United States of America, ex rel., et al v. Sightpath Medical, Inc., et al
Filing
1086
ORDER granting in part and denying in part 1047 Motion for Judgment as a Matter of Law and further directing. (Written Opinion) Signed by Judge Wilhelmina M. Wright on 2/8/2024. (RMM)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA
United States of America ex rel. Kipp
Fesenmaier,
Plaintiff,
Case No. 13-cv-3003 (WMW/DTS)
ORDER
v.
The Cameron-Ehlen Group, Inc., doing
business as Precision Lens; and Kathryn
Weitzel Ehlen, personal representative for
the Estate of Paul C. Ehlen,
Defendants.
Judgment has been entered in this matter against defendants The Cameron-Ehlen
Group, Inc. (“Precision Lens”) and Paul Ehlen in the amount of $487,048,705.13, not
including post-judgment interest, statutory attorneys’ fees or other taxable costs. See Dkt.
1043. This matter is now before the Court on the motion of Precision Lens and defendant
Kathryn Weitzel Ehlen (in her capacity as personal representative for the Estate of Paul
Ehlen) for post-judgment relief. 1 See Dkt. 1047. In their motion, defendants seek
(1) judgment as a matter of law under Rule 50(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure;
(2) to the extent that judgment as a matter of law is not granted, a new trial under Rule 59
of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure; and (3) to the extent that neither a new trial nor
Paul Ehlen died shortly after judgment was entered in this matter, and his wife, Kathryn
Weitzel Ehlen, was substituted as a party pursuant to Rule 25(a)(1) of the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure. See Dkt. 1079.
1
judgment as a matter of law is granted, a reduction in the monetary judgment on the
grounds that the monetary award violates the Excessive Fines Clause 2 of the federal
constitution.
For the reasons addressed below, defendants’ motion is granted in part and denied
in part—specifically, the request for a new trial is denied, the request for judgment as a
matter of law is denied with respect to all but one of the transactions found by the jury to
be a kickback, and the request for a reduction in the judgment is granted, although not to
the extent sought by defendants. The judgment previously entered in this matter will be
amended to reflect an award of $216,675,248.55, not including post-judgment interest,
statutory attorneys’ fees, or other taxable costs. This is the maximum award permitted by
the constitution in this case.
BACKGROUND
After a two-month trial, a jury concluded that Precision Lens and Paul Ehlen
violated the Anti-Kickback Statute (“AKS”), 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7b, by offering
remuneration in the form of trips, meals and other items of value to dozens of
ophthalmologists over a 10-year period. The ophthalmologists, in turn, purchased medical
supplies from Precision Lens and later sought reimbursement from Medicare for medical
procedures conducted using those items. The jury concluded that, because the requests for
Defendants’ constitutional challenge also arises under the Due Process Clause of the Fifth
Amendment, but defendants do not distinguish in their briefing between the two
constitutional provisions, and the legal analysis under both provisions appears to have been
treated largely the same by courts in similar cases. See, e.g., United States ex rel.
Drakeford v. Tuomey, 792 F.3d 364, 368 (4th Cir. 2015). For simplicity, the Court will
refer throughout this order only to the Excessive Fines Clause.
2
2
Medicare reimbursement did not disclose that the AKS had been violated with respect to
the purchase of supplies used during the medical procedures, those requests for
reimbursement violated the False Claims Act (“FCA”), 31 U.S.C. §§ 3729-3733. The jury
also concluded that Precision Lens and Paul Ehlen had caused the false claims to be
submitted to Medicare or had caused records or statements to be made or used in support
of the false claims. According to the jury, 64,575 false claims were submitted to Medicare
due to Defendants’ conduct, resulting in $43,694,641.71 in damages to Medicare. See
Dkt. 985 at 38-39 (verdict form).
The Court subsequently directed that judgment be entered against Precision Lens
and Paul Ehlen in the amount of $487,048,705.13. Of that amount, less than one tenth
($43,694,641.71) represented actual damages to the United States. That actual-damages
amount was then trebled pursuant to 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1), resulting in approximately
$131 million in trebled damages. The remaining three quarters of the judgment amount,
or approximately $358 million, represented statutory penalties assessed for each of the
64,575 requests for Medicare reimbursement found by the jury to be false claims.
Approximately $2.5 million was deducted from the judgment amount due to settlements
from other parties on claims related to the conduct at issue in this proceeding. 3
The more precise calculation of the amount of judgment can be found in the Court’s
May 12, 2023 Order. Dkt. 1042.
3
3
ANALYSIS
Defendants challenge the judgment on many grounds. Those challenges can be
divided into four categories: First, defendants contend that the Court erred in several
respects when interpreting the FCA and AKS and that, absent those errors, the result of this
case would have been different—either because summary judgment would have been
granted in their favor or because the jury would have been instructed differently and,
therefore, reached a different conclusion. Second, defendants contend that the Court erred
in its handling of several evidentiary issues that arose before and during trial. Third,
defendants contend that there was insufficient evidence admitted at trial from which the
jury could reasonably conclude that defendants had violated the FCA—or, there was
insufficient evidence from which to conclude that defendants had violated the FCA with
respect to many of the specific transactions found by the jury to be kickbacks. Fourth,
defendants challenge the calculation of damages and the amount of judgment, including an
argument that the punitive portion of the judgment exceeds the amount permitted by the
Excessive Fines Clause.
A. Standards of Review
Rule 50(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure governs renewed motions for
judgment as a matter of law. “In ruling on the renewed motion, the court may: (1) allow
judgment on the verdict, if the jury returned a verdict; (2) order a new trial; or (3) direct
the entry of judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(b). A renewed motion for
judgment as a matter of law may be granted only if “‘a reasonable jury would not have a
legally sufficient evidentiary basis’” to return the verdict that it reached. Bavlsik v. Gen.
4
Motors, LLC, 870 F.3d 800, 805 (8th Cir. 2017) (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(a)(1)). In
deciding a motion for judgment as a matter of law, the court must view the evidence in the
light most favorable to the party who prevailed before the jury, making all reasonable
inferences in that party’s favor. Id.
Rule 59 governs motions for a new trial. Following a jury trial, on the motion of
any party, a district court may grant a new trial on all or some of the issues. See Fed. R.
Civ. P. 59(a)(1)(A). But “a district judge is not free to reweigh the evidence and set aside
the jury verdict merely because the jury could have drawn different inferences or
conclusions or because judges feel that other results are more reasonable.” King v. Davis,
980 F.2d 1236, 1237 (8th Cir. 1992) (citation omitted). The “trial judge may not usurp the
functions of a jury.” White v. Pence, 961 F.2d 776, 781 (8th Cir. 1992) (quotation omitted).
A new trial is warranted only when “the verdict was so contrary to the evidence as to
amount to a miscarriage of justice.” Butler v. French, 83 F.3d 942, 944 (8th Cir. 1996).
B. Legal Standards for Liability
1. Intent
To prove a violation of the AKS, a plaintiff must establish that the remuneration
offered or paid by the defendant was intended “to induce” the payee to purchase, lease, or
order—or arrange for or recommend purchasing, leasing, or ordering— any good, facility,
service, or item, or to refer an individual to a person for the furnishing of any item or service.
See 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7b(b)(2). “The AKS’s plain language thus makes it unlawful for a
defendant to pay a kickback with the intent to induce a referral, whether or not a particular
5
referral results.” United States ex rel. Parikh v. Citizens Med. Ctr., 977 F. Supp. 2d 654,
665 (S.D. Tex. 2013).
Throughout this litigation, the parties have disputed whether the AKS requires that
intent to induce purchases be the primary motivation of the remuneration for liability to
attach, or whether it is sufficient that the intent to induce purchases was one motivation of
the remuneration (perhaps among many). When addressing the parties’ motions for
summary judgment, the Court surveyed the case law of the several appellate courts that
have considered the issue and found that each of those courts had concluded that an AKS
violation exists if one purpose of the remuneration was to induce purchases, even if other
legitimate purposes for the remuneration also existed. See United States v. Borrasi, 639
F.3d 774, 781-82 (7th Cir. 2011) (collecting cases from the Third, Fifth, Ninth, and Tenth
Circuits and rejecting the argument that inducement must be “the primary motivation
behind the remuneration”); United States ex rel. Lutz v. Mallory, 988 F.3d 730, 741 (4th
Cir. 2021) (similarly adopting the one-purpose standard rather than the primary-purpose
standard).
Defendants continue to maintain that the AKS requires that the primary motivation
of the remuneration was to induce purchases. Defendants’ argument is preserved for
appeal, but the Court continues to be persuaded that the appropriate standard on intent was
applied in this matter for the reasons explained in the Court’s January 12, 2021 order. See
Dkt. 722 at 16-19.
