United States v. Khaled Elbeblawy
Opinion
This appeal from the convictions and sentence of Khaled Elbeblawy for conspiracy to commit healthcare fraud and wire fraud,
I. BACKGROUND
Khaled Elbeblawy owned or managed three home health agencies that provided in-home medical nursing and other services to homebound patients, and he used each to defraud Medicare of millions of dollars. Elbeblawy began defrauding Medicare when he was working as a billing agent at Willsand Home Health. He and Eulises Escalona, the owner of Willsand and a cooperating witness for the government, were "falsifying ... medical records, [ ]exaggerating the symptoms [of] ... patients in order to get paid [by] Medicare," and billing for services that were never provided. Elbeblawy quickly saw the potential to bilk Medicare for still more money. He asked Escalona for a promotion to marketing director and offered to "go out there [in] the community and recruit doctors ... [who would accept] kickbacks." He told Escalona that if they "pa[id] kickback[s]," and took "doctors to lunch or g[ave] them nice gift[s]," the doctors would refer patients to them. Escalona agreed, and they began to pay doctors between $400 and $800 per referral. They insisted on paying the doctors only in "[c]ash because cash is the only way that nobody can trace if you pay somebody or not."
Elbeblawy also hired "[b]etween eight [and] ten" "patient recruiters" and purchased referrals from nurses and other home health entities or staffing groups that lacked the authority to bill Medicare. Because the groups required a "large amount of money," it was impractical to pay them in cash. Elbeblawy and Escalona consulted a lawyer who informed them that it was illegal to pay for patient referrals. Undeterred, Elbeblawy and Escalona disguised check payments to the groups by inflating the rate they paid for staffing services. And they described checks to the patient recruiters as payments for consulting and other services. Escalona testified that 90 percent of the patients of Willsand were referred because of a kickback of some kind.
Elbeblawy and Escalona also paid the doctors to approve unnecessary medical services. Elbeblawy would pick the most profitable services, falsify the medical records, and pay the doctors in cash-filled envelopes to sign the appropriate documents. Escalona testified that the majority of the patients of Willsand did not need the services billed to Medicare.
Although Elbeblawy began to hold himself out as the chief executive officer of Willsand, Escalona refused to make him a full partner and instead agreed to become equal partners with him in a new firm, JEM Home Health. Elbeblawy managed the day-to-day operations of the new agency, which had "the same modus operand[i]" as Willsand and used many of the same sources for patient referrals. Around March 2009, Elbeblawy became the sole owner of JEM.
In November 2009, Medicare suspended payments to JEM in response to "reliable information that [JEM] billed Medicare and received payment for home health services provided to beneficiaries who are not, in fact, homebound and were not homebound during the time the services were rendered." Safeguard Services, a Medicare contractor responsible for investigating healthcare fraud, audited JEM. The audit revealed that almost 74 percent of claims submitted between July 2008 and July 2009, and almost 99 percent of claims submitted between August 2009 and February 2010, should never have been paid.
Elbeblawy then started yet another home health agency, this time in his ex-wife's name, and failed to disclose that he was affiliated with a suspended agency. From the beginning, Elbeblawy ran Healthy Choice Home Health. And in 2013, he bought the company from his ex-wife for ten dollars in accordance with a "stock purchase option agreement" they entered in 2010. All told, Medicare paid $29.1 million for claims from Willsand, $8.7 million for claims from JEM, and $2.5 million for claims from Healthy Choice.
Elbeblawy later decided to "cooperate with the [g]overnment and accept responsibility." For approximately two years, Elbeblawy helped investigators obtain evidence against his former conspirators. For example, he provided the government with a handwritten list of the doctors, home health groups, and recruiters with whom he used to work. And he recorded more than 30 incriminating conversations about kickbacks with his former conspirators. He offered one physician "the same number [they] used to do." And he told another physician that he "remember[ed] what [he] used to do with [the physician] before," and he told the physician to "[l]et [him] know what [he] ha[d] in mind" for payment.
In June 2015, Elbeblawy and his attorney signed a plea agreement and, 14 days later, a written factual basis for the agreement.
