Reddy Annappareddy v. United States
Reddy Annappareddy v. United States
Opinion
USCA4 Appeal: 23-2027 Doc: 52 Filed: 01/28/2025 Pg: 1 of 16
UNPUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 23-2027
REDDY VIJAY ANNAPPAREDDY,
Plaintiff – Appellant,
v.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Defendant – Appellee,
and
MAURA LATING; ROBERT MOSLEY; PAM ARNOLD; JAMES P. RYAN; SANDRA WILKINSON; CATHERINE SCHUSTER PASCALE; STEVEN CAPOBIANCO,
Defendants.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, at Baltimore. Joseph F. Anderson, Jr., Senior District Judge. (1:18-cv-03012-JFA)
Argued: October 29, 2024 Decided: January 28, 2025
Before GREGORY and HARRIS, Circuit Judges, and Louise W. FLANAGAN, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of North Carolina, sitting by designation.
Affirmed by unpublished opinion. Judge Harris wrote the opinion, in which Judge Gregory and Judge Flanagan joined. USCA4 Appeal: 23-2027 Doc: 52 Filed: 01/28/2025 Pg: 2 of 16
ARGUED: Joshua Daniel Greenberg, THE JOSH GREENBERG LAW FIRM PLLC, Washington, D.C., for Appellant. Molissa Heather Farber, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Erek L. Barron, United States Attorney, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellee.
Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
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PAMELA HARRIS, Circuit Judge:
After federal criminal charges against him were dismissed, Reddy Annappareddy
sued the United States for malicious prosecution under the Federal Tort Claims Act. The
district court held a three-week bench trial and then ruled against Annappareddy on two
alternative grounds: first, that he failed to show the proceedings against him were instituted
without probable cause; and second, that he had not shown a malicious motive for the
prosecution. We agree on both points and affirm the district court’s judgment.
I.
This case began with the government’s criminal prosecution of Reddy
Annappareddy for healthcare fraud. After his conviction was vacated and the charges
against him dismissed, Annappareddy sued the United States and multiple state and federal
officials involved in his prosecution. In a previous opinion, we held that most of
Annappareddy’s claims should be dismissed. See Annappareddy v. Pascale,
996 F.3d 120(4th Cir. 2021) (Annappareddy I).
But we have not yet considered Annappareddy’s claim against the United States
under the Federal Tort Claims Act (“FTCA”), alleging that two federal agents, Maura
Lating and Robert Mosley, knowingly relied on false and unreliable information in
obtaining a search warrant and indictment. The facts related to the agents’ investigation of
Annappareddy are recounted in detail in our prior opinion, see
id.at 127–29, and we outline
them just briefly here. We then turn to Annappareddy’s criminal proceedings and his
subsequent civil suit, and finally to the district court ruling now on appeal.
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A.
Plaintiff Annappareddy founded and owned Pharmacare, a chain of pharmacies
located in Maryland and other nearby states. State and federal officials began investigating
Pharmacare in 2012, when its former Chief Operating Officer, Dennis Tokofsky, reported
the company to Maryland authorities, alleging that it regularly billed Medicaid for
automatically refilled prescriptions that were never picked up or delivered to patients. A
pharmacist at one of Pharmacare’s stores, Lisa Ridolfi, echoed Tokofsky’s account and
became a confidential informant, helping the team to gather evidence.
FBI Special Agent Maura Lating and U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services Special Agent Robert Mosley – the targets of Annappareddy’s FTCA claim –
were members of the investigative team. Together, the team spent approximately 13
months investigating and corroborating Tokofsky’s initial allegations before seeking a
search warrant or indictment. Investigators conducted multiple interviews with current and
former Pharmacare employees, who validated the overall billing-but-not-filling scheme.
They also interviewed patients, who likewise confirmed Tokofsky’s allegations, reporting
that they were billed for prescriptions that had been automatically refilled but never
delivered. Additional evidence was discovered through undercover operations,
surveillance, and trash pulls.
Agent Mosley also worked with a Medicare drug integrity contractor (“MEDIC”)
to prepare a statistical analysis of Pharmacare’s invoices and inventory. The MEDIC
analysis purported to find “shortages” of multiple medications – that is, that Pharmacare
had insufficient inventory to fill prescriptions for which it billed and was paid. This
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calculation was designed to estimate the financial loss incurred by government insurance
programs as a result of the alleged fraud.
