WIENER, Circuit Judge:
Defendants-Appellants Dr. Arun Sharma ("Arun") and Dr. Kiran Sharma ("Kiran") pleaded guilty to defrauding health-care insurers by billing for pain injections that they never administered. As part of their sentences, the district court ordered them to pay $43,318,170.93 in restitution to thirty-two victims defrauded by the
Arun and Kiran are physicians married to each other who operated two pain management, arthritis, and allergy clinics in Houston, Texas. From 1998 to 2009, they conspired to defraud Medicare, Medicaid, and many private insurance companies of millions of dollars by billing for paravertebral facet-point injections that they never administered to patients. Sometimes, the Sharmas would actually administer a cheaper, faster, "trigger-point injection" but would "upcode" the procedure and bill insurers for the more expensive facet-point injection. Other times, the Sharmas would submit "phantom" bills for injections or patient visits that never happened.
The Sharmas were indicted on sixty-four counts of conspiracy, health-care fraud, mail fraud, unlawful distribution of controlled substances, and money laundering. Eventually, each pleaded guilty to (1) one count of conspiracy to commit health-care and mail fraud and (2) one substantive count of health-care fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1347. The counts of conviction related to the injection-billing fraud but not to any other charged conduct, such as unlawful distribution of controlled substances. In their plea agreements, the Sharmas agreed to pay restitution to the insurer victims in an amount to be set by the district court. They also agreed to specified forfeitures, including a money judgment to be rendered by the sentencing court in the same amount as the restitution award. Finally, the government agreed to place $1,500,000 of the seized funds in an educational trust for the benefit of the Sharmas' son.
The United States Probation Office ("Probation Office") prepared Presentence Investigation Reports ("PSRs") for both defendants. The PSRs calculated that the actual loss to Medicare, Medicaid, and thirty private insurers totaled $43,318,170.93, and recommended restitution in that amount. The Sharmas objected, primarily because the recommendation did not give them a credit for amounts that the insurers would have paid for the trigger-point injections that were actually administered. They also objected that the $43,318,170.93 total overstated the insurers' actual losses because it improperly included payments for non-injection treatments unrelated to the Sharmas' specific offenses of conviction, such as Kiran's undisputedly legitimate allergy practice and treatments other than by injection.
In support of their objections, the Sharmas submitted an alternative restitution calculation prepared by a forensic accountant. According to her report, their accountant first scrutinized the insurers' claimed losses to exclude payments for procedures other than injections, reducing the total loss to $37,670,826.32. The accountant then assumed that the Sharmas had administered a specific number of legitimate, medically necessary trigger-point injections each month and that the insurers would have paid for those procedures without the "upcoding." Applying a credit for those injections, the accountant concluded that the actual loss to the insurers totaled $21,028,963.61.
The Sharmas timely appealed, challenging the amount of restitution ordered by the district court. In addition, Arun contends that the government breached the plea agreement by pursuing forfeiture of particular assets and by opposing a credit to the restitution award for legitimate charges.
We review the quantum of an award of restitution for abuse of discretion.
As Arun did not articulate breach of the plea agreement to the district court, we review that claim for plain error.
The district court awarded restitution pursuant to the Mandatory Victim Restitution Act ("MVRA").
The Sharmas contend on appeal, as they did in the district court, that the total restitution awarded exceeded the aggregate amount of the insurers' actual loss by erroneously (1) including restitution for payments not related to the injection-billing
The MVRA limits restitution to the actual loss directly and proximately caused by the defendant's offense of conviction. An award of restitution cannot compensate a victim for losses caused by conduct not charged in the indictment or specified in a guilty plea,
The Sharmas insist that the district court erred by awarding restitution for losses not caused by their offenses of conviction. They pleaded guilty to only two of the sixty-four counts of indictment, and both of those counts related to the scheme to bill insurers between 1998 and 2009 for facet-point injections that were never administered. Amounts that the insurers paid the Sharmas between 1998 and 2009 for those non-administered injections are actual losses properly compensable through restitution. Not so, however, for amounts paid by the insurers before 1998 or paid by them between 1998 and 2009 for unrelated treatments. Those payments do not constitute losses directly and proximately caused by the offenses of conviction and should not have been included in calculating the restitution award.
The district court adopted the precise amount from the PSRs, which it could do only if those amounts had an adequate evidentiary basis and remained unrebutted by the defendants.