The agreement provided that, "[i]n the event of ... a breach[,] ... the [d]efendant waives any protection[ ] afforded by ... Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure and Rule 410 of the Federal Rules of Evidence," both of which bar the admission of statements made during plea discussions. The agreement also stated that "the [g]overnment w[ould] be free to use against the [d]efendant, directly and indirectly, in any criminal or civil proceeding[,] any of the information, statements, and materials provided by him pursuant to th[e] [a]greement, including offering into evidence or otherwise using the attached Agreed Factual Basis for Guilty Plea." Elbeblawy's attorney testified that he met with Elbeblawy at least twice to discuss the agreement, that he "literally read" the agreement to him, and that he "walk[ed] [Elbeblawy] through each paragraph separately."
After he signed the agreement, Elbeblawy "changed [his] mind" and refused to plead guilty, so the government prosecuted him for conspiracy to commit healthcare fraud and wire fraud,
At trial, the government introduced the factual basis for the plea agreement as well as the evidence Elbeblawy helped the government obtain. And it called Escalona and Kansky Delisma, one of the doctors who accepted kickbacks, to testify. Elbeblawy testified in his own defense and declared that he was completely "framed" by the government.
At the end of the trial, the district court instructed the jury on both conspiracy counts. It instructed the jury that "[t]o ... defraud the United States" under section 371"means to cheat the [g]overnment out of ... property or money or to interfere with any of its lawful [g]overnment functions by deceit, craft, or trickery." The wording of this instruction varied slightly from the wording in the indictment, which alleged that Elbeblawy conspired "to defraud the United States by impairing, impeding, obstructing, and defeating through deceitful and dishonest means, the lawful government functions of the United States Department of Health and Human Services." The jury found Elbeblawy guilty of each object on both conspiracy counts: conspiracy to commit healthcare fraud and wire fraud, and conspiracy to defraud the United States and pay healthcare kickbacks.
The district court denied Elbeblawy's motion for a new trial based on an alleged violation of his right to due process under
Brady v. Maryland
,
The district court imposed a forfeiture order of $36,400,957.
See
At the sentencing hearing, the district court ruled that the 2015 Sentencing Guidelines applied, that Elbeblawy used "sophisticated means" to commit his crimes, and that the loss amount from the conspiracy exceeded $25 million. Elbeblawy argued that an earlier, less-stringent version of the Guidelines applied because his criminal conduct occurred before November 2011. But the district court ruled that the 2015 Guidelines applied because the "continuing criminal conduct ... began in 2006 and ended in 2013." It also applied a sophisticated-means role enhancement because the conspiracy "was a sophisticated and very extensive and elaborate operation." The district court explained that Elbeblawy "recruited ... patient recruiters" and "directly paid the doctors ... [and] made arrangements for those meetings and those payments." And it stated that Elbeblawy "was involved in the fraudulent contracts that were executed." For the loss amount, the district court used the same $36 million figure it had used for the forfeiture order. It then sentenced Elbeblawy to 240 months of imprisonment.
II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
Several standards govern this appeal. "In reviewing the district court's suppression rulings, 'we review factual findings for clear error and the court's application of law to those facts
de novo
.' "
United States v. Mathurin
,
III. DISCUSSION
We divide our discussion in five parts. First, we explain that the district court did not err when it admitted the signed factual basis for Elbeblawy's plea agreement. Second, we explain that the government did not violate Elbeblawy's right to due process under Brady . Third, we explain that the district court did not constructively amend the indictment when it instructed the jury. Fourth, we explain that the district court did not clearly err when it calculated Elbeblawy's Sentencing Guidelines range. Fifth, we explain that the district court erred when it imposed a forfeiture order that held Elbeblawy jointly and severally liable for the proceeds of the conspiracy.
A. The District Court Did Not Err when It Admitted the Factual Basis for Elbeblawy's Plea Agreement.
Federal Rule of Evidence 410(a), which is incorporated into Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11(f), provides that "a statement made during plea discussions" may not be admitted "[i]n a civil or criminal case ... against the defendant who made the plea or participated in the plea discussions" if "the discussions did not result in a guilty plea." Fed. R. Evid. 410(a) ;
see also
Fed. R. Crim. P. 11(f) ("The admissibility or inadmissibility of a plea, a plea discussion, and any related statement is governed by Federal Rule of Evidence 410."). But "an agreement to waive" the protections in these rules is "valid and enforceable," the Supreme Court has held, "absent some affirmative indication that the agreement was entered into unknowingly or involuntarily."