6
2. Causation
Defendants raise essentially two claims with respect to the causation standard
applied by the Court in this matter. First, relying on United States ex rel. Cairns v. D.S.
Medical LLC, 42 F.4th 828 (8th Cir. 2022), defendants argue that plaintiffs were required
to establish but-for causation in proving a violation of the AKS. But as more fully
addressed in this Court’s January 4, 2023 order, the causation standard described in Cairns
applies only to claims governed by 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7b(g). See Dkt. 842 at 1-7; Cairns,
42 F.4th at 836 (“Our ruling today is narrow. We do not suggest that every case arising
under the False Claims Act requires a showing of but-for causation.”).
Second, defendants object to what they characterize as plaintiffs’ “taint theory” of
establishing causation. On defendants’ version of events, plaintiffs led the jury to believe
that any request for Medicare reimbursement submitted within one year of an alleged
kickback—the so-called “taint period”—may be presumed to have been caused by the
kickback and therefore unlawful. But plaintiffs were not permitted to argue any such thing.
As the Court explained in a previous order, “‘[t]emporal proximity between a kickback and
a Medicare claim, without more, is insufficient to establish the requisite causal link under
the AKS.’” Dkt. 722 at 27 (quoting United States ex rel. Greenfield v. Medco Health
Solutions, Inc., 880 F.3d 89, 99 (3d Cir. 2018)).
To be sure, for most (although not all) of the alleged kickbacks, the United States
did seek recovery for any requests for Medicare reimbursement that were submitted by
doctors in the year following the alleged kickback. But the strategic decision to seek
recovery for one year of Medicare claims following the alleged kickbacks reasonably
7
reflected that temporal proximity, although not sufficient by itself to establish causation,
was nevertheless relevant. All else being equal, claims for Medicare reimbursement made
very shortly after a kickback would be more likely to have been caused by that kickback
than claims for Medicare reimbursement made many years after the fact. Plaintiffs would
inevitably have had a more difficult time, all else being equal, establishing causation on
claims made more than one year after an alleged kickback event. Reasonably, then,
plaintiffs limited their case for the most part to requests for Medicare reimbursement that
occurred within one year of the alleged kickback event. But for each allegedly false claim,
regardless of when it occurred, plaintiffs were required to establish proximate causation,
not merely temporal proximity.
3. Damages
The FCA provides for the recovery of “damages which the [United States] sustains
because of” a false claim. 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a). Plaintiffs argue that the appropriate
measure of damages in this matter is the full amount of each Medicare claim paid by the
United States that was found by the jury to be false. The rationale for this argument is
straight forward. Because doctors are required to certify that they are in compliance with
the AKS, had the doctors (truthfully) refused to certify that they were in compliance with
the AKS with respect to any particular claim for Medicare reimbursement, that claim for
reimbursement never would have been approved. Applying plaintiffs’ logic, every penny
paid by the United States in reimbursement of false claims amounts to actual damages that
are recoverable by the United States under the FCA.
8
Defendants offered several alternative theories for calculating damages. One theory
is that the United States’s actual damages were zero, because every one of the medical
procedures for which reimbursement was sought was medically necessary and, therefore,
would have been reimbursed anyway. Another theory is that actual damages should be
limited, at most, to the profits that accrued to Precision Lens from the sales of lenses and
viscoelastic tainted by kickbacks. A third theory separates the requests for Medicare
reimbursement into claims for Physician Professional Fees and claims for Facility Fees—
defendants objected to either fee being recoverable. But defendants especially objected to
the Physician Professional Fees being recoverable because no portion of that fee served
directly as reimbursement for the purchase of Precision Lens products.
This Court agreed with plaintiffs that the full amount of the claims—including the
portions attributable to Physician Professional Fees—were recoverable as actual damages
in his matter. See Dkt. 842 at 7-12. The rationale for that decision is set forth more fully
in this Court’s January 4, 2023 order and will not be revisited here, except to state that it is
well-established that the appropriate measure of damages is the full value of the false
claims paid by the United States. See, e.g., United States v. Rogan, 517 F.3d 449, 453 (7th
Cir. 2008); Teva Pharmaceuticals USA, Inc., No. 20-11548-NMG, 2022 WL 6820648,
at *5 (D. Mass. Oct. 11, 2022).
4. Jury Instructions
Finally, defendants object to several of the final instructions given to the jury and
argue that, because of supposed errors in those instructions, a new trial should be granted.
“[A] district court has broad discretion in instructing the jury, and jury instructions do not
9
need to be technically perfect or even a model of clarity.” B & B Hardware, Inc. v. Hargis
Indus., Inc., 252 F.3d 1010, 1012 (8th Cir. 2001) (citations and internal quotation omitted).
A new trial based on erroneous jury instructions “is necessary only when the errors misled
the jury or had a probable effect on the jury’s verdict.” Slidell, Inc. v. Millennium Inorganic
Chemicals, Inc., 460 F.3d 1047, 1054 (8th Cir. 2006) (citation omitted).
i. AKS Instruction
As explained above, defendants have argued that the AKS requires that, for liability
to attach, the intent to induce purchases must be the primary motivation of the remuneration.
The Court rejected this argument. As a result, the jury’s instructions did not follow
defendants’ proposed primary-motivation standard. Defendants renew their argument that
the jury instructions were erroneous in this regard. That argument is rejected for the same
reasons that defendants’ underlying argument regarding the appropriate standard of intent
was rejected.
Defendants similarly object that the phrase “in exchange for” was omitted from the
Court’s final instruction on the AKS, arguing this phrase should have been included
because it would have reinforced what they believe to be the correct primary-purpose
standard. As the Court has explained, the primary-purpose standard is not a correct
statement of the law, and any proffered instruction reinforcing that incorrect understanding
would have been an error.
Finally, defendants argue that the jury should have been instructed that a hope or
expectation of future business from physicians does not by itself result in AKS liability.
The Court believes that the definition of remuneration provided to the jury adequately
10
established the boundaries of liability under the AKS and that no clarifying instruction was
necessary.
ii. FCA Instruction
Most of defendants’ objection to the final jury instruction on the FCA pertains to
the appropriate standard of causation under the FCA, with defendants asserting that the
jury should have been instructed that the but-for standard set forth in Cairns applies in this
matter. For the reasons addressed above, the Court rejects this argument that but-for
causation is the appropriate standard in this litigation and concludes that the jury was
instructed correctly regarding causation.
Defendants also argue that the Court provided an inaccurate description of the
concept of materiality to the jury. The definition of materiality provided to the jury derived
directly from Universal Health Services, Inc. v. United States ex rel. Escobar, 579 U.S. 176
(2016), and was an accurate and neutral summarization of the holding of that case.
iii. Damages
As explained above, the Court determined that the appropriate measure of damages
in this proceeding is the full amount paid by the United States for each false claim resulting
from a kickback. See Dkt. 722 at 7-10 (order on motions for summary judgment).
Defendants argue that this conclusion regarding the appropriate measure of damages is
wrong and that, because of the error, the jurors were instructed improperly on how to
calculate damages in this matter. Because the Court does not believe its conclusion
regarding damages to be wrong, the Court similarly does not believe that there was any
error in the damages instruction that was given to the jury.
11
iv. Relator’s Award
The jurors were instructed that “[y]ou are not to allow the possibility of a relator’s
share of the recovery enter into your deliberations about whether, or the extent to which,
the United States is entitled to monetary damages.” Jury Instruction 18. Defendants
objected to the instruction, arguing that the jurors should have been informed that
Fesenmaier and his attorneys had a pecuniary interest in the outcome of the litigation.
The jury instruction given was appropriate, and the instruction that defendants
preferred would have been inappropriate.
That Fesenmaier stood to benefit from a
favorable outcome in this case is wholly irrelevant to the questions presented to the jury:
whether, and to what extent, Precision Lens or Paul Ehlen violated the FCA. See United
States ex rel. Feldman v. Van Gorp, No. 03 CV 8135 (WHP), 2010 WL 2911606, at *5
(S.D.N.Y. July 8, 2010). Nor was it relevant—or even, for that matter, unusual—that the
attorneys of one party stood to benefit from a favorable outcome. The jury was instructed
correctly to ignore the issue.
C. Evidentiary Issues
Defendants’ next category of post-judgment arguments pertains to decisions made
by the Court regarding the admissibility of evidence at trial.
None of defendants’
arguments are availing.