Ultimately, the team sought a search warrant for a number of Pharmacare locations.
Agent Lating signed the 40-page supporting affidavit, which described in detail the
evidence obtained from two confidential informants – Tokofsky and Ridolfi – and from
the team’s corroborating investigation. It also included the MEDIC shortage calculations.
Based on this affidavit (the “Lating Affidavit”), a federal magistrate judge found probable
cause to search six locations. On the same day, Agent Mosley used the Lating Affidavit
as an outline for his grand jury testimony, which led to the indictment of Annappareddy
and two of his employees on charges of healthcare fraud and aggravated identity theft.
B.
Because Annappareddy’s claim is that Lating and Mosley knowingly relied on false
information in obtaining the search warrant and indictment against him, events that came
later – after presentation of the Lating Affidavit to the magistrate judge and grand jury –
are not directly relevant here. But for context, we summarize the rest of the events that led
to this appeal.
Following a superseding indictment and jury trial, Annappareddy was convicted of
healthcare fraud and identity theft. That conviction was vacated, however, when
Annappareddy moved for a new trial, and discovery produced evidence of significant flaws
in an updated MEDIC analysis used against him at trial. As a result of that disclosure, the
government joined Annappareddy’s request for a new trial, which was granted by the
district court. And then, after securing a new superseding indictment, the government
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disclosed that it had destroyed three boxes of relevant documents – mistakenly, according
to the government, but intentionally in Annappareddy’s view. Annappareddy moved to
dismiss all charges with prejudice, and the district court granted the motion.
Annappareddy then filed the 25-count civil lawsuit that gives rise to this appeal,
naming as defendants seven individual state and federal officers and the United States.
Most of those claims have been resolved already. In our first review of this case, on
interlocutory appeal, we affirmed the dismissal of Annappareddy’s claims against the
individual federal officers, agreeing with the district court that a Bivens cause of action
could not be extended into this new context. See Annappareddy I, 996 F.3d at 132–38.
We also held that Annappareddy’s claims against a state prosecutor were barred by
prosecutorial immunity.
Id.at 138–42. But Annappareddy’s FTCA claims against the
United States were still pending, see
id.at 130 n.3, and we left that issue for further
proceedings on remand. 1
C.
That brings us to the trial and ruling now before us on appeal. The FTCA allows
for the recovery of damages against the United States for a malicious prosecution claim
that involves the conduct of “investigative or law enforcement officers . . . who [are]
empowered by law to execute searches, to seize evidence, or to make arrests for violations
of Federal law.”
28 U.S.C. § 2680(h). Annappareddy’s FTCA claim accordingly focuses
1 There also remained state-law claims against one state investigator. See Annappareddy I,
996 F.3d at 130n.3. The district court separated out those claims from the FTCA claim against the United States, and they are not relevant to this appeal.
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on the actions of two federal agents, Lating and Mosley, alleging that they engaged in
malicious prosecution when they used false and unreliable information to obtain both his
indictment and the search warrants that effectively shuttered his pharmacies. 2
That FTCA claim is governed by state law, see
28 U.S.C. § 1346(b)(1) – here, by
the law of Maryland. To make out a claim of malicious prosecution under Maryland law,
Annappareddy was required to prove four elements: (1) a criminal proceeding instituted
against him; (2) without probable cause; (3) with malice, or with a motive other than to
bring an offender to justice; and (4) termination of the proceeding in his favor. Heron v.
Strader,
761 A.2d 56, 59(Md. 2000). The parties agreed that Annappareddy could satisfy
the first and fourth elements, but contested the second and third – lack of probable cause
and malice. See Annappareddy v. Lating, No. 1:18-cv-03012,
2023 WL 6538392, at *24
(D. Md. Aug. 3, 2023).
The district court thus proceeded to a lengthy bench trial. Over the course of ten
days, the court heard approximately 40 hours of testimony from 19 witnesses, including
Annappareddy, and reviewed approximately 200 exhibits. It then set out its findings of
fact and conclusions of law in a detailed and thoroughly reasoned 67-page opinion. The
court gave special care to its credibility determinations, addressing the testimony of each
2 Annappareddy initially pressed five FTCA counts against the United States. The district court granted summary judgment to the United States on three of those counts, see Annappareddy v. Lating, No. 1:18-cv-03012,
2023 WL 2540306, at *18 (D. Md. Mar. 16, 2023), and Annappareddy did not appeal that judgment. The district court handled together the remaining two counts – malicious prosecution in obtaining the search warrant and malicious prosecution in the indictment – and we do the same.