United States v. Mezzanatto
,
Elbeblawy argues that, although he and his attorney signed a plea agreement that waived the plea-statement rules, the waiver is unenforceable. The relevant provision of that agreement waived the protections of Rule 410 and Rule 11 in broad terms:
Defendant agrees that if he fails to comply with any of the provisions of this [a]greement, including the failure to tender such [a]greement to the [district] [c]ourt, ... or attempts to withdraw the plea (prior to or after pleading guilty to the charges identified [in the agreement] ), the [g]overnment will have the right to characterize such conduct as a breach of th[e] [a]greement. In the event of such a breach[,] ... the [d]efendant waives any protections afforded by Section 1B1.8(a) of the Sentencing Guidelines, Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure [,] and Rule 410 of the Federal Rules of Evidence, and the [g]overnment will be free to use against the [d]efendant, directly and indirectly, in any criminal or civil proceeding any of the information, statements, and materials provided by him pursuant to this [a]greement, including offering into evidence or otherwise using the attached Agreed Factual Basis for Guilty Plea.
Elbeblawy argues that the waiver is ambiguous and should be construed against the government and, in the alternative, that he did not knowingly and voluntarily sign the plea agreement and that his attorney could not waive the plea-statement rules on his behalf. We disagree.
1. The Waiver Is Unambiguous.
We construe plea agreements "in a manner that is sometimes likened to contractual interpretation."
United States v. Harris
,
Elbeblawy argues that the waiver provision in his plea agreement was ambiguous and must be construed against the government, but the agreement clearly stated that Elbeblawy "waive[d] any protections afforded by ... Rule 11... and Rule 410." And to avoid any confusion, it elaborated that "the [g]overnment will be free to use against the [d]efendant, directly and indirectly, in any criminal or civil proceeding any of the information, statements, and materials provided by him pursuant to th[e] [a]greement, including offering into evidence or otherwise using the attached Agreed Factual Basis." We discern no ambiguity in this text.
Elbeblawy objects that the waiver provision is ambiguous because it defined "breach" to include "attempts to withdraw the plea (prior to or after pleading guilty ...)" even though "[a] guilty plea that has not yet been entered cannot be withdrawn." Put differently, he contends that the use of the word "withdraw" renders the agreement "ambiguous" about whether a defendant who "attempts to withdraw" "prior to" pleading guilty has breached the agreement. We disagree.
That the term withdraw might have a different meaning in other contexts does not render its meaning in this context any less clear. The text of the agreement makes clear that to withdraw, in this context, includes a decision not to plead guilty at all. Elbeblawy's waiver is unambiguous.
We also reject Elbeblawy's argument that the waiver is ambiguous because it refers to the "attached Agreed Factual Basis" even though the factual basis was not attached when the agreement was signed. The factual basis was identified in the plea agreement and was later signed by both Elbeblawy and his attorney. And the agreement did not condition its enforcement on whether the signed statement was yet attached. Elbeblawy's attorney also testified that when he and Elbeblawy signed the agreement, they "had a ... [f]actual [b]asis," although he could not recall "if it was specifically stapled to [the agreement]." Nothing suggests that Elbeblawy was confused about the contents of the factual basis.
2. The District Court Did Not Clearly Err when It Found that Elbeblawy Knowingly and Voluntarily Waived the Plea-Statement Rules.
The Supreme Court has held that a waiver of the plea-statement rules is "valid and enforceable" "absent some affirmative indication that the agreement was entered into unknowingly or involuntarily."
Mezzanatto
,
Everett v. Sec'y, Fla. Dep't of Corr.
,
Elbeblawy acknowledges that both he and his attorney signed the plea agreement, but he argues that his attorney could not waive the plea-statement rules on his behalf and that he did not knowingly sign the agreement because he did not understand the waiver provision or the protections he was waiving. He stresses that, although his attorney met with him twice to discuss the agreement and "read the entire plea agreement to him," his attorney did not explain the plea-statement rules or the waiver provision. Elbeblawy also argues that his attorney testified that he generally advises his clients that "there would be no agreement" if the client "pulls out of the agreement after the plea ." According to Elbeblawy, his attorney "did not tell [him] the agreement would be void if he never entered a guilty plea." This argument fails.