1. Evidence Related to Materiality
In 2010, both the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of
Inspector General (“HHS-OIG”) and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
(“CMS”) were presented with complaints that Precision Lens had violated the AKS. The
12
HHS-OIG elected not to investigate the complaints, and the CMS continued to pay claims
for Medicare reimbursement for procedures in which Precision Lens products had been
used. Defendants sought admission of exhibits and testimony regarding the actions (or the
inaction) of HHS-OIG and CMS, arguing that the comportment of those agencies tended
to show that the United States did not regard defendants’ conduct as material. The Court
disagreed with defendants then, and continues to disagree with defendants now, that the
evidence was relevant to materiality. The inaction of HHS-OIG and CMS did not fairly
reflect that those entities found kickbacks generally or the actions of defendants
particularly to be unimportant. And the admission of the evidence described above would
have risked the jury drawing an unwarranted inference from that evidence.
Defendants also argue that expert David Gregory should have been permitted to
testify regarding whether and to what extent the false statements on the Medicare
reimbursement forms were material. As the Court explained, when this issue was presented,
Gregory (by defendants’ own admission) had not offered an opinion on materiality in his
expert report. For this reason, he was appropriately not permitted to testify on the topic.
See Dkt. 931 (citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(c)(1)).
2. Tiffany’s Fifth Amendment Invocation
At trial, the United States sought to designate the bulk of the deposition testimony
of James Tiffany, who was the former chief executive officer of Sightpath Medical, LLC
(“Sightpath”). Both Tiffany and Sightpath previously were defendants to this action, and
both Tiffany and Sightpath had a substantial business relationship with Precision Lens
during much of the period during which the events at issue occurred. Throughout his
13
deposition, Tiffany invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination and
declined to answer any substantive question posed to him by counsel for any party.
Defendants objected to admission of the deposition on the grounds that Tiffany’s
invocation of his Fifth Amendment rights was not relevant to the issues in dispute and that
admission of Tiffany’s invocation would be unfairly prejudicial to them.
The Court sustained in part and overruled in part defendants’ objection. The United
States was permitted to introduce no more than 50 lines from the Tiffany deposition
transcript—essentially, only enough to establish that the United States had been unable to
elicit deposition testimony from Tiffany because of his Fifth Amendment invocation.
Defendants, in turn, were permitted to counter-designate a snippet of Tiffany’s deposition
showing that they, too, had been unable to elicit testimony from Tiffany.
In their post-judgment motion, defendants renew their objection to the admission of
any portion of the deposition. Defendants’ argument is rejected on the grounds set forth in
the Court’s January 22, 2023 order, Dkt. 872, overruling in part the objection to the
admission of the deposition.
3. Ehlen Audio Recording
Defendants sought admission of a 77-minute audio recording 4 in which Paul Ehlen
discussed with Fesenmaier the investigation of the transactions later found to be kickbacks
In their motion for post-judgment relief, defendants refer to audio recordings (plural)
“which span 50 hours over the course of years.” Dkt. 1048 at 33. But during trial,
defendants sought the admission of only one such recording, Exhibit D-75, and only that
one recording was expressly excluded. In fact, the Court expressly stated before trial that
the audio recordings of Ehlen and Fesenmaier would not be categorically excluded and
would instead be evaluated on a case-by-case basis. See Dkt. 842 at 21.
4
14
and, speaking generally, asserted his innocence of having violated the AKS. The Court
sustained the objection to the admission of that evidence on the grounds that it was
inadmissible hearsay. See Dkt. 922. Defendants contend that Paul Ehlen’s statements in
the recording are not hearsay and that, even if they were, the statements are admissible
under Rule 803(3) of the Federal Rules of Evidence as reflecting Ehlen’s state of mind at
the time that he made the statements.
The Court remains satisfied that Paul Ehlen’s statements in the recording at issue
are inadmissible hearsay. Moreover, to the extent that defendants intended to introduce the
recordings for non-hearsay purposes, Paul Ehlen’s statements were irrelevant to any
question being presented to the jury. That Paul Ehlen—while being investigated by the
United States—told Fesenmaier that he did not believe the transactions for which he was
being investigated to be kickbacks is not probative of whether those transactions were, in
fact, kickbacks. Moreover, that Paul Ehlen did not know he was being recorded does not
make his statements any more probative.
4. Evidence Related to Knowledge of Fesenmaier
Defendants designated portions of Fesenmaier’s deposition for admission. The
Court sustained plaintiffs’ objection to the designation, explaining at the time that
much of the designated testimony relates to Fesenmaier’s
motivation in bringing a claim against Defendants. Mr.
Fesenmaier has not testified in this matter, and his deposition
testimony regarding his motivation is not relevant. See United
States ex rel. Landis v. Tailwind Sports Corp., 292 F. Supp.
3d 211, 215 (D.D.C. 2017) (finding that a defendant could not
call the relator as a witness solely for the purpose of attacking
his character or highlighting his motivation for filing the qui
tam action).
15
Dkt. 935. Similarly, the Court precluded Paul Ehlen from testifying about Fesenmaier’s
possible motivations for acting as a whistleblower. See Tr. 3509-11.
Defendants argue that evidence regarding Fesenmaier’s motivations and state of
mind should have been admitted. But this kind of evidence would have been “not relevant
to any of the elements of an FCA claim” and thus was properly excluded under Rule 403. 5
Feldman, 2010 WL 2911606, at *5. As the Court explained at greater length prior to trial,
when a relator does not testify, “his self-serving interest in filing suit is irrelevant, as it does
not affect whether a defendant’s actions were legal or not.” United States ex rel. Kiro v.
Jiaherb, Inc., No. CV 14-2484-RSWL-PLAX, 2019 WL 2869186, at *4 (C.D. Cal. July 3,
2016) (citing Landis, 292 F. Supp. 3d at 215).
5. Evidence Related to Amount of Damages
Defendants next argue that various forms of evidence should have been admitted at
trial showing (in their view) that the amount of actual damages to the United States
resulting from any false certification was less than the full amount of reimbursement paid
to the doctors. The issue of how actual damages should be calculated in this matter has
been litigated repeatedly, and the Court’s exclusion of defendants’ proffered evidence on
damages follows directly from the Court’s prior ruling that the appropriate measure of
To be sure, “[t]he motivation of a witness in testifying, including [his] possible selfinterest and any bias or prejudice against the defendant, is one of the principal subjects for
cross-examination.” Henry v. Speckard, 22 F.3d 1209, 1214 (2d Cir. 1994). A party
certainly may test the quality of an adversarial witness’s testimony by pointing out that the
motivations of the witness are something other than pure. But Fesenmaier did not testify
at trial. Accordingly, there was no testimony of Fesenmaier for defendants to attempt to
impeach.
5
16
actual damages in this matter was the full amount of false claims paid by the United States.
In light of that ruling, the evidence for which defendants sought admission was irrelevant
and therefore properly excluded. See Fed. R. Evid. 403.
6. Expert Demonstratives
Defendants objected to the admission of Exhibit P-1216, which was intended for
use as a demonstrative exhibit by plaintiffs during the testimony of their expert Michael W.
Phillips but was later admitted into evidence. The Court’s explanation as to why the exhibit
was admitted was provided on the record during trial, see Tr. 2546, and it is unnecessary
to provide further explanation here. The Court notes only that every word and number on
the exhibit would have been admitted into evidence through Phillips’s testimony—and,
indeed, every word and number was in the process of being admitted through Phillips’s
testimony when the exhibit was admitted. Admission of the document thus spared the
needless expenditure of juror time in a trial that had already gone on for nearly one month
and would go on for yet another month.
Defendants counter that, having admitted plaintiff’s demonstrative exhibit used
during expert testimony, the Court should have granted the same courtesy to defendants
and admitted Exhibit D-335, which was shown to the jury as a demonstrative during the
testimony of their expert Scott Van Meter but was not admitted into evidence. But the
rationales that supported the admission of the Phillips exhibit did not support the admission
of the Van Meter exhibit. The Van Meter exhibit, unlike the Phillips exhibit, was a true
demonstrative—the exhibit provides a visualization of data supporting Van Meter’s
underlying testimony regarding physician purchases before and after alleged kickback
17
events. 6 The exhibit used during the Phillips testimony, by contrast, was merely a
summarization of opinions that Phillips already intended to offer as testimony. Indeed, the
Phillips exhibit was hardly a “demonstrative” at all. It is a chart that shows only what
Phillips’s testimony was about to be. The information on the Phillips demonstrative exhibit
therefore was destined for admission, while the information on the Van Meter
demonstrative exhibit was not.
Nor does the Court believe that defendants were unduly prejudiced by the
discrepancy. This is not a situation in which two experts offered dueling opinions on a
topic and one of those opinions was admitted into evidence while the other was excluded,
thereby preventing one side or the other an adequate opportunity to present its case on a
particular issue. Phillips and Van Meter testified as to entirely unrelated topics—the
former regarding the fair market value of transactions alleged to be kickbacks, the latter as
to the quantity of purchases made by doctors from Precision Lens before and after the
alleged kickback events.