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witness in turn to provide “greater insight,”
id. at *3, into its bottom-line finding: that the
government’s witnesses, including Lating and Mosley, were credible, see
id.at *15–16,
while Annappareddy was not, see
id.at *22–23 (explaining that the “court had difficulty
giving Annappareddy’s testimony credence at any point,” and discussing one particularly
“concerning” inaccuracy).
Based on its credibility determinations and factual findings, the district court held,
first, that Annappareddy had failed to prove that the proceedings against him were not
supported by probable cause. The crux of the issue here, as the district court explained,
was the Lating Affidavit, on which both the search warrants and the indictment rested. See
id. at *5, *23 & n.31. Applying Maryland law, the district court considered the sufficiency
of that affidavit using a Franks framework, under which Annappareddy could challenge
probable cause only by showing both culpability and materiality: that the agents
intentionally or recklessly included false information in the affidavit; and that without the
false information, there would not be enough for probable cause.
Id.at *24–25 (discussing
Franks v. Delaware,
438 U.S. 154, 155–56 (1978)).
Under that standard, the district court emphasized, what mattered was what Lating
and Mosley knew or had reason to believe at the time the Lating Affidavit was submitted.
And there was no credible evidence, the court found, that either Lating or Mosley had any
reason to believe that the Lating Affidavit included false information. See
id.at *15–16.
To the contrary: The “mountain of corroboration” unearthed by the team’s investigation
meant that Lating and Mosley had no reason to doubt the veracity of their confidential
informants or the accuracy of the affidavit. Id. at *26. The affidavit did include, the court
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recognized, an early version of the flawed MEDIC invoice analysis that led to the vacatur
of Annappareddy’s conviction, which contained some “duplication errors” and did not give
a “complete picture of Pharmacare’s actual operation.” Id. at *27. But again, there was
“no indication” that the agents were aware of those errors prior to Annappareddy’s
indictment, and in any event, they were immaterial to a probable cause finding. Id.
The court also held, in the alternative, that Annappareddy could not prevail on his
malicious prosecution claim because he could not prove the requisite malice. Id. at *29.
The court recognized that under Maryland law, malice may be inferred from a lack of
probable cause. See id. at *29 n.37 (citing Wesko v. G.E.M., Inc.,
321 A.2d 529, 532(Md.
1974)). But here, the court explained, no such inference would be appropriate because
there was no evidence that Mosley or Lating – or any agent – had any ill-will toward
Annappareddy or “ever acted for personal gain or for any reason other than to bring about
justice.” Id. at *29. Instead, Mosley and Lating, along with the rest of their team, initiated
an investigation based on reports of fraudulent activity, took normal investigative steps,
and made “painstaking efforts to verify, corroborate, and gather evidence of fraud” –
leaving them, in the end, with no doubt that probable cause existed. Id. Annappareddy’s
claims of malice were wholly unsupported by the evidence, the court concluded, and for
this reason, too, his “claims for malicious prosecution must fail.” Id.
The district court entered final judgment in favor of the United States, dismissing
Annappareddy’s FTCA claim with prejudice. Annappareddy timely appealed.
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II.
We review a judgment following a bench trial under a mixed standard of review.
Roanoke Cement Co. v. Falk Corp.,
413 F.3d 431, 433(4th Cir. 2005). Conclusions of law
are reviewed de novo.
Id.But we may reverse a finding of fact only if it is “clearly
erroneous.”
Id.That deferential standard of review is important to this appeal, in which
Annappareddy primarily disputes the district court’s weighing of the evidence at trial. But
even if we might have “weighed the evidence differently,” we will not reverse the district
court so long as its “account of the evidence is plausible” on the record as a whole.
Anderson v. City of Bessemer City, N.C.,
470 U.S. 564, 574(1985). And where, as here, a
district court’s findings rely in part on an assessment of witness credibility, we give those
findings even greater deference, recognizing that a district court has the critical benefit of
observing the witnesses in person. See U.S. Fire Ins. Co. v. Allied Towing Corp.,
966 F.2d 820, 824(4th Cir. 1992).
A.
