United States v. Toe Myint

455 F. App'x 596
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 9, 2012
Docket10-1597
StatusUnpublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 455 F. App'x 596 (United States v. Toe Myint) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Toe Myint, 455 F. App'x 596 (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge.

Defendant-Appellant Dr. Toe Myint was convicted of one count of conspiracy to commit health care fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1349. In this timely appeal, Myint challenges the sufficiency of the evidence and the district court’s “deliberate ignorance” jury instruction. He also claims ineffective assistance of counsel. We AFFIRM Myint’s conviction and DISMISS WITH *598 OUT PREJUDICE his ineffective assistance of counsel claim.

I.

Dr. Myint was indicted on one count of conspiracy to defraud Medicare and three counts of defrauding Medicare, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1347, 1349, in connection with his work as a medical doctor at Sacred Hope Center, Inc. (Sacred Hope), a clinic in South-field, Michigan, purporting to perform injection therapy. 1

During the early summer of 2006, Jose Rosario met with his cousin, Lili Vargas-Arias, to discuss opening and managing a clinic in Detroit, Michigan for the purpose of defrauding Medicare by ordering expensive medications that patients did not need and administering only a fraction of the drugs billed to Medicare. Rosario told Vargas-Arias that Sacred Hope would recruit Medicare patients who would be paid to attend the clinic. One of Vargas-Arias’s first and top priorities was to hire a doctor because Sacred Hope could not bill without a doctor’s Medicare provider number. According to Vargas-Arias, Sacred Hope needed a doctor who “didn’t ask a lot of questions,” who “pretty much got along with whatever ... [they] were going to do,” and who would “actually go along with the scheme.” Trial Tr. at 315-16, 429. The doctor’s main role would be to sign charts and order medications. After placing an ad in the newspaper and rejecting several doctors because they expressed skepticism about Sacred Hope, Vargas-Arias interviewed Dr. Toe Myint. 2

During their interview, Vargas-Arias explained to Dr. Myint that Martinez, an accountant from Florida, was opening Sacred Hope to provide infusion therapies for high-risk patients, such as patients with HIV or Hepatitis C. Vargas-Arias did not inform Dr. Myint that these patients would be paid, though she testified that she told Dr. Myint that the patients would come from soup kitchens and homeless shelters. Vargas-Arias said she hired Dr. Myint because “he agreed with everything” and, in her view, he would “do whatever’s necessary” and could be “easily maneuvered.” Id. at 320, 404. Dr. Myint signed a contract under which he would be paid $100 per hour for twelve hours per week and $500 per month toward his malpractice insurance. On September 20, 2006, Dr. Myint gave Vargas-Arias his Medicare provider number; Vargas-Arias submitted the Medicare enrollment application the same day, and Sacred Hope began seeing patients the next day. Id. at 327.

All the patients would arrive at Sacred Hope in the same van, and Vargas-Arias testified that Dr. Myint sometimes witnessed all the patients coming in at the same time. Rosario’s nephew, Arnaldo Rosario, was responsible for recruiting patients and testified that payments to the patients and recruiters were secret. Vargas-Arias performed the patients’ initial evaluations, asking questions about demographics and symptoms, as well as taking vital signs. Vargas-Arias explained that inflammatory problems, especially asthma, were preferable because those maladies were consistent with the drugs Sacred Hope was planning to bill anyway.

Dr. Myint’s interaction with the patients was limited. A patient’s initial visit with *599 Dr. Myint lasted between fifteen and twenty minutes, but follow-up visits were “in and out.” According to Vargas-Arias, Dr. Myint saw patients between thirty to thirty-five percent of the time; otherwise, he was in his office searching the internet or watching soccer. Some weeks, especially toward the end, Dr. Myint did not come into the clinic at all.

Many of the patients received infusions of vitamins, such as Vitamin C. Vargas-Arias testified that Dr. Myint prescribed these vitamin treatments three times per week. She also explained that there was no medical reason for providing the vitamins via infusion, as opposed to administering them orally. The vitamin infusions constituted fourteen percent of the claims that Sacred Hope billed to Medicare. Most of the drugs Sacred Hope administered — and the most profitable— were Interferon, Acthar, Cosyntropin, and Carimune. Dr. Myint did not have prior experience with these drugs, so Vargas-Arias printed information from the internet and encouraged Dr. Myint to prescribe the medicines. In particular, she highlighted that some of the drugs could be used for asthma. Vargas-Arias also informed him that the other clinics, including the clinics in Florida, were using the medications. According to Vargas-Arias, Dr. Myint knew Sacred Hope had purchased some of the medicine. These four drugs constituted around eighty percent of Sacred Hope’s claims to Medicare. The drugs — if they were administered at all — were diluted before they were administered to the patients. However, Medicare was billed as though the patients had received the full, undiluted doses. At trial, Dr. Myint stipulated that none of these drugs were medically necessary.

Vargas-Arias testified that Dr. Myint agreed to prescribe the medications. According to Vargas-Arias, Dr. Myint would initially scribble a few notes on a patient’s treatment plan — such as “Start Acthar,” or something comparably vague — that were not detailed enough to perpetrate the scheme. Then, Vargas-Arias would rewrite the notes, making the diagnoses appear more plausible. In doing so, she explained to Dr. Myint that she had “cleaned up” everything and made the notes make more sense. Dr. Myint apparently asked Vargas-Arias where she got the additional information, and she responded that she was researching and learning on the internet. Vargas-Arias testified that Dr. Myint knew she did not have any medical training.

Unbeknownst to Dr. Myint, another doctor from Florida assisted Vargas-Arias in rewriting the patient notes. Vargas-Arias testified that Dr. Myint would sign the notes after she had rewritten them. The government presented patient files on which Vargas-Arias’s changes had forced Dr. Myint to sign in a different spot than usual, indicating that Vargas-Arias’s additions had, in fact, occurred before Dr. My-int signed. Dr. Myint signed the rewritten patient notes without objection and actually commented that she was becoming really good at transcribing the notes. At one point, Vargas-Arias bragged to a cocon-spirator that she could get Dr. Myint to sign anything she put in front of him.

On February 27, 2007, Wisconsin Physician Services and Trust Solutions, contractors responsible for processing Sacred Hope’s claims, noted certain billing irregularities. For example, the drugs for which Sacred Hope billed were not related to the stated diagnoses or were prescribed in unusually high doses. On March 13, 2007, Trust Solutions notified Sacred Hope that its Medicare payments were suspended. Upon learning this, Vargas-Arias went to Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
455 F. App'x 596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-toe-myint-ca6-2012.