United States v. Patrick Tonge

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 22, 2021
Docket18-11165
StatusUnpublished

This text of United States v. Patrick Tonge (United States v. Patrick Tonge) 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. Patrick Tonge, (11th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

USCA11 Case: 18-11165 Date Filed: 11/22/2021 Page: 1 of 32

[DO NOT PUBLISH] In the United States Court of Appeals For the Eleventh Circuit

____________________

No. 18-11165 ____________________

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, versus PATRICK TONGE, SERGE FRANCOIS,

Defendants-Appellants.

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida D.C. Docket No. 1:16-cr-20399-DPG-2 ____________________ USCA11 Case: 18-11165 Date Filed: 11/22/2021 Page: 2 of 32

2 Opinion of the Court 18-11165

Before BRANCH, GRANT, and BRASHER, Circuit Judges. PER CURIAM: Patrick Tonge and Serge Francois were convicted of federal crimes arising out of their work at Atlantic Pharmacy & Com- pounding, a Florida pharmacy that collected over thirty-one mil- lion dollars in fraudulent claims from federal insurance programs. Both men challenge their convictions on direct appeal. After care- ful consideration and with the benefit of oral argument, we affirm their convictions and sentences. I. Background

The defendants’ convictions, and thus these appeals, begin and end with Atlantic Pharmacy, a pharmaceutical business that manufactured and sold custom medications. Serge Francois opened Atlantic in 2009, owned the business, and was the pharma- cist-in-charge. Atlantic’s business operations largely involved non- sterile compounding, specifically the creation of compound pre- scription creams (“CPCs”) from scratch using various raw materi- als. Francois hired Patrick Tonge, his former used car dealer and personal trainer, to manage Atlantic’s CPC business, despite Tonge having no pharmaceutical training. In total, Atlantic collected over thirty-one million dollars in claims for CPCs from TRICARE and the Federal Employee Health Benefits Program (“FEHBP”), two federal insurance programs. USCA11 Case: 18-11165 Date Filed: 11/22/2021 Page: 3 of 32

18-11165 Opinion of the Court 3

In 2017, Tonge and Francois were indicted on federal charges including conspiracy, healthcare fraud, paying illegal healthcare kickbacks, introducing misbranded drugs into interstate commerce, money laundering, obstruction, and making false state- ments. The government alleged that Tonge and Francois stole mil- lions of dollars from federal healthcare programs by (1) making misrepresentations about Atlantic that allowed the pharmacy to obtain access to federal insurance networks; (2) filing fraudulent claims based on invalid CPC prescriptions; and (3) paying illegal kickbacks to “marketers” who then paid doctors and patients to fuel Atlantic’s CPC business. After a lengthy trial in the Miami federal courthouse, jury deliberations began on Thursday, August 31. By Tuesday, Septem- ber 5, Hurricane Irma had formed in the Gulf of Mexico. That af- ternoon, the district court informed the parties, outside the hearing of the jury, that one juror would have difficulties returning the next day due to the need to make storm-related preparations. Another juror needed to return a rental car by 6:00 PM that evening. The lawyers agreed to allow the jury to continue deliberating as long as possible on Tuesday, even going so far as to pay for an extra day of the juror’s rental car to allow deliberations to continue past 6:00 PM. The jury returned a verdict that evening at or around 9:50 PM convicting Tonge and Francois of many of the charged offenses while acquitting each defendant of at least some counts. Below, we describe the background of Atlantic’s CPC busi- ness as it relates to the convictions at issue in this appeal. Because USCA11 Case: 18-11165 Date Filed: 11/22/2021 Page: 4 of 32

4 Opinion of the Court 18-11165

Francois and Tonge were convicted, we take the evidence in the light most favorable to the government. A. Atlantic’s Misrepresentations to Gain Admission to a Federal Insurance Network and Obtain a DEA Registration TRICARE and the FEHBP contracted with a pharmacy ben- efit manager, Express Scripts International, to establish a network of healthcare providers for use by the programs’ beneficiaries. Membership in Express Scripts’s network was an ex ante require- ment for submitting a claim to either TRICARE or the FEHBP. Any pharmacy that wanted to submit claims for CPCs would also have been required to possess a Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”) registration to dispense or handle controlled substances in the pharmaceutical context. Atlantic was admitted to Express Scripts’s network and received a DEA registration, allowing it to submit claims to TRICARE and the FEHBP and work with CPCs containing controlled substances. In obtaining these privileges for Atlantic, Francois made sub- stantial misrepresentations to Express Scripts and the DEA. First, Francois lied about himself and Atlantic throughout the phar- macy’s interactions with Express Scripts. Francois submitted Atlan- tic’s initial application in 2010 and made subsequent recertifications in 2013 and 2014. As part of these interactions, Francois stated that his sister Rosemary owned Atlantic, that his DEA license had never been suspended, that he had never been arrested, that he had never filed for bankruptcy, and that Atlantic had never paid more than twenty-five thousand dollars to any subcontractor. Each of those USCA11 Case: 18-11165 Date Filed: 11/22/2021 Page: 5 of 32

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representations was false. If Francois had been truthful, Express Scripts would never have credentialed Atlantic as an in-network provider, walling it off from TRICARE and FEHBP claims. And second, Francois lied during Atlantic’s DEA registration by assert- ing that his DEA license had never been suspended when in fact, it had been. Were it not for this lie, the DEA would have never granted Atlantic a registration allowing the pharmacy to fill and dispense CPC prescriptions involving controlled substances. B. Atlantic’s Fraudulent CPC Business The problems at Atlantic Pharmacy did not end with Fran- cois’s misrepresentations to Express Scripts and the DEA. To re- ceive payment from Express Scripts on any given claim, an in-net- work pharmacy had to satisfy two requirements: (1) the prescrip- tion underlying the claim had to be valid and (2) the patient had to have been charged a co-payment. For a prescription to be valid, a physician had to have examined the patient, the prescription needed to have been medically necessary, and the pharmacy needed to have been licensed in the patient’s home state. Although Francois and Tonge processed, certified, and submitted Atlantic’s CPC claims to Express Scripts, those claims systematically failed to meet either requirement. Atlantic’s CPC operations proceeded as follows. First, a phy- sician would send a prescription to Atlantic where it would be pro- cessed and entered into a computer system. The employee enter- ing this information was required to be a licensed pharmacist or USCA11 Case: 18-11165 Date Filed: 11/22/2021 Page: 6 of 32

6 Opinion of the Court 18-11165

pharmacy technician. Then, the processing employee submitted the file to Express Scripts for approval, and Atlantic filled the pre- scription if the claim was eventually approved. Despite his com- plete lack of pharmaceutical training, Tonge processed many of At- lantic’s CPC prescriptions and submitted many of its claims. Next, after Express Scripts approved a prescription, a pharmacy techni- cian manufactured the CPC, and a pharmacist, usually Francois, reviewed and certified it as valid. Finally, Atlantic would dispense the CPC to a patient, often mailing prescriptions to patients living in states where Atlantic was not licensed to do business. The fraudulent nature of Atlantic’s CPC business was due just as much to its marketing, which relied on paying doctors and patients to generate prescriptions, as its fulfillment practices.

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