By thus directly incorporating the amounts from the victim impact statements into the PSRs as actual losses, the Probation Office went astray. Examples from three of the insurers will suffice to show how the Probation Office failed to scrutinize those amounts and thereby recommended restitution for more than the insurers' actual losses. One insurer, Tricare, claimed as loss all of its payments to
These three errors in confecting the PSRs resulted in recommendations of restitution to Tricare, Texas Amerigroup, and Principal Life that exceeded the evidence of their actual losses under the MVRA. Moreover, these obvious mistakes undermine our confidence that the Probation Office gave any meaningful scrutiny to the actual losses of Medicare, Medicaid, and the remaining twenty-seven private insurer victims.
In sum, the record does not support the entire $43,318,170.93 of restitution recommended in the PSRs and awarded by the district court. The Sharmas identified this deficiency to the district court, but it did not address those objections and instead adopted the unsupported figure. This was an abuse of discretion.
Actual loss also must not include compensation for that which would have occurred in the absence of the crime. Thus, in health-care fraud cases, an insurer's actual loss for restitution purposes must not include any amount that the insurer would have paid had the defendant not committed the fraud. For example, in United States v. Klein, the defendant physician was convicted of billing insurers for personally administering three shots to his patients, when in fact each patient self-administered
In contrast, no credit was warranted in United States v. Jones when the defendants billed Medicare for providing physical rehabilitation services, but fraudulently misrepresented the qualifications of the personnel who performed the work.
In the instant case, the parties dispute whether this situation is closer to Klein or to Jones. The Sharmas assert that, like the defendant in Klein, they provided real medical services for which the insurers would have paid in the absence of the fraudulent upcoding.
Even though the MVRA puts the burden on the government to demonstrate the amount of a victim's loss, a sentencing court may shift "the burden of demonstrating such other matters as the court deems appropriate ... [to] the party designated by the court as justice requires."
The government presented unrebutted evidence that Arun (1) deliberately misdiagnosed patients as having rheumatoid arthritis and put them on an injection regimen, (2) tried to convince all of his patients to have trigger-point injections at every visit, (3) required patients who declined injections to sign mendacious acknowledgments that they had received the treatments before he would prescribe pain medication, and (4) administered injections in an assembly-line fashion without taking routine sanitary precautions.
The Sharmas offered little in the way of concrete evidence to rebut the government's contentions. Their plea agreements stated that some injections were provided, but did not represent that those injections were medically necessary or that the physicians would have been reimbursed for them by the insurers. Although the Sharmas provided anecdotal statements from patients claiming some degree of pain relief, the victims of the crimes of conviction were the insurance companies, not the patients.
Our review of the record in the context of the burdens of proof satisfies us that the government provided sufficient evidence that the trigger-point injections were merely a revenue stream for the Sharmas and not legitimate, medically necessary treatments for which the insurers would have paid in the absence of the fraud. The Sharmas did not submit evidence refuting that conclusion. Accordingly, the district court did not abuse its discretion in declining to apply a restitution credit.
Arun also contends that the government breached his plea agreement by (1) opposing the restitution credit discussed above, (2) requesting forfeiture of the remainder of the educational trust, and (3) requesting forfeiture of funds not listed in the indictment or in notices of forfeiture. "In evaluating whether a plea agreement was breached, we apply general principles of contract law, construing the terms strictly against the government as drafter, to determine whether the government's conduct is consistent with the defendant's
Assuming without deciding that Arun adequately briefed this issue, none of the purported breaches are inconsistent with a reasonable understanding of the plea agreement. First, the agreement did not stipulate to a method for calculating restitution or to a credit for any trigger-point injections.
The evidence is not sufficient to support the district court's entire $43,318,170.93 restitution award. The Sharmas both identified these deficiencies and provided rebuttal evidence confirming that the PSRs' recommended restitution amount exceeded the insurers' actual losses by millions of dollars. Thus, the district court abused its discretion as a matter of law in awarding the entire amount recommended in the PSRs. The district court did not, however, abuse its discretion in declining to allow the Sharmas credit for injections that were not shown to be medically necessary or reimbursable by the insurers.
Accordingly, we vacate the order of restitution and remand for recalculation consistent with this opinion and based solely on evidence already in the record.
In summary, we vacate the district court's order of restitution and order of forfeiture, and we remand this matter to that court for it to recalculate those amounts in a manner consistent with this opinion.
VACATED and REMANDED with instructions.