United States v. Ogba

526 F.3d 214, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 8924, 2008 WL 1822762
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 24, 2008
Docket06-10519
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 526 F.3d 214 (United States v. Ogba) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth 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. Ogba, 526 F.3d 214, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 8924, 2008 WL 1822762 (5th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

Ignatius Chuka Ogba (“Chuck”) started a durable medical equipment (“DME”) supply corporation for Medicare patients, and his brother, Ifeanyi Ogba (“Iffy”) helped him run the business. They hired recruiters to find potential recipients of wheelchairs and paid doctors, including Dr. Patrick Antoon, to refer wheelchair recipients to their corporation. Antoon also charged Medicare for his visits with potential wheelchair recipients. Chuck and Iffy represented to Medicare that they had provided patients with high-end electric wheelchairs, but at times they provided no equipment at all, provided lower-end equipment, or took back the wheelchairs after delivering them to Medicare recipients. A jury found Defendants guilty on all counts, which included health care fraud, paying and receiving illegal kickbacks, engaging in monetary transactions with illegally-obtained property, alteration or falsification of records, endeavoring to influence a grand jury, and conspiracy to commit health care fraud, paying and receiving illegal remuneration, and illegal monetary transaction. 1 Defendants all appealed.

I

The jury could have concluded the following beyond a reasonable doubt. Chuck *218 and Iffy Ogba, with the help of doctors and recruiters, carried out a scheme to profit from the regulations of Medicare. Medicare’s “Part B” regulations allow Medicare to reimburse suppliers of certain types of DME, such as wheelchairs, for the equipment that they provide to Medicare patients. Chuck set up a corporation called Universal Health Services, Inc. (“Universal”), an approved Medicare supplier located in Dallas, Texas. The brothers later set up a second business, Apex Medical Services (“Apex”), to provide wheelchairs to Medicare beneficiaries in Magnolia, Arkansas and the surrounding area. Apex was not an approved independent supplier of DME so it submitted its claims for Medicare reimbursement through UHS. Iffy worked for both of Chuck’s companies.

The brothers hired Rhonda Lambert Smith and other recruiters to help them sell wheelchairs. Smith sought out individuals who might need wheelchairs, referring them to Dr. David Antoon in Magnolia and Dr. Lloyd McGriff in Dallas, and other doctors. These referrals were made in order to obtain certification that the patients needed expensive electric wheelchairs called “K0011 power wheelchairs” (“K-lls”). The doctors in turn sent wheelchair prescriptions to UHS/Apex. The brothers paid the doctors an average of $200 for every referred patient for whom Medicare approved a wheelchair. 2

Medicare required two forms from suppliers of chairs, a CMS 3 1500 and a Certificate of Medical Necessity (“CMN”). The CMS 1500 form requires identification of the patient who will be receiving the equipment, the reason for the patient’s receipt of the equipment, supplier identification, and identification of the referring doctor. Doctors and suppliers prepare the CMN. This form has four parts. Part A, filled out by the equipment supplier, contains identifying information such as the patient’s name and address, the supplier’s identification number, and the treating physician authorizing the equipment. Part B, completed by the physician, describes the length of time during which the patient will need the equipment, diagnosis codes describing why the patient needs the equipment, the physical constraints of the patient demonstrating wheelchair necessity, such as weak upper extremities and the inability to operate manual wheelchairs, 4 and the hours per day that the patient will spend in the chair. Part C, completed by the supplier, describes the type of equipment prescribed and its costs. Doctors signing the CMN verify in its Section D that they have reviewed Parts A through C and the charges for the equipment ordered for the patient, that all information is true, and that they will be subject to criminal and civil liability for any falsification. 5

*219 Under the Ogba brothers’ plan, lasting from approximately 2002 through 2004, the brothers recruited patients and sent these patients to “company” physicians who regularly sent wheelchair prescriptions to UHS/Apex. The physicians signed off on Part D of the form before Part C was filled out, thus “approving” equipment and charges for equipment not yet provided, and sent the forms to UHS/Apex. UHS then sent equipment reimbursement requests to Palmetto GBA, the Texas administrator of Medicare Part B that provided reimbursement for wheelchair suppliers. The brothers received more than $4.8 million in Medicare reimbursement.

In addition to paying for wheelchair prescriptions, 6 the Ogba brothers, through UHS, entered false delivery dates on the form — typically the date of the wheelchair recipient’s visit to the doctor for a wheelchair prescription — and requested reimbursement for wheelchairs before they were supplied. The brothers added accessories to doctors’ prescriptions, and requested reimbursement for 100% of the cost of the wheelchairs, violating a requirement that patients pay 20% in coinsurance. Finally, although nearly all of UHS’s reimbursement claims were for K-ll wheelchairs, the brothers often gave patients less expensive equipment, such as scooters, or failed to deliver any equipment. In some cases, they delivered equipment and then took it back, claiming that it needed to be repaired. The brothers deposited their illegally-derived profits in several domestic and foreign bank accounts.

Antoon, in signing the CMNs, falsely certified that he was patients’ treating doctor. By its section D, he certified that the equipment purchased, as indicated in Section C, matched the equipment prescribed, whereas Section C had not yet been completed. He charged Medicare for his visits with wheelchair patients, and he received illegal payments from the Ogba brothers. 7 He also certified that patients needed Kills when they did not need them.

Antoon recorded his meetings with the wheelchair patients as appointments in his computer system, only after he was subpoenaed by the Grand Jury. He then told an employee to record the appointments in the computer, back-date them, and prepare questionnaires and letters to fill in wheelchair patients’ files. Antoon explained that he had ordered the filling in of appointments in response to a request by the prosecutor that the entries be reduced to an electronic format.

Recruiter Smith testified that she paid Antoon for each CMN that he signed, but in other testimony stated that she did not reimburse Antoon for the patients whose wheelchair claims were rejected by Medicare. The Government’s evidence included a tape recording of one of these payment *220 sessions. At trial, Smith described the recording, indicating that she and Antoon were counting the money for each patient whose prescription was fulfilled and deducting any denied claims. Antoon testified that the payments were for time blocked out for his office visits with potential wheelchair recipients, not for signing CMNs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
526 F.3d 214, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 8924, 2008 WL 1822762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-ogba-ca5-2008.