United States v. Walter Hudspeth

639 F. App'x 1004
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 12, 2016
Docket14-10165, 14-10843
StatusUnpublished

This text of 639 F. App'x 1004 (United States v. Walter Hudspeth) 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. Walter Hudspeth, 639 F. App'x 1004 (5th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

Defendants Walter Hudspeth, Joesephis Austin, Patricia Bryant, and Lisa Hollier challenge the sufficiency of the evidence supporting their convictions for conspiracy to distribute hydrocodone outside the scope of professional practice and without a legitimate medical purpose. Hudspeth also challenges the district court’s decision to depart upwards from the Sentencing Guidelines in imposing his 72-month sentence. We affirm.

I.

Dr. Nicholas Padrón, a physician, operated a clinic where he wrote illegitimate prescriptions to patients seeking hydroco-done in exchange for cash. He pled guilty and served as the lead witness for the government against defendants, who pled not guilty and proceeded to trial. Padrón testified that he obtained new patients through the use of “patient herders,” or individuals who would bring new patients to the clinic in exchange for cash or free medical services. He prescribed Xanax, promethazine with codeine, and'hydroco-done, often without examining the patients brought in by the herders. At trial, Pa-drón identified Hudspeth, Austin, and Bryant as patient herders. Hollier was the pharmacist in charge of Urban Independent Pharmacy, where she oversaw the fulfillment of many prescriptions written by Padrón.

After months of investigation, federal agents searched Padron’s clinic pursuant to a warrant. Based on the evidence obtained, a federal grand jury returned an indictment, charging Padrón, Hudspeth, Austin, Bryant, Hollier, and several other patient herders with conspiracy to distribute hydrocodone outside the scope of professional practice and without a legitimate medical purpose.

II.

Defendants first argue insufficiency of evidence. All defendants timely moved for a judgment of acquittal during trial. Our review is de novo, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the Government, asking whether any rational jury could have found all of the essential ele *1007 ments of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. 1 In this review, we accept all credibility choices and reasonable inferences tending to support the verdict and resolve any evidentiary conflict in favor of the verdict. 2

The essential elements of conspiracy to distribute hydrocodone are “(1) ah agreement by two or more persons to violate the narcotics law; (2) a defendant’s knowledge of the agreement; and (8) his voluntary participation in the agreement.” 3

With respect to Hudspeth, the evidence indicates that he played a leadership role in the conspiracy. Padrón testified that it was Hudspeth who first pitched the idea of the scheme. Indeed, Padrón and Hudspeth formed the initial agreement at the root of the conspiracy. Padrón also recounted that Hudspeth would bring ten to twenty patients a day to the clinic seeking prescriptions for controlled substances. Documentary evidence — clinic ledgers and videotape — corroborated Padron’s testimony. Other patient herders testified that Hudspeth was a leader in the conspiracy.-Hudspeth not only stood outside of the clinic on one occasion controlling admission, he also warned other members of the conspiracy after the arrest of some participants that “snitches be dealt with, so don’t say nothing.” A reasonable jury could have inferred knowledge of and intent to further the conspiracy’s unlawful, purpose from this evidence.

The evidence concerning Joesephis Austin’s participation is also sufficient to affirm his conviction. Unlike Hudspeth, Austin’s name does not frequently appear in the clinic appointment book, nor is it among the. contacts in the cell phone the clinic used to communicate with herders. But the government put forth evidence at trial to explain the absence: Dr. Padrón testified that Austin often accompanied Hudspeth to the clinic, joining him on his scheduled visits without a documented appointment of his own. A January 5th search by law enforcement at the clinic found Hudspeth and Austin at the clinic with a number of patients. Further, Austin’s name did appear on a list of names and numbers maintained by the pharmacy that Dr. Padrón later identified as a catalog of patient herders. Another patient herder identified Austin as a participant in the scheme, and Padron’s front desk employee identified him as a regular at the clinic, coming in every 30 days with four to five patients. Austin also appeared regularly on surveillance video from the clinic. 4

In arguing that there was insufficient evidence for his conviction, Austin noted that Dr, Padrón did not incriminate Austin when Padrón first met with investigators, naming Austin a coconspirator only after *1008 speaking to his lawyer. Austin’s lawyer cross-examined Padrón about the circumstances surrounding his identification of Austin as a herder in the presence of the jury. The jury could have reasonably found Austin guilty of each of the elements of the conspiracy on the basis of the evidence presented.

The evidence is also sufficient to support Patricia Bryant’s conviction. The government put forth evidence that Bryant was one of several persons who regularly brought in groups of patients to the clinic, sometimes with her son Allen Burkins, who pled guilty to charges stemming from the conspiracy and whose appeal was dismissed as frivolous by this court. 5

Bryant argues that she was merely acting as a caregiver to the patients that she brought to Padron’s clinic. But the government offered a different narrative, which a reasonable jury could have accepted. Padrón testified that Bryant received benefits for bringing in patients, including free visits to the clinic for herself, that Bryant paid him cash for delivering the prescriptions to the patients, and negotiated a lower rate when Bryant had some financial difficulties. At trial, the government introduced videos that showed Bryant visiting the clinic and the Urban Independent Pharmacy. The footage depicts Bryant obtaining a prescription in the name of an individual who was not present, receiving cash from at least one other individual, and making several trips back and forth between the clinic and the pharmacy with different groups of people in different vehicles. A-reasonable jury could thus infer that Bryant knowingly and voluntarily participated in the conspiracy.

Finally, the evidence is sufficient to support the conviction of Lisa Hollier, pharmacist and part-owner at Urban Independent Pharmacy (UIP). Hollier contends that she never formed an agreement with Padrón. She points out that Padrón even testified to that effect. But the attorneys strenuously argued this point to the jury in closing, 6 and the jury was entitled to credit the government’s evidence suggesting that the two had come to an informal understanding. The government relied on a call that Hollier placed to Padrón to set up a meeting to discuss streamlining the prescription process between the clinic and pharmacy. As a result of that meeting, patients no longer brought their own prescriptions to the pharmacy; instead, Hollier created a form that Padrón would fax directly to the pharmacy.

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Bluebook (online)
639 F. App'x 1004, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-walter-hudspeth-ca5-2016.