Justia Government Contracts Opinion Summaries
Articles Posted in Criminal Law
United States v. White
Defendant, former commissioner in charge of the Environmental Services Department of Jefferson County, was convicted of charges related to federal-funds bribery for accepting cash from an engineering firm that contracted with the county for a sewer reconstruction project. Defendant subsequently appealed, challenging the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his convictions and the reasonableness of his prison term. The court held that the same evidence that supported defendant's federal-funds bribery convictions supported his conspiracy conviction. The court also held that defendant's sentence was procedurally and substantively reasonable. Accordingly, the judgment was affirmed. View "United States v. White" on Justia Law
United States v. Gray
Based on her part in billing Indiana Medicaid for ambulance service while running a car service to take patients to medical appointments, defendant was convicted of Medicaid fraud, 18 U.S.C. 1347, and conspiracy to defraud the U.S. government, 18 U.S.C. 371. She was sentenced to 33 months in prison and to pay restitution of $846,115. The Seventh Circuit affirmed. Data relating to time-stamping of bills, which may have established that multiple people submitted bills, was not concealed; the government simply failed to extract (before trial) information to which it and the defense had access. Even if the data was "Brady" material, it would not have changed the outcome. The judge did not err in telling the jury that a scheduled witness was ill without saying that the witness had refused treatment. View "United States v. Gray" on Justia Law
Leavitt v. Correctional Medical Services, Inc.
An inmate of the Maine corrections system, sought a civil rights remedy (42 U.S.C. 1983) for alleged denial of adequate medical care for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) by healthcare professionals at a jail and the state prison. The district court entered summary judgment for the defendants. The First Circuit affirmed with respect to the contractor that provides care, stating that the evidence could not establish Eighth Amendment violations, but reversed with respect to a physicians' assistant. Although the contractor acknowledged that its care "fell short of the mark," carelessness or inadvertence falls short of the Eighth Amendment standard of deliberate indifference. There was a material dispute about deliberate indifference by the physicians' assistant, who had a financial interest in limiting care and a disciplinary history.View "Leavitt v. Correctional Medical Services, Inc." on Justia Law
United States v. Jones
A podiatrist, primarily serving elderly patients, was convicted of healthcare fraud counts that resulted in a loss of $120. The podiatrist was sentenced to 18 months in prison followed by three years of supervision and ordered to pay more than $244,000, based on acquittal counts. The Sixth Circuit affirmed the conviction, but vacated and remanded the sentence. There was sufficient evidence that the podiatrist mailed bills for patients who were not actually treated and for work done by staff no longer employed at the office. Sentencing based on acquittal counts is not unconstitutional if those counts have been established by a preponderance of evidence, but the sentence was unreasonable. Although a court need only make a reasonable estimate of loss, the court relied solely on statistical evidence about loss from up-coding without a sound representative sample. The acquittal counts were part of a broad scheme to defraud and an award of restitution, based on those counts, was proper.