We begin with the district court’s holding that Annappareddy could not satisfy the
probable cause element of his malicious prosecution claim. On appeal, Annappareddy does
not challenge the legal standard applied by the district court, incorporating the Franks
framework and requiring him to show that Lating and Mosley intentionally or recklessly
included false information in the Lating Affidavit that was material to the probable cause
determination. Annappareddy,
2023 WL 6538392, at *24. Instead, Annappareddy insists
that he did make that showing at trial – that he proved by a preponderance of the evidence
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that Lating and Mosley intentionally or recklessly put false and material information in the
Lating Affidavit – and that the district court erred in finding to the contrary. We disagree
and discern no clear error in the district court’s findings.
The district court carefully explained its analysis of the evidence and its factual
findings on this matter, and we summarize only briefly here. Annappareddy’s primary
argument was that the agents intentionally or recklessly included in the affidavit the
accounts of two confidential informants – former COO Tokofsky and pharmacist Ridolfi
– who they knew or should have known were biased and unreliable. See
id.at *5–8, *26.
But the district court, as noted above, found Lating and Mosley to be credible witnesses,
and it credited their testimony that they believed Tokofsky and Ridolfi were reliable.
Id. at *26. And, importantly, the district court found that belief was entirely reasonable, given
the “mountain” of evidence corroborating the informants’ accounts.
Id.The district court
carefully reviewed the investigators’ “continuous[] work[] to corroborate the information”
provided by Tokofsky and Ridolfi “through a variety of sources” – physical evidence and
photographs provided by Ridolfi to back up her account; interviews with Pharmacare
patients, some of whom recounted experiences “indicative of the exact scenarios described
by Tokofsky and Ridolfi;” interviews with Pharmacare employees, who also gave accounts
consistent with Ridolfi and Tokofsky’s testimony; and undercover operations using fake
patient profiles.
Id. at *7. “All told,” the district court found, “the multitude of
corroborating information garnered from a variety of unrelated sources more than justified
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[the] agents’ beliefs that Tokofsky and Ridolfi were reliable informants providing credible
information.”
Id. at *8. We see no clear error in that finding.
Annappareddy also tried to undermine the Lating Affidavit by arguing that Lating
and Mosley recklessly or intentionally included false results from a preliminary MEDIC
invoice analysis. The particulars of Annappareddy’s concerns regarding the MEDIC
analysis – an alleged failure to account for transfers across stores, plus instances of “double
counting” billings for prescriptions with secondary insurers – are complex and well
explained in the district court’s opinion. See
id.at *8–12. For present purposes, it is
enough that the district court agreed – as did the government – that the MEDIC analysis
contained some “inaccuracies” and “duplication errors.”
Id. at *10, *27. But the court also
found that neither Mosley, who worked with MEDIC, or Lating knew or had reason to
know of those errors at the time the Lating Affidavit was submitted.
Id. at *11, *27. We
owe substantial deference to the district court’s decision to credit Mosley’s testimony –
that he believed the information in the MEDIC analysis was accurate,
id.at 15 – and also
to credit corroborating witness testimony that consistently described Mosley as acting only
as a “logistical liaison” to MEDIC, without the expertise to perform a technical analysis of
his own,
id. at *11. We see no clear error in the district court’s finding that Annappareddy
failed to show that Lating or Mosley doubted or had reason to doubt the accuracy of the
MEDIC analysis in the Lating Affidavit.
The district court also found, in the alternative, that Annappareddy had not proven
that any MEDIC errors in the Lating Affidavit were material to the probable cause
determination.
Id. at *27. Again, we see no error in that finding. Even with the corrections
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deemed necessary by Annappareddy and his expert, the district court explained, the invoice
analysis still would show a shortage for several medications – a significant gap between
inventory and billings that was indicative of fraud and supportive of probable cause.
Id.And more fundamentally, the entirety of the MEDIC analysis could be removed from the
Lating Affidavit without “consequence” for the probable cause determination because the
MEDIC data was used to estimate the scale of the fraud and the amount of loss – and neither
is an element of the offenses for which Annappareddy was prosecuted.
Id.All the
government needed to show probable cause, the court explained, was the multitude of
evidence it gathered in corroborating its informants’ allegations – witness accounts, photos,
claims data, and the like – making any reliance on the MEDIC invoice analysis immaterial.
