United States v. Rao

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 9, 2024
Docket23-10670
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Rao (United States v. Rao) 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. Rao, (5th Cir. 2024).

Opinion

Case: 23-10670 Document: 82-1 Page: 1 Date Filed: 12/09/2024

United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit ____________ United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit

No. 23-10670 FILED December 9, 2024 ____________ Lyle W. Cayce United States of America, Clerk

Plaintiff—Appellee,

versus

Sekhar Rao,

Defendant—Appellant. ______________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas USDC No. 3:19-CR-507-1 ______________________________

Before Smith, Clement, and Higginson, Circuit Judges. Stephen A. Higginson, Circuit Judge: This appeal arises from a scheme to defraud TRICARE, a federal health benefit plan. Following a jury trial, Sekhar Rao was acquitted of con- spiracy to commit health care fraud but was convicted of two counts of sub- stantive health care fraud based on two specific fraudulent claims. Rao raises three issues on appeal: (1) whether there was sufficient evidence to convict Rao on the substantive health care fraud counts; (2) whether the district court erred in excluding testimony regarding statements purportedly made to Rao by the scheme’s leader that he had vetted the scheme with an attor- ney; and (3) whether the district court erred in calculating the loss amount Case: 23-10670 Document: 82-1 Page: 2 Date Filed: 12/09/2024

No. 23-10670

under the United States Sentencing Guidelines. Finding no reversible error, we AFFIRM Rao’s convictions and sentence. I A Erik Bugen and others devised a health care fraud scheme to order medically unnecessary toxicology and DNA cancer screening tests and to bill those tests to TRICARE, a federal health benefit plan for active duty and re- tired servicemembers and their families. As part of this scheme, Bugen started a shell company called ADAR Group, LLC (“ADAR Group”) to set up fraudulent testing sites for collecting urine and saliva samples, which would then be submitted for unnecessary toxicology and DNA testing, re- spectively. ADAR Group established a collection site in Killeen, Texas, near Fort Cavazos (then known as Fort Hood), to maximize reimbursements from TRICARE. The site did not contain any medical exam rooms and was run by an office manager with no medical training or experience. The facility would collect samples from as many as two hundred servicemembers and their spouses in a single day. At the direction of the office manager, the “pa- tients” filled out the patient portion of the testing requisition form; allowed the office manager to make copies of their military IDs, which listed their TRICARE numbers; and provided samples for testing. The office manager filled out the billing, diagnosis, and testing portions of the requisition forms. The “patients” then received a $50 Walmart gift card as payment. But ADAR Group needed a doctor to order the testing for the costs to be reimbursed by TRICARE. So, Bugen placed online job postings seeking remote contract physicians “to simply sign off on [ADAR Group’s] Toxicol- ogy and DNA swabs for testing.” An example posting introduced at trial stated that ADAR Group “test[ed] [its] clients twice per week to insure [sic] they are staying sober” and that the physician would be “responsible for

2 Case: 23-10670 Document: 82-1 Page: 3 Date Filed: 12/09/2024

reviewing the Tox Results and DNA results for each client.” The posting listed the salary for the position as “$8,000.00/month.” Bugen testified that he consistently sought to deceive doctors, including Rao, about the nature of the ADAR Group scheme, including lying to them that the ADAR Group clinics “were outpatient facilities for soldiers that were struggling with drug addiction or alcoholism” and hiding from them that the “patients”—who were not receiving any substance abuse treatment—were given Walmart gift cards in exchange for providing samples. Rao responded to one of Bugen’s job postings and negotiated a con- tract with Bugen under which Rao would be given the title “Physician Con- sultant” and would be paid “$50 per billable analyzed toxicology sample or DNA sample.” Initially, Rao went to Bugen’s house once or twice per week to sign the pre-filled requisition forms by hand. Bugen testified that Rao did not review any patient medical information before signing the requisition forms. Instead, Bugen and Rao together reviewed only the sample and insur- ance card associated with each requisition form, after which Rao would sign as the provider. Sometimes, Rao would sign one or two hundred forms in a single visit to Bugen’s house. Bugen would submit the materials to the test- ing lab—primarily Cockerell Dermopathology—which then submitted the claims to TRICARE for reimbursement. According to Rao’s own hand-writ- ten records of tests he ordered during these meetings with Bugen, he signed orders for 692 urinalysis tests and 98 DNA tests between June 6 and June 27, 2015, and for 732 urinalysis tests and 138 DNA tests between July 1 and Au- gust 16, 2015. 1

_____________________ 1 Although financial records demonstrate that Rao worked for ADAR Group from May 2015 through January 2016, Rao’s handwritten records only cover tests he ordered between June 6, 2015, and August 16, 2015.

3 Case: 23-10670 Document: 82-1 Page: 4 Date Filed: 12/09/2024

As noted, the office manager had completed the diagnosis and testing codes on the requisition forms before Rao reviewed and signed them. The toxicology requisition forms almost always listed the same six diagnosis codes, which the forms indicated were “REQUIRED to indicate medical ne- cessity,” and ordered the same two “comprehensive panels” for the toxicol- ogy tests. According to expert trial testimony, these panels tested for multi- ple drugs that were no longer commonly used at the time the ADAR Group scheme was in operation. Eventually, Bugen and his co-conspirators became concerned that Rao was making too much money because of the pay structure Rao had nego- tiated. To limit Rao’s cut, Bugen decided to use a signature stamp, rather than having Rao continue signing by hand, so that Rao would not know the “full extent” of the number of requisition forms that ADAR Group was sub- mitting on his behalf. Bugen testified that he ordered a rubber stamp of Rao’s signature with Rao’s knowledge and consent. 2 According to Bugen, Rao knew that the stamp was being used by ADAR Group employees to sign req- uisition forms on Rao’s behalf, particularly given that Rao continued to re- ceive payment for tests, even after he stopped personally signing the forms by hand. One of the office managers testified that Bugen told her to keep the stamp safe because Rao had been reluctant before ultimately agreeing to or- der the stamp. She also testified, however, that Rao never asked that his stamp be returned to him. The two substantive counts in this case are based on two TRICARE claims, submitted on behalf of the same patient (“J.J.”), both listing Rao as

_____________________ 2 Rao was not the only doctor working for ADAR Group to order tests that were then billed to TRICARE. Bugen also recruited and hired Rao’s co-defendant Vinay Parameswara, among others. Like Rao, Parameswara agreed to let Bugen order a rubber signature stamp, which ADAR Group employees then used to sign the requisition forms.

4 Case: 23-10670 Document: 82-1 Page: 5 Date Filed: 12/09/2024

the referring provider: (1) an October 13, 2015 submission for urinalysis tox- icology testing based on a principal diagnosis of alcohol abuse, uncompli- cated, billed to TRICARE for $2,584; and (2) an October 14, 2015 submis- sion for cancer-related DNA testing based on a principal diagnosis of malig- nant neoplasm of the prostate, billed to TRICARE for $31,626. J.J. was a repeat “patient.” All told, the Cockerell lab submitted claims to TRICARE for J.J.

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