We need not decide whether an attorney may waive the plea-statement rules on behalf of his client, because the district court did not clearly err when it ruled that Elbeblawy knowingly and voluntarily waived the rules. As discussed above, the waiver provision is unambiguous. And the testimonies of Elbeblawy, his attorney, and a government investigator over the course of a two-day evidentiary hearing amply support the findings by the district court. Not only could Elbeblawy read the waiver provision for himself, his attorney "literally read" it to him. Indeed, his attorney "walk[ed] through each paragraph separately" with Elbeblawy, and his attorney testified that he was present when Elbeblawy signed the agreement. The district court also explained that Elbeblawy "has a college degree" and "asked many questions" of his attorney, which suggests that he took steps to ensure that he knew his rights and understood the consequences of signing the agreement. His attorney agreed that, "[o]ther than those questions or concerns that he raised" about unrelated issues, Elbeblawy never "indicate[d] to [him] that there was any portion of the [p]lea [a]greement or [f]actual [b]asis that he didn't understand." We reject Elbeblawy's argument that the district court clearly erred.
B. The Government Did Not Violate Elbeblawy's Right to Due Process Under Brady.
To establish a violation of the duty to disclose exculpatory evidence, a defendant must prove "that the government possessed favorable evidence," that the defendant "did not possess the evidence and could not have obtained the evidence with any reasonable diligence, that the government suppressed the favorable evidence, and that the evidence" is material, or "creates a reasonable probability of a different outcome."
United States v. Man
,
Elbeblawy argues that the government violated Brady when it failed to disclose an allegedly exculpatory report about an early police interview of Delisma. According to the interview report, Delisma initially denied knowing Elbeblawy and acknowledged only that he "may have seen Elbeblawy ... approximately 4-5 years [before the date of the interview]" when Elbeblawy was approaching other doctors about working with him. But Delisma almost immediately reversed course. He testified that about two weeks after that initial interview he "f[ound] out that the [g]overnment knew that [he] had referred patients to ... Elbeblawy in exchange for money" when an investigator "showed [him] a video where [he] was receiving cash money from ... Elbeblawy in exchange for a referral." At that point, he "admitt[ed] to receiving money for patient referrals." The government played the video for the jury, and Delisma testified that he "told the [g]overnment" about other referrals he made in exchange for kickbacks.
Elbeblawy contends that the report was material because "Delisma [was] the only witness who testified that he received kickbacks from Elbeblawy" and the report "directly exculpate[d] Elbeblawy of any wrongdoing relating to his alleged payment to Delisma of kickbacks." He also maintains that the report was "powerful impeachment evidence" because it showed "Delisma's dishonesty and his willingness to lie to [government investigators]." And he asserts that impeaching Delisma's credibility would have "undermined ... Escalona's testimony" because "the government relied on Delisma's testimony to corroborate testimony elicited from [Escalona,] its star witness." We again disagree.
The interview report does not "create[ ] a reasonable probability of a different outcome."
Man
,
Moreover, the evidence at trial was overwhelming even without Delisma's testimony.
See
United States v. Hernandez
,
C. The District Court Did Not Constructively Amend the Indictment.
The Fifth Amendment provides that "[n]o person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury...." U.S. Const. amend. V. So the government may not try
a defendant "on charges that are not made in the indictment against him."
Madden
,
Elbeblawy argues that the district court "constructively amended Count [Two] of the superseding indictment" when it instructed the jury. Count Two charged Elbeblawy with violating section 371, which prohibits "conspir[ing] ... to defraud the United States, or any agency thereof in any manner or for any purpose."
Our review is governed by the plain-error standard, which applies to challenges that were not raised before the district court.
