. 1977). Thus, a medical practitioner who prescribes controlled substances may be convicted of illegal distribution or dispensing under § 841"if he acts without a legitimate medical purpose or outside the usual course of professional practice." United States v. Nelson , 383 F.3d 1227 , 1233 (10th Cir. 2004).

To help the jury decide whether this standard for criminal liability has been met, "[e]xpert testimony from medical practitioners is of course admissible." United States v. Bartee , 479 F.2d 484 , 488 (10th Cir. 1973). "However, the jury is not bound by such expert testimony and may of course consider all of the facts and circumstances surrounding the prescribing as related by lay witnesses." Id. The jury is "free to sort out all the competing proof: the question [of] what constitutes usual medical practice remain[s], at all times, within its province." United States v. Lovern , 590 F.3d 1095 , 1100 (10th Cir. 2009). 1

With this legal backdrop in mind, we first consider Defendant's challenge to the admission of testimony from the government's medical expert. "The admission of expert testimony is within the discretion of the trial court and will be overturned on appeal only when a clear abuse of discretion has occurred." United States v. Varma , 691 F.2d 460 , 463 (10th Cir. 1982). "The district court abuses its discretion if the court's decision is arbitrary, capricious, whimsical or manifestly unreasonable, or when we are convinced that the district court made a clear error of judgment or exceeded the bounds of permissible choice in the circumstances." United States v. Chapman , 839 F.3d 1232 , 1237 (10th Cir. 2016) (internal quotation marks omitted).

The government's medical expert, Dr. Theodore Parran, was indisputably qualified to testify as an expert. Dr. Parran's training and experience included not only practicing medicine for many years, but also teaching residency programs relating to pain and pain management, directing an addiction-medicine training program, directing a doctoring course for first- and second-year medical students at a medical school in Cleveland, directing a continuing medical education program, and conducting clinical work at an outpatient methadone clinic and various other facilities. Defendant does not dispute Dr. Parran's qualifications; he only disputes the substance of his testimony.

Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
891 F.3d 1220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-miller-ca10-2018.