7. Van Meter Testimony on Maintenance of Business
Finally, defendants argue that Van Meter should have been permitted to testify to
the effect that the alleged kickbacks did not cause the physicians to continue using
Precision Lens products. Van Meter’s opinions in this regard, however, were not fairly
Defendants characterize the Van Meter exhibit as a Rule 1006 summary, but it was not.
See White Industries, Inc. v. Cessna Aircraft Co., 611 F. Supp. 1049, 1070-71 (W.D. Mo.
1985) (distinguishing Rule 1006 summaries from “pedagogical” summaries). This by
itself does not mean that the exhibit was inadmissible. The Phillips exhibit was not a
Rule 1006 summary, either. It does mean, however, that Rule 1006 of the Federal Rules
of Evidence did not compel admission.
6
18
encompassed by his expert report. He was, therefore, properly precluded from testifying
on that topic. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b).
D. Sufficiency of the Evidence
Defendants’ next group of arguments relates to the sufficiency of the evidence
admitted at trial. Some of these sufficiency-of-the-evidence arguments overlap with the
arguments that were considered and rejected above. For example, defendants contend that
plaintiffs were required under the AKS to establish that the primary purpose of the alleged
kickbacks was to induce referrals. With respect to the sufficiency of the evidence,
defendants argue that the evidence admitted at trial does not suffice to meet this primarypurpose standard. But the Court rejected the primary-purpose standard, and defendants’
sufficiency-of-the-evidence argument related to the primary-purpose standard, therefore,
fails as well. Similarly, defendants contend that plaintiffs failed to establish but-for
causation. But as addressed above, plaintiffs were not required to establish but-for
causation under the AKS. Therefore, any sufficiency-of-the-evidence claim premised on
but-for causation must be rejected.
Defendants, however, also challenge the sufficiency of the evidence on grounds that
are not necessarily encompassed by the arguments examined above and which, therefore,
must be addressed in greater detail. Some of these challenges to the sufficiency of the
evidence implicate the entirety of the verdict against defendants. In these arguments,
defendants contend that plaintiffs failed to establish a critical component of their case,
fatally undermining any finding of liability. Other challenges, by contrast, attack the
sufficiency of the evidence with respect to specific transactions found by the jury to be
19
kickbacks. The Court will address these arguments next, starting with the more general
arguments and ending with the more specific.
In reviewing these arguments, the Court must view the evidence in the light most
favorable to the verdict and may reverse the verdict only if no reasonable juror could have
returned the verdict that the jury in this matter returned. See, e.g., Ryther v. KARE 11, 108
F.3d 832, 836 (8th Cir. 1997).
1. Materiality
To establish liability under the FCA, plaintiffs were required to show that the false
or fraudulent information in the claim for Medicare reimbursement was material to the
United States’s decision to pay the claim. Defendants contend that there was insufficient
evidence admitted at trial to establish the necessary materiality.
Defendants challenge the sufficiency of the evidence as to materiality on two
grounds. The first argument is a restatement of the argument described above regarding
the failure of HHS-OIG and CMS to follow up on whistleblower complaints concerning
the conduct of Precision Lens and Medicare’s subsequent payment of claims. Defendants
argue that these agencies’ actions establish that the misstatements in the Medicare
reimbursement forms were not material. The Court determined that the inaction of HHSOIG and CMS, far from being conclusive on the issue of materiality, was not even
probative on the issue of materiality. In any event, the jury had an adequate evidentiary
basis upon which to conclude that lack of compliance with the AKS was a material
20
misstatement through the testimony of Scott Lawrence, a CMS representative. 7 See
Tr. 444-79.
Defendants also advance a second argument regarding materiality, focusing again
on the “taint theory” that defendants attacked with respect to causation. To summarize,
Defendants’ argument generally contends that, even if a false certification of compliance
with the AKS is, speaking generally, a potentially material misrepresentation, plaintiffs did
not establish that the United States would have regarded the specific transactions alleged
to be kickbacks in this litigation to be material. For example, defendants characterize one
of the transactions found by the jury to be a kickback as being nothing more than a salad
and a soda offered at a Christmas party. Plaintiffs sought recovery from Precision Lens
and Paul Ehlen for one full year of Medicare claims submitted by that doctor following the
Christmas party. Defendants argue, in essence, that plaintiffs did not establish that the
United States would have refused to pay the claim had the doctor certified on her Medicare
reimbursement forms that she had accepted a salad and soft drink from one of her medical
suppliers.
To be clear: “A misrepresentation cannot be deemed material merely because the [United
States] designates compliance with a particular statutory, regulatory, or contractual
requirement as a condition of payment.” Escobar, 579 U.S. at 194. But Lawrence’s
testimony provided the jury an adequate evidentiary basis to conclude that compliance with
the AKS is an especially weighty concern of the United States, as the existence of a
kickback implicates the quality of care provided to the patient. Tr. 459 (“We care—any
time there’s influence, we care about it any time because we want all the decision-making
to be purely to benefit the patient and to follow the rules.”).
7
21
Defendants’ argument regarding the de minimis nature of some of the kickbacks has
some force when applied to causation. 8 That argument also may be relevant in establishing
the existence of remuneration—that is, some benefits might be of such insubstantial benefit
that they do not amount to remuneration under the AKS and, therefore, cannot constitute
kickbacks. While the Court rejects this contention in its analysis below, the contention is
far from frivolous. But defendants’ salad-and-a-soda argument is a poor fit in the context
of materiality. There is no reason to believe that the United States would not have cared
about the doctor’s false certification of compliance with the AKS if only it had known that
the kickback was a modest meal, not something more lavish.
Accordingly, the Court concludes that the evidence admitted at trial was sufficient
to establish materiality.
2. Proximate Causation
Defendants raise several arguments with respect to the sufficiency of the evidence
regarding causation.
Many of these arguments reprise the complaints pertaining to
plaintiffs’ putative “taint theory.” The Court addressed that issue above and declines to
repeat the point here, except to observe that the United States was required to establish
causation with respect to each individual claim and that proximity in time to a kickback
was not a sufficient basis upon which to conclude that the necessary causation existed here.
Two other arguments on this subject require somewhat closer attention. First,
defendants contend that the United States did not establish that Precision Lens or Paul
How much influence, for example, can be purchased with a salad at lunch or a modest
meal at a holiday party?
8
22
Ehlen caused any claim to be submitted, thereby severing a necessary link for proving
liability under the FCA. Second, defendants contend that the United States did not
establish that the requests for Medicare reimbursement at issue in this matter were false.
Both arguments can be addressed briefly. First, the jury was entitled to conclude
that the defendants violated the FCA if (among other things) the defendants caused records
or statements to be made or used in support of a false claim to the United States. The jury
was further instructed that a defendant’s conduct may be found to have caused the
submission of a claim for Medicare reimbursement (1) if the alleged misconduct was a
substantial factor in inducing providers to submit claims for reimbursement, and (2) if the
submission of claims for reimbursement was reasonably foreseeable or anticipated as a
natural consequence of defendants’ conduct. The evidence at trial was sufficient for a
reasonable juror to conclude that requests for Medicare reimbursement would likely result
following the use of the products tainted by kickbacks. The products at issue were used in
cataract surgeries, which are especially prevalent in populations covered by Medicare. The
evidence at trial was also sufficient for the jury to conclude that defendants understood that
compliance with the AKS would be a prerequisite of reimbursement.
Second, defendants argue that the doctors were required only to certify to the United
States that they (that is, the doctors) had not knowingly violated the AKS. Many of the
doctors testified that they believed that they had adequately recompensed Precision Lens
and Paul Ehlen for any benefit given to them—for example, by paying invoices for trips.
Defendants contend that these doctors therefore could not have knowingly certified a false
statement. But a knowing violation of the FCA includes not only claims made with actual
23
knowledge of falsity, but also claims made in deliberate ignorance or reckless disregard of
the truth or falsity of the information provided on the reimbursement form. There was a
sufficient evidentiary basis for the jury to conclude that the doctors at issue acted in
deliberate ignorance or reckless disregard of the truth, even if the doctors did not
subjectively believe themselves to have violated any law.
The Court therefore concludes that the evidence admitted at trial was adequate to
establish causation.