See
Madden
,
We conclude that there was no error, let alone plain error, because the slightly different wording of the jury instruction did not amount to a constructive amendment of the indictment. The district court correctly stated the law and its instructions tracked, almost verbatim, our pattern instructions for conspiracy to defraud the United States,
D. The District Court Did Not Clearly Err when It Calculated Elbeblawy's Sentencing Guidelines Range.
Elbeblawy raises three challenges to the calculation of his Sentencing Guidelines range. First, he argues that the district court violated the Ex Post Facto Clause, U.S. Const. art. 1, § 9, cl. 3, when it sentenced him under the 2015 Guidelines instead of the less severe Guidelines in effect before November 1, 2011. Second, he argues that the district court clearly erred when it found that Elbeblawy used sophisticated means within the meaning of section 2B1.1(b)(10)(C) of the Guidelines. Third, he argues that the district court clearly erred when it calculated the loss amount. None of these arguments is persuasive.
Although a defendant is ordinarily sentenced under the Guidelines in effect at the time of sentencing,
United States v. Aviles
,
The district court did not clearly err when it found that Elbeblawy's conduct continued after 2011. Elbeblawy's signed factual basis expressly provided that his "primary role in the scheme ... was to establish and take control of JEM ... (from approximately 2006-2011) and Healthy Choice ... ( from approximately 2009-2013 )." This evidence alone establishes that Elbeblawy's criminal conduct continued after 2011.
Nor did the district court err when it found that Elbeblawy used "sophisticated means" within the meaning of section 2B1.1(b)(10)(C) to defraud the government. The role enhancement for sophisticated means applies to "especially complex or especially intricate offense conduct pertaining to the execution or concealment of an offense," such as "hiding assets or transactions, or both, through the use of fictitious entities, corporate shells, or offshore financial accounts." U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1 n.9(B). Elbeblawy and Escalona first agreed to use cash to pay the doctors because "cash is the only way that nobody can trace if you pay somebody or not." They later decided to create sham contracts that allowed them to inflate the rates they paid for staffing services to disguise the kickbacks they paid to the home health entities. Elbeblawy also sent checks to patient recruiters that used the term "patient care coordinator[ ]" because, according to Escalona, "if you use the word 'recruiter' ..., you will be caught very eas[il]y." And he used his ex-wife to open a new home health agency when Medicare suspended payments to JEM. In the light of these efforts at concealment,
we are not "left with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed."
United States v. Robertson
,
Finally, the district court did not clearly err when it estimated that the loss amount under section 2B1.1(b)(1) was in excess of $25 million. "Although it may not speculate about the existence of facts and must base its estimate on reliable and specific evidence, the district court is required only to make a reasonable estimate of the loss" based on facts that the government must prove by a preponderance of the evidence.
United States v. Ford
,
E. The District Court Erred when It Entered a Forfeiture Order That Held Elbeblawy Jointly and Severally Liable for the Proceeds of the Conspiracy.
Elbeblawy raises three challenges to the forfeiture order. He argues that the district court erred because "[t]he forfeiture statutes do not authorize personal money judgments as a form of forfeiture," because the Sixth Amendment "require[s] a jury verdict or proof beyond a reasonable doubt to sustain [a] forfeiture order," and because "a forfeiture judgment premised on proceeds received by Escalona" contravenes the holding of the Supreme Court in
Honeycutt v. United States
, --- U.S. ----,
We have squarely held that "criminal forfeiture acts
in personam
as a punishment against the party who committed the criminal act[ ]."
United States v. Fleet
,
But
Honeycutt
held only that a district court may not hold members of a conspiracy jointly and severally liable for property that a conspirator derived from the crime.
Elbeblawy's Sixth Amendment argument fares no better. The Supreme Court held in
Libretti v. United States
that "the right to a jury verdict on forfeitability does not fall within the Sixth Amendment's constitutional protection."
Finally, we agree with both parties that we must remand for a new forfeiture determination because the district court erred when it ruled that Elbeblawy was jointly and severally liable for the proceeds from the conspiracy. The Supreme Court held in
Honeycutt
that a defendant may not "be held jointly and severally liable for property that his co-conspirator derived from [certain drug] crime[s] but that the defendant himself did not acquire."
IV. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM Elbeblawy's convictions and sentence, VACATE the forfeiture order, and REMAND for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Khaled ELBEBLAWY, Defendant-Appellant.
- Cited By
- 26 cases
- Status
- Published