Id.Finally, in one sentence in the argument section of his brief, Annappareddy claims
that the Lating Affidavit falsely stated that pharmacies are required to reverse the billing
for a prescription that is not picked up or delivered within 14 days, when in fact the law
allowed for a 60-day window. We assume without deciding that this argument is
preserved. But see Grayson O Co. v. Agadir Int’l LLC,
856 F.3d 307, 316(4th Cir. 2017)
(explaining that a party waives an argument by failing to “develop” it in a brief, even if the
brief takes a “passing shot” at the issue). The district court rejected it on two grounds:
First, the affidavit’s reference to a 14-day standard is not “false” because there is in fact a
14-day industry standard for reversing billings on old prescriptions, and the affidavit does
not present that standard as a legal requirement. Annappareddy,
2023 WL 6538392, at
*26. And second, references to a 14-day standard were in any event immaterial, as the
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Lating Affidavit also discussed ample evidence of undelivered prescriptions older than the
legally required 60-day reversal period.
Id. at *27. We see no ground for reversal of those
findings.
In sum, having considered Annappareddy’s arguments 3 and the full trial record, we
find no error in the district court’s conclusion that Annappareddy failed to prove the
probable cause element of his malicious prosecution claim.
B.
The district court also held that Annappareddy could not make out a malicious
prosecution claim for a second, independent reason: he could not prove malice. Even if,
that is, Lating and Mosley had initiated Annappareddy’s prosecution without probable
cause, Annappareddy had not presented any evidence that they acted with a motive “other
than that of bringing an offender to justice.” Annappareddy,
2023 WL 6538392, at *29
(citing Montgomery Ward v. Wilson,
664 A.2d 916, 922(Md. 1995)). Again, we have
considered Annappareddy’s arguments and find no basis for disturbing the district court’s
ruling.
Under Maryland law, malice is a separate and independent element of the tort of
malicious prosecution. To prove malice, Annappareddy must show that Lating and Mosley
Annappareddy also suggests that Lating intentionally or recklessly included in her 3
search warrant application a newer, closed-door pharmacy, CareMerica, as to which there was not probable cause. But as the district court explained, CareMerica opened at the site of what was formerly a Pharmacare store, and other Pharmacare stores transferred their prescriptions to CareMerica upon opening. Annappareddy,
2023 WL 6538392, at *14. We agree with the district court and the government that a new name on a building does not affect the probable cause analysis.
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had a “wrongful or improper motive in initiating legal proceedings,” meaning some motive
other than “bringing the party to justice.” Montgomery Ward,
664 A.2d at 924(internal
citation omitted). As the district court explained, Annappareddy attempted to make that
showing at trial. He suggested that Lating and Mosley initiated his prosecution to win an
award – but given the complete absence of evidence of any such “mythical award,” the
district court rejected that theory as “completely manufactured.” Annappareddy,
2023 WL 6538392, at *29. Nor, the district court found, was there any evidence that Lating or
Mosley knew of or disliked Annappareddy before the investigation, or had any reason to
engage in an elaborate conspiracy to fabricate evidence, falsify data analyses, and lie to
federal prosecutors.
Id.Instead, the evidence showed that Lating and Mosley acted only
“in the pursuit of bringing an individual they had no prior knowledge of to justice for his
role in [a] reported fraud.”
Id.Based on the trial record, this finding of an absence of
malice was not clearly erroneous.
We also reject Annappareddy’s argument that the district court erred by not
inferring malice from a lack of probable cause – a lack the court was assuming only for the
purpose of its alternative holding. “While malice can be inferred from want of probable
cause, it is no more than a permissible inference[.]” Wesko,
321 A.2d at 532. The existence
of malice is ultimately a fact question for the trier of fact to decide. Banks v. Montgomery
Ward & Co.,
128 A.2d 600, 606(Md. 1957); Torsch v. Dell,
41 A. 903, 905(Md. 1898).
In light of the evidence presented at trial, the district court did not err in holding, in the
alternative, that it would decline to infer malice in this case even if probable cause were
lacking.
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III.
The evidence that Annappareddy presented at trial failed to prove two necessary
elements of his malicious prosecution claim. We therefore affirm the district court’s entry
of judgment in favor of the defendant, the United States.
AFFIRMED
16
Reference
- Status
- Unpublished