3. Proof of Remuneration
Defendants’ next series of arguments focuses on specific transactions found by the
jury to be kickbacks. According to defendants, there was insufficient evidence admitted at
trial from which to conclude that remuneration was provided to doctors in these
transactions. For this reason, defendants argue, there was insufficient evidence from which
to conclude that these transactions amounted to kickbacks.
i. Fair Market Value
Defendants first challenge several instances in which the jury “found kickbacks for
trips in which doctors testified that they were invoiced and paid their own costs and/or what
they considered to be fair market value.” Dkt. 1048 at 13. This category can be addressed
briefly. Regardless of the doctors’ beliefs about these trips, the jury was entitled to
conclude that the amount paid for these trips fell short of the fair market value of those
trips based on Phillips’s testimony and analysis of fair market value of difficult-to-quantify
benefits such as private flights. There was sufficient evidence to conclude that this
category of transactions constituted remuneration.
24
ii. Third-Party Benefits
Defendants next argue that, in some instances, the remuneration alleged by plaintiffs
came from a third party, not from Precision Lens or Paul Ehlen. Defendants are less than
clear about which kickbacks they believe to fall into this category. The memorandum in
support of the post-judgment motion refers vaguely to locations in which many trips had
been conducted, rather than to specific transactions believed to have not been remunerative.
Absent greater precision as to the specific trips at issue, the Court will not enter into an
extended analysis as to why each of the possible trips to which defendants might be alluding
could reasonably have been found by the jury to have been remunerative. It suffices to
state that, for each of these trips, the jury could reasonably have concluded that the doctor
either accrued a remunerative benefit from Precision Lens and Paul Ehlen (for example, in
the form of a private flight for which fair market value was not provided) or that Precision
Lens and Paul Ehlen were the ultimate payees of the benefit supplied by the third party.
Two instances, however, are specifically cited by defendants, and the Court will
address them with greater detail here. First, one of the transactions that the jury found to
be a kickback was a 2006 golf outing in Las Vegas attended by Dr. Kurt Weir. See Dkt. 985
at 24 (verdict form). Weir did not pay for the outing, but it is uncertain who did pay. The
United States believes it was Paul Ehlen. But the evidence is inconclusive. Weir testified
that he “assume[d]” that Paul Ehlen had paid for the trip, Tr. 594, but he did not have a
specific recollection. Weir’s assumption, in turn, appears to have been premised on an
email shown to him during direct examination. In that email, Linda Norling—a Precision
Lens employee and Paul Ehlen’s personal assistant—informed the host at the casino where
25
the golf course at issue was located that “Paul left me a VM last night and said it was OK
to charge all of the Cascata golf to his card.” Exhibit P-378 at 1. But Norling testified that
another doctor had provided her with his credit card information for that trip, see Tr. 200103, and there is documentary evidence showing that Norling forwarded that doctor’s creditcard information to the casino host approximately one month prior to sending the email
shown to Weir, see Exhibit D-265. If the other doctor paid for the trip, then Precision Lens
and Paul Ehlen would not have provided remuneration with respect to that trip and no false
claims could have resulted from that trip.
The jury could have reasonably inferred from the evidence admitted at trial that it
was the other doctor, not the defendants, who paid for Weir’s golf. But that conclusion
certainly is not compelled by the evidence. 9 The jury also could have reasonably inferred
that Norling’s email to the casino host meant exactly what it said—that Paul Ehlen had told
her to tell the casino manager “to charge all of the Cascata golf to his card.” Exhibit P-378
at 1. Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, the evidence was sufficient for the
jury to conclude that Paul Ehlen had paid for Weir’s golf and therefore it was a kickback,
notwithstanding that other evidence supported a different conclusion.
Second, defendants cite to the testimony of Dr. Richard Lindstrom that, for at least
one of the trips that the jury found to be a kickback, he had flown on the private plane of
Dr. Bill Link, not Paul Ehlen’s plane. See Tr. 3128. Link, however, was closely associated
Norling herself, when reviewing the documents at trial, declined to testify that the other
doctor had in fact paid for the trip. See Tr. 2003 (“Q. Can you tell from these e-mails who
ultimately paid for Dr. Weir’s golf? A. No, I cannot tell.”).
9
26
with Precision Lens, serving for approximately two years on its advisory board around the
same time as the events at issue. See Tr. 3151. Lindstrom himself was under the
impression that Link and Ehlen would “divvy up the costs between the participants as they
thought was appropriate.” Tr. 3129. None of the costs of that private flight appear to have
been divvied to Lindstrom. A reasonable juror could conclude from the evidence that a
free flight provided by Link to an event attended by Paul Ehlen amounted to remuneration
from Precision Lens and Ehlen to Lindstrom, albeit through an intermediary.
iii. Davis Christmas Party
Dr. Elizabeth Davis attended the Precision Lens Christmas party in 2013.
According to her testimony, she ate a salad and drank a soda while she was there. See
Tr. 1838. The jury found that this was a kickback. See Dkt. 985 at 8.
Plaintiffs strive diligently to suggest that the value of the remuneration provided to
Davis was something more than a salad and a soft drink. But the evidence adduced at trial
does not bear that out. For example, Precision Lens did submit a report under the Sunshine
Act that the per-person value of the Christmas party was $240. But the fact that other
invitees might have received a great deal of value from the party does not mean that Davis
received any more benefit than what she had admitted to receiving. Plaintiffs also speculate
that Davis might have attended pre-party or post-party events held by Precision Lens, but
there is no evidence in the record bearing that out. The jury reasonably could have
concluded that Davis received a salad and a soda on that occasion, which she admitted, but
nothing beyond that.
27
The problem for defendants, however, is that remuneration within the meaning of
the AKS includes the provision of anything of value for an amount other than the fair
market value of that thing. 10 42 U.S.C § 1320a-7a(i)(6). Davis, by her own admission,
received a dinner at a restaurant. While not an extravagant dinner, the dinner nevertheless
is an item of value. The jury was entitled to conclude from that testimony that Davis had
received a kickback.
iv. Riedel New York Trip
The jury found that a trip taken by Dr. Patrick Riedel and his wife to New York City
with Paul Ehlen and his wife constituted an unlawful kickback. See Dkt. 985 at 26.
Defendants argue that there is insufficient evidence to support jury’s verdict with respect
to this trip.
Although the question is close, there was sufficient evidence to support a finding
that Riedel had received a kickback. Riedel testified that he had taken a trip with Paul
Ehlen to New York, that he had flown on Ehlen’s plane, and that he did not recall paying
Defendants cite to United States ex rel. Martin v. Hathaway, 63 F.4th 1043, 1048 (6th
Cir. 2023), for the proposition that “giving someone a soda does not constitute
remuneration within the meaning of the statute.” Dkt. 1048 at 13. But Hathaway says only
that remuneration within the meaning of the AKS requires the transfer of money, goods or
services, and does not include more nebulous transactions. For example, in Hathaway, the
alleged remuneration was “a hospital’s decision not to hire an ophthalmologist in return
for a general commitment of continued surgery referrals from another ophthalmologist for
patients from the local community . . . .” Id. at 1046. The transaction in Hathaway did not
involve the transfer of money, services or goods, and thus there was no remuneration. But
Hathaway does not state that some transfers of money, goods, or services are so slight as
to not be of value.
10
28
anything for trip. See Tr. 1143-1144. A reasonable juror could conclude from the
testimony that the trip occurred and that Riedel had received renumeration from Ehlen.
Although there was sufficient evidence from which to conclude that Riedel received
a kickback, there is insufficient evidence regarding when the trip occurred to tie that
kickback to any specific violation of the FCA. Riedel could do no better than to testify that
the trip occurred either in 2008 or 2009. The selection of any date within that two-year
period by the jury would have been arbitrary. And no claims for Medicare reimbursement
occurring before the date of that trip could have been caused by that kickback or could be
said to have resulted in a violation of the FCA due to the kickback. 11 Because there is
insufficient evidence from which to conclude that any particular false claim resulted from
the New York City trip, judgment as a matter of law must be granted on behalf of
defendants with respect to that trip.
v. Swarup Trips
Defendants final set of claims with respect to sufficiency of the evidence pertain to
trips paid for by Dr. Jitendra Swarup. Defendants again do not cite any specific kickback
event, which makes further analysis of this argument exceedingly difficult. Like the claim
regarding the provision of a private flight to Dr. Lindstrom by Dr. Link rather than by
defendants directly, the Court concludes that there was a sufficient nexus between Swarup,
Sightpath, and plaintiffs that a jury could reasonably have concluded that the trips were
remuneration to doctors on behalf of defendants.
Plaintiffs did not seek recovery for any claims for Medicare reimbursement submitted
by Riedel in 2010. See Exhibit P-1223.
