Philadelphia-Area Medicare Fraud Defendant Raises Interstate Commerce Argument In Post-Trial Motions

Posted On Thursday, March 31, 2016

This past February, Home Care Hospice Service, Inc.’s former professional services director, Patricia McGill, stood trial in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania for 14 counts sounding in Medicare fraud.  The indictment alleged that McGill and other nurses from the Philadelphia-based company permitted the admission of more than 100 patients for medically unnecessary hospice services, for which Medicare was billed.  A jury returned a guilty verdict on four of the 14 counts.

Post-trial, McGill moved for a judgment of acquittal and, alternatively, a new trial, and the government filed its opposition to the motion on March 25. Motions for judgment of acquittal are infrequently granted, because the court must view all evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution and grant the motion only if no reasonable trier of fact could have found the defendant guilty.  Courts are similarly reluctant to grant motions for new trial such as this one, which are not based on newly discovered evidence, absent cumulative trial errors that likely had a substantial influence on the outcome.

In an effort to carry her heavy burden, McGill advances numerous arguments regarding the import of both admitted evidence and evidence the government did not proffer.  One argument – unlikely to succeed – is of particular note for what it teaches about the federal criminal system. McGill contends that the government offered no direct proof of the effect that the Medicare fraud had on interstate commerce, which is an element of the offense.

To be sure, there is facial appeal to that argument. Defining crimes is traditionally the province of states and localities. Federal crimes must be founded in the U.S. Constitution, and the nexus for most is the Commerce Clause.  Here, the charged Medicare fraud must affect interstate commerce to be constitutionally valid.  However, as demonstrated by the generations-long expansion of the federal criminal code, an offense’s connection to interstate commerce need not be significant. Consistent with the governing law, the McGill court instructed the jury that “[a]ffecting interstate commerce means any action, which in any way interferes with, changes, or alters the movement or transportation or flow of goods, merchandise, money, or other property in commerce between or among states.  The effect can be minimal.”

McGill does not argue that the charged offense has no effect on interstate commerce – a contention that would be difficult to support in light of the complex state of health care delivery. Rather, she argues that the government neglected to present testimony on the issue, thus creating “a failure of proof of [a] critical element[] of the offense.” The government quips that the argument “borders on the frivolous,” and, while that response may be an overstatement, given the lack of direct precedent, governing case law has endorsed the general notion that juries may infer an effect on interstate commerce from the totality of the evidence. See, e.g., United States v. Haywood, 363 F.3d 200, 210 (3d Cir. 2004). Furthermore, a rule requiring the government to present direct testimony on interstate commerce would be difficult to reconcile with the approach that has permitted the federalization of crimes that have only a minimal or hypothetical effect on interstate commerce.

If McGill does not prevail on her post-trial motions, her case will proceed to sentencing.  The U.S. Sentencing Guidelines advise a sentence of imprisonment with the range of 33-41 months.  However, the court has discretion to depart from that range, either upward or downward, based on a number of factors identified in the Guidelines or the U.S. Code, including her history and characteristics and the nature and circumstances of the offense.

Pardon Attorney Cites Lack Of Resources, Access In Resignation

Posted On Wednesday, March 30, 2016

The resignation letter of United States Pardon Attorney Deborah Leff was made public Monday, following a FOIA request by USA Today.  The letter draws attention to a clemency process long shrouded in secrecy as well as to the shortcomings of President Obama’s much-touted clemency program. 

In the letter, dated January 15, 2016, Leff claims that a lack of resources and a lack of access to the Office of White House Counsel prevented her from effectively doing her job. 

The role of the Patent Attorney is to investigate pardon and commutation petitions and make recommendations to the Deputy Attorney General, who then forwards these recommendations to the Office of White House Counsel.  Since many of these cases are very sensitive, the workings of this process are typically kept secret.

In 2014, the Obama administration announced the Clemency Project, designed to use the president’s pardon power to release federal inmates (mostly nonviolent drug offenders) who would have received shorter sentences if sentenced under today’s less severe guidelines.  After the Obama administration announced the initiative, the number of clemency petitions skyrocketed – now standing at over 10,000 cases pending. 

In her resignation, Leff stated that while she supported the initiative, a lack of resources, including staffing, has stymied not only her ability to provide timely clemency recommendations, but also required that she set aside “thousands” of traditional pardon and commutation petitions as well.

Besides the funding and staffing issues, Leff also pointed to the lack of access she had during her tenure to the Office of White House Counsel.  Citing the increasing number of instances in which the Deputy Attorney General reversed the Pardon Attorney’s recommendation, Leff asserted that “it is important for the President to have a full set of views” when making the complex decisions related to clemency.

In closing, Leff pointed to the fundamental untenability of her situation: asked to address 10,000 clemency petitions with few attorneys and little support staff.  And the paltry figures yielded to date by the initiative seem to bear out Leff’s complaints: with ten months to go in his second term, President Obama has granted only seventy pardons – the fewest since John Adams.

Categories