11
29
E. Damages
Defendants next challenge the damages calculations made by the jury. These
arguments pertaining to damages can be grouped into four categories. First, defendants
contend that the actual damages suffered by the United States are far less than the
$43,694,641.71 found by the jury. Second, defendants contend that statutory penalties
should not be assessed with respect to most of the 64,575 false claims found by the jury.
Third, defendants contend that the penalties that make up the bulk of the $487,048,705.13
judgment constitute a violation of the Excessive Fines Clause. Fourth, the amount of the
judgment, defendants contend, should be further offset against settlement amounts
procured from other defendants.
1. Calculation of Actual Damages
Defendants’ arguments attacking the jury’s calculation of actual damages are
substantively identical to their arguments attacking the Court’s conclusions with respect to
the appropriate measure of damages in this case. To the extent that those arguments were
rejected above, they are again rejected here for the reasons explained above.
However, because the Court concluded above that there was insufficient evidence
admitted at trial from which to conclude that an undated New York City trip taken by Paul
Ehlen and Dr. Riedel resulted in a false claim being presented to Medicare, the judgment
in this matter must be reduced to reflect the fact that damages and statutory penalties may
no longer be attributed to that trip.
The jury was not asked to attribute a specific amount of damages or a specific
number of false claims to any particular transaction found to be a kickback. Therefore, the
30
Court cannot say for certain how much in damages or how many false claims the jury
attributed to the New York City trip. Making matters still more complicated, the jury also
found that Riedel had received two other kickbacks in late 2007 and 2008, and the jury
attributed false claims to those other kickbacks. It is not possible to determine from the
verdict form with certainty which false claims would have been attributed to the other
kickbacks and which to the New York City trip.
In any event, because the trip was noted on the verdict form with the arbitrary date
of January 1, 2009, and because plaintiffs sought relief for all false claims that were made
within one year of that date that resulted from the kickback, the Court will assume that all
claims for Medicare reimbursement submitted by Riedel in 2009 for which plaintiffs
sought relief are attributable to the New York City trip. This amounts to 258 claims and
$359,592 in actual damages to Medicare. Accordingly, the judgment in this matter must
be reduced by $4,563,840. This amount consists of statutory penalties of $13,508 for each
of the 258 claims and $1,078,776 in trebled actual damages.
2. Statutory Penalties
The FCA requires the assessment of an additional penalty, separate from damages,
on each false claim. The jury found that 64,575 false claims were submitted to Medicare
as a result of kickbacks attributable to defendants (including the false claims related to the
Riedel trip to New York City), resulting in a total penalty of $358,445,780. 12 Separate
Of the 64,575 false claims found by the jury, at least 410 were made on or after
December 1, 2015. These false claims are subject to a minimum penalty of $13,508, or a
total of $5,538,280. See 28 C.F.R. § 85.5. The remaining 64,165 false claims are subject
to the $5,500 minimum penalty established by 28 C.F.R. § 85.3(a)(9), for a total of
12
31
from the arguments addressed above, defendants challenge the calculation of the number
of false claims, and therefore the amount of penalties that should result from those false
claims, in two respects.
First, defendants argue that, because each cataract surgery would have generated at
least two separate claims to Medicare, a “Facility Fee” (which included the cost of
Precision Lens products) and a “Physician Professional Fee” (which did not), assessing
statutory penalties on each fee represents a double-counting of misconduct, since only one
surgery will have been performed. But penalties are assessed under the FCA per false
claim presented to the United States resulting from defendants’ misconduct, not based on
the number of surgeries or kickbacks or any other metric.
Second, defendants point to several claims with unusually small or unusually large
amounts requested in reimbursement from Medicare. Defendants contend that these
amounts do not correlate to the kinds of procedures in which Precision Lens products
would have been used, suggesting that these entries may be the result of a coding error
rather than a reflection of actual false claims made to the United States. This argument is
unavailing for at least two reasons. First, evidence of the existence of these outlier claims
and the methodology through which the claims were assembled was presented to the jury,
which was entitled to make a factual determination regarding whether the relevant data
$352,907,500. The sum of these figures is $358,445,780. The Court has already concluded
that $3,485,064 must be subtracted from that amount due to judgment as a matter of law
having been granted on all FCA claims arising out of the Riedel trip to New York City.
32
entries represented false claims motivated by a kickback. 13 Second, there appear to have
been very few of these outlier claims. See Exhibit P-1169b. Defendants have identified
no more than a handful. Even if each of these actual damages from these claims (many of
which are for only one dollar) were excluded, and even if no penalties were assessed on
any of these claims, the amount of judgment would change minimally. Moreover, any such
changes would have no effect on this Court’s analysis of the amount of judgment under the
Excessive Fines Clause. Even if the Court were to conclude that the outlier claims should
be removed, judgment would be altered to reflect the limits established by the Excessive
Fines Clause, and those constitutional limits would not be affected by the removal of a very
small number of claims amounting to only a very small fraction of the judgment amount.
3. Constitutionality
After taking into account that judgment as a matter of law has been granted on the
claim related to Riedel’s New York City trip, defendants remain responsible under the FCA
for $482,484,865.13 in damages and penalties. Of that amount, $43,335,049.71 consist of
actual damages to the United States. Another $86,670,099.42 in damages result from the
mandatory trebling of the actual damages amount. See 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1). The
remaining $352,479,716 consist of statutory penalties assessed for each claim for Medicare
reimbursement found to be false. 14
The jury was spared from providing a yes-or-no verdict on each of the tens of thousands
of allegedly false claims. Therefore, it is impossible to say whether any particular claim
for Medicare reimbursement was found by the jury to be true or false.
14
This is the minimum amount in penalties that the FCA permits the Court to impose. See
31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1). The FCA authorizes the Court to impose up to twice that amount
in penalties.
13
33
Defendants argue that the Excessive Fines Clause precludes the imposition of such
a massive imposition of penalties. The Court agrees.
“The Excessive Fines Clause applies to civil penalties that are punitive in nature.”
United States v. Aleff, 772 F.3d 508, 512 (8th Cir. 2014) (citation omitted). Neither party
questions, as this Court has already determined in another context in this proceeding, see
Dkt. 1077 at 6-7, that the amount owed by defendants consists substantially of penalties,
even though how much of the judgment is “remedial” and how much is “punitive” is a
matter of dispute. In any event, the Excessive Fines Clause applies to the judgment entered
in this matter.
“A punitive sanction violates the Excessive Fines Clause if it is ‘grossly
disproportional to the gravity of a defendant’s offense.’” Aleff, 772 F.3d at 512 (quoting
United States v. Moyer, 313 F.3d 1082, 1086 (8th Cir. 2002)). The United States Court of
Appeals for the Eighth Circuit has instructed district courts to consider a variety of factors
in determining whether a penalty is grossly disproportional, including the reprehensibility
of the defendant’s conduct, the relationship between the penalty and the harm to the victim,
the sanctions in other cases for comparable misconduct, legislative intent, and the
defendants’ ability to pay. Id. The Supreme Court has suggested that the ratio of punitive
damages to compensatory damages may provide a guidepost to district courts in conducting
this inquiry, further stating “an award of more than four times the amount of compensatory
damages might be close to the line of constitutional impropriety,” State Farm Mut. Auto
Ins. Co. v. Campbell, 538 U.S. 408, 425 (2003) (emphasis added), and that “[w]hen
compensatory damages are substantial, then a lesser ratio, perhaps only equal to
34
compensatory damages, can reach the outermost limit” of constitutionality, id. But the
Supreme Court also has “consistently rejected the notion that the constitutional line is
marked by a simple mathematical formula.” BMW of North America, Inc. v. Gore, 517
U.S. 559, 582 (1996).
The Court considers each of those factors in turn. At the outset, however, the Court
notes is mindful that this is not a sentencing. The Court’s role in this proceeding is not to
determine the appropriate punishment for defendants. Instead, the Court is limited to
determining what is the permissible punishment under the Excessive Fines Clause.
a. Reprehensibility of Defendants’ Conduct
The parties dispute the degree of moral turpitude underlying defendants’ conduct.
Defendants characterize Paul Ehlen as a person exerting strenuously to comply with the
AKS who was foiled by his generosity towards “a small number of doctors who were his
longtime friends and whose families were friends with his family.” Dk. 1048 at 48. This
depiction, in the Court’s view, does not comport with the evidence at trial. Nor is it a
depiction accepted by the jury, which found Paul Ehlen (and Precision Lens) to be in
knowing disregard of the AKS. Defendants’ conduct also was not an isolated slip-up. The
jury concluded that defendants had committed well over 150 violations of the AKS over a
ten-year period.
The AKS is not a technicality. “Put simply, anti-kickback statutes are important
pieces of the governmental healthcare apparatus, ensuring that claims presented for
reimbursement are the product of untainted and independent medical judgment.”
State v. MedImmune, Inc., 342 F. Supp. 3d 544, 556 (S.D.N.Y. 2018). Indeed, the United
35
States’s interest in preventing kickbacks is important enough that violations of the AKS
sometimes constitute criminal violations punishable by up to 10 years in prison. See 42
U.S.C. § 1320a-7b.
Although all misconduct under the AKS is serious, defendants’ misconduct is
somewhat less severe in a few respects than the usual AKS case. First, the judgment vastly
overstates the benefit that defendants derived personally from the misconduct.
Reimbursement for Precision Lens products comprised only a small percentage of the cost
of any surgery for which doctors sought reimbursement, and the profit accruing to
Precision Lens from any sale to those doctors would represent only a percentage of that
already small percentage. 15 Defendants are wrong to suggest that the harm to the United
States is capped by the amount Precision Lens profited from any misconduct. But the
amount of profit is relevant, although certainly not determinative, in assessing the
reprehensibility of conduct.
Second, as this Court explained above, the definition of remuneration provided for
in the AKS includes the provision of anything of value for an amount other than fair market
value. This definition precludes defendants from contending that some benefits to doctors
were too slight to constitute violations of the AKS, and therefore the FCA. But the
definition of remuneration cuts in the other direction when the reprehensibility of
defendants’ conduct is considered. One example, addressed at length above, is that a doctor
was offered a salad and soda at a Christmas party amounts to remuneration. While the jury
Defendants’ calculations suggest that Precision Lens would have accrued only about
$1.3 million in profit from the sale of the products at issue.
15
36
could reasonably conclude that violation of the FCA resulted from that remuneration, but
it is difficult to categorize that particular instance of conduct as reprehensible.
Third, there is truth to defendants’ argument that the penalties imposed in this matter
are something of an accounting fluke. If Medicare required only one claim per surgery
rather than separate claims for Facility Fees and Physician Professional Fees, the
substantial penalty assessed against defendants would be reduced at least by half. If that
were so, the judgment in this matter would be reduced by over $175,000,000, even though
nothing about the conduct of the defendants or the harm resulting to the United States
would have changed. 16
Finally, at no point has anyone alleged that physical harm resulted from the
misconduct. See State Farm, 538 U.S. at 419 (identifying factors to be considered in
evaluating the reprehensibility of the defendant’s conduct). No patient is alleged to have
undergone a procedure that would not otherwise have occurred. Not one of the products
sold by Precision Lens is alleged to have been defective. This is not to minimize the harm
that was caused to patients, who were entitled to services untainted by kickbacks, or to the
United States, which was entitled not to provide reimbursement for those services.
Fortunately, however, those harms were not physical.
Even the United States seems to recognize that this quirk of Medicare reimbursement
leads to an unwarranted result in this matter, as the United States now requests that statutory
penalties be applied only to half of the claims found to be false. This concession alone, if
accepted, would result in the judgment being reduced from roughly $487 million to roughly
$310 million.
16
37
b. Harm to the Victim
As addressed earlier, the appropriate measure of actual damages in this matter is the
amount paid by the United States as reimbursement for claims found to be false. This
amount, after the exclusion of claims potentially based on the claim for which judgment as
a matter of law was granted for defendants, is $43,335,049.71. Added to those actual
damages are other, harder-to-quantify harms. These include, for example, the costs to the
United States in investigating and litigating this action and the harms to patients resulting
from any conflicts of interest between them and their doctors. The Court will not attempt
to derive an exact number, but the harm that resulted from defendants’ conduct is
significant.
c. Ratio of Punitive Damages to Compensatory Damages
Calculating the ratio of punitive damages to compensatory damages in this matter
is not straightforward.
Of the remaining judgment, $43,335,049.71 is plainly
compensatory. That amount reimburses the United States for the amounts paid on false
claims. The remaining statutory penalties of approximately $355 million are plainly
punitive. But the trebled damages required by the FCA have been characterized as both
compensatory and punitive, as “treble damages have a compensatory side, serving remedial
purposes in addition to punitive objectives.” Cook County, Ill. v. United States ex rel.
Chandler, 538 U.S. 119, 130 (2003). If the trebled damages in this matter were to be
regarded as purely punitive, the ratio of punitive damages to compensatory damages would
exceed 10-to-1. If the trebled damages were to be regarded as purely compensatory, the
ratio of punitive damages to compensatory damages would fall to just below 3-to-1. The
38
true ratio in this matter, after trebled damages have been divided between compensatory
and punitive aspects, lies somewhere between those two figures.
d. Legislative Intent
The Eighth Circuit and other courts have identified legislative intent as a relevant
factor in determining whether a penalty amounts to a violation of the Excessive Fines
Clause. See Qwest Corp. v. Minnesota Public Utilities Commission, 427 F.3d 1061, 1069
(8th Cir. 2005). This Court would not be the first to observe that this is something of an
oddity. Where legislative intent is used to help guide the analysis of the Excessive Fines
Clause, “Congress both levies the fine and, at least as a presumptive matter, determines its
constitutionality,” which “[s]eems a bit like letting the driver set the speed limit.”
Yates v. Pinellas Hematology & Oncology, P.A., 21 F.4th 1288, 1318 (11th Cir. 2021)
(J. Newsom, concurring). The legislative-intent factor is also tautological when applied to
statutory penalties. Every statutory penalty evinces the intent of the legislature to impose
that penalty. The legislature passed the statute, after all.
Although the penalties for FCA violations are established by Congress, there is at
least one indication from Congress itself that the penalties resulting from defendants’
misconduct might be overly severe. If defendants had been charged criminally with
violations of § 1320a-7b(b) for every transaction found by the jury to be a kickback, and
found guilty of those violations, which is by no means a certainty, in light of the greater
burden of proof on the United States in criminal proceedings, the maximum fine that this
Court could have imposed for the misconduct would have been a $100,000 fine on each
count, or about $15.5 million for each defendant. Indeed, the maximum fine that may be
39
assessed for any federal criminal violation (except where the statute of conviction itself
imposes a larger fine) is only $250,000 per offense for individuals or $500,000 per offense
for organizations—that is, a fine of about $38.7 million for Paul Ehlen and a fine of $77.5
million for Precision Lens. See 18 U.S.C. § 3571. The minimum penalties called for under
the FCA, even after excluding trebled damages, which should also be regarded as partly
punitive, amount to more than $350 million in this case. Cf. United States v. 817 N.E. 29th
Drive, Wilton Manors, Fla., 175 F.3d 1304, 1309 n.9 (11th Cir. 1999) (observing that “[a]
forfeiture far in excess of the statutory fine range . . . is likely to violate the Excessive Fines
Clause.”).
e. Defendants’ Ability to Pay
There is not a great deal of evidence in the record regarding defendants’ ability to
pay the judgment entered in this matter. The evidence that has been presented to the Court,
however, suggests that neither Precision Lens nor Paul Ehlen’s estate will be able to satisfy
even the compensatory damages in this matter, much less any penalties imposed in addition
to those compensatory damages. Kathryn Weitzel Ehlen attests that Paul Ehlen’s estate
possesses assets of approximately $25 million, not including Paul Ehlen’s interest in
Precision Lens.
See Declaration of Kathryn Weitzel Ehlen, Dkt. 1073-1.
William
Henneman, chief executive officer of Precision Lens, estimates the current value of the
company to be less than $5 million. See Declaration of William Henneman, Dkt. 1073-2.
In light of the evidence produced at trial, neither representation is implausible.
40
f. Sanctions in Other Cases for Comparable Misconduct
Finally, the Court is tasked with reviewing the sanctions assessed in other cases for
similar misconduct. Performing this task is difficult in the context of this litigation for four
reasons.
First, it is not entirely clear what “comparable misconduct” is supposed to entail.
For example, do all claims arising under the FCA involve comparable misconduct?
Perhaps all claims arising under the FCA premised on violations of the AKS constitute
“comparable misconduct.” Or all claims arising under the FCA in which penalties
comprise such a substantial portion of the overall monetary judgment may be deemed
“comparable misconduct.” Certainly, cases in which a medical supplier is found to have
supplied purchasers with kickbacks in the form of trips, meals, and other enticements
would be “comparable misconduct.” Different scopes of comparison would potentially
yield different results regarding the constitutional limits on damages imposed by other
courts.
Second, having presided over a trial that lasted for nearly two months, the Court is
very familiar with defendants’ conduct.
By contrast, in determining the relative
reprehensibility of the conduct of defendants in other cases, the Court must rely on the brief
synopses of evidence supplied in case reports. This is a very imperfect substitute for having
reviewed thousands of documents and listened to weeks of testimony.
Third, in those cases that appear most closely comparable to this litigation, few
courts have concluded that the penalties imposed exceed the constitutional barrier.
Sometimes this has been because the penalties required by the FCA are found not to violate
41
the Excessive Fines Clause. Other times, the United States has agreed to seek a lesser
monetary judgment in an effort to evade a constitutional challenge. 17 While it would not
be accurate to conclude that the amounts sought by the United States in those cases
necessarily represent the constitutional limit on penalties that could have been imposed in
those cases, to say that the full imposition of penalties required by the FCA would have
been a constitutional violation also is not an apt conclusion. Unfortunately for this case,
the United States’s decision to seek lesser amounts in judgment in prior litigation deprives
other courts of the benefit of analysis regarding whether the penalties required by the FCA
would have been a violation of the Excessive Fines Clause in those cases.
With those caveats, this Court briefly summarizes the monetary awards imposed in
litigation similar to this matter, with a particular focus on those cases identified by the
parties as comparable to this litigation.
That is the case here as well. Plaintiffs are now seeking only about $310 million rather
than the $487 million currently reflected by the judgment. Plaintiffs contend that “[i]t is
uncontroversial that the [United States] possesses the discretion to seek a lower penalty
amount in the context of a constitutional analysis.” Dkt. 1059 at 46. But it is far from
obvious to the Court that either the United States or the Court has this discretion to ignore
the penalties plainly required on the face of the FCA following a jury verdict—except, of
course, insofar as the statutory penalties are unconstitutional. Nor are the invocations by
the United States of “prosecutorial discretion” convincing. Undoubtedly it was withing the
discretion of the United States not to prosecute tens of thousands of claims under the FCA
against the defendant. But it did prosecute those claims. Prosecutorial discretion does not,
as a general matter, entail the privilege of seeking relief outside the boundaries of the law.
17
Of course, if the United States believes the penalties imposed by the FCA to be
unconstitutional in the context of this litigation, then it has an obligation not to seek those
penalties to the extent that the penalties violate the Excessive Fines Clause. But in that
case, the United States should be forthright about why a lesser punitive sanction—
particularly a sanction that is not permitted on the face of the statute—is being sought,
rather than framing its constitutional obligations as noblesse oblige.
42
i. Tyson
Plaintiffs identify United States ex rel. Tyson v. Amerigroup Illinois, Inc., 488 F.
Supp. 2d 719 (N.D. Ill. 2007) as comparable to the present matter. Tyson involved false
claims for Medicaid reimbursement found to violate the FCA. The monetary penalties
imposed in that litigation were roughly similar to the penalties imposed in this case, $48
million in actual damages and an overall monetary judgment of $334 million based on
18,130 false claims. The Court in Tyson concluded that the penalty imposed in that matter
did not violate the Excessive Fines Clause.
Despite the facial similarities with this litigation, Tyson is in some ways a poor
comparator for this lawsuit. First, the claims in Tyson related not to kickbacks by a medical
supplier, but to discrimination against unhealthy patients by an insurance company. The
conduct of defendants in that matter—“a several years long, institution-wide goal to fleece
Defendants’ pockets at the expense of the United States, the Medicaid system, and . . .
pregnant women and ‘unhealthies,’” Tyson, 488 F. Supp. 2d at 745— was, in this Court’s
view, more morally opprobrious than the conduct at issue in this case. Second, the
defendant in Tyson directly profited from the misconduct more so than Precision Lens
profited from the misconduct at issue in this litigation. 18 Third, although the conduct in
Tyson appears to have been somewhat more reprehensible than the conduct in this case.
It is impossible, however, to know to what extent the Tyson defendant profited from the
misconduct. The defendant in Tyson boosted its profits by discriminating against unhealthy
patients and thereby skewing the risk profile of the pool of insureds. The measure of profit
resulting from the scheme, then, was the difference between the profits actually accrued by
the defendant and the profits that would have accrued if the defendant had not acted in a
discriminatory manner. See Tyson, 488 F. Supp. 2d at 748.
18
43
The penalties imposed on the defendant in that matter were approximately $160 million
less than the penalties imposed under the FCA in this case (with nearly identical actual
damages to the United States). Fourth, the penalty imposed in Tyson, although large, was
by no means crippling for the defendant. See id. at 747.
In each of these respects, Tyson differs substantially from the current litigation,
limiting the value of Tyson as a comparator case. The Court, therefore, is reluctant to
conclude that the judgment entered in Tyson would also be constitutional if entered in this
case.
ii. Drakeford
In United States ex rel. Drakeford v. Tuomey, the United States Court of Appeals
for the Fourth Circuit concluded that a judgment under the FCA of $237,454,195—of
which $39,313,065 represented actual damages, $78,626,130 represented trebled damages,
and $119,515,000 represented penalties— did not violate the Excessive Fines Clause. 792
F.3d 364, 387-90 (4th Cir. 2015). Drakeford is helpful insofar as the Fourth Circuit appears
to have concluded that the penalty imposed in that matter, although not constitutionally
excessive, was approaching the limits of what the Excessive Fines Clause might permit.
See id. at 389 (noting that “the ratio of punitive damages to compensatory damages is
approximately 3.6-to-1, which falls just under the ratio the Court deems constitutionally
suspect.”). As in this case, but unlike the penalty in Tyson, the penalty imposed in
Drakeford was likely to have crippling effects on the defendant. See id. at 391 (J. Wynn,
concurring) (“But I write separately to emphasize the troubling picture this case paints: An
impenetrably complex set of laws and regulations that will result in a likely death sentence
44
for a community hospital in an already medically underserved area.”). The violations of
the FCA in Drakeford were premised on violations of the Stark Law, 42 U.S.C. § 1395nn,
not the AKS, but they are roughly comparable to the claims in this proceeding in terms of
reprehensibility.
While Drakeford is not a perfect comparator to this case, it is a closer comparator
than the other cases examined in this section. The amended judgment imposed in this
matter is somewhat in line with the judgment imposed in Drakeford. To be constitutionally
permissible, the Court has entered a slightly lower judgment amount despite slightly higher
actual damages resulting from the conduct of defendants in this matter. The resulting ratio
of punitive damages to actual damages awarded in this matter is marginally lower in this
matter than in Drakeford.
As explained by the Supreme Court, however, “[w]hen
compensatory damages are substantial, then a lesser ratio, perhaps only equal to
compensatory damages, can reach the outermost limit” of constitutionality. State Farm,
538 U.S. at 425. Accordingly, this Court has placed more emphasis on this statement than
the Drakeford court.
iii. Montcrieff
The defendant in United States ex rel. Montcrieff v. Peripheral Vascular Associates,
P.A., was found to have billed Medicare for services that it did not perform, thereby
violating the FCA. 649 F. Supp. 3d 404, 409 (W.D. Tex. Jan. 9, 2023). A jury awarded
$2,728,199 in actual damages. Id. at 419. Although the defendant faced a minimum
statutory penalty of $40,590,000 in addition to trebled actual damages, the United States
sought the imposition of only about half that amount in penalties. Id. at 424. The court in
45
Montcrieff concluded that this reduced demand did not result in a judgment exceeding the
boundaries of the Excessive Fines Clause. Because of the substantially lower amount
awarded in actual damages, Moncrieff is a poor comparator for this case for two reasons,
the substantially lower amount awarded in actual damages as well as the difference in
underlying misconduct.
iv. Lutz
In United States ex rel. Lutz v. BlueWave Healthcare Consultants, Inc., defendants
performed unnecessary medical tests and later sought reimbursement for those tests under
Medicare, resulting in total damages of approximately $17 million to Medicare. No. 9:14CV-00239-RMG, 2018 WL 11282049, at *2 (D.S.C. May 23, 2018), The court in Lutz
concluded that the imposition of approximately $64 million in statutory penalties did not
exceed the limits of the Excessive Fines Clause. Id. at *5. Lutz is not a useful comparator,
however, because of the differences in underlying conduct and because the actual damages
and penalties in that matter were substantially less than those in this case. Moreover, the
brief analysis in Lutz regarding the Excessive Fines Clause appears to be excessively
deferential to the penalties imposed by Congress.
v. Bickel and Mackby
Defendants cite two cases in which the United States sought penalties drastically
lower than those provided for by the FCA, United States v. Bickel, No. 02-3144, 2006
WL 1120439 (C.D. Ill. Feb. 22, 2006); and United States v. Mackby, 339 F.3d 1013 (9th
Cir. 2003). However, neither Bickel nor Mackby is a helpful comparator for precisely the
reason that defendants cite those cases. The United States voluntarily agreed to a lesser
46
recovery in those proceedings, thereby averting more significant challenges under the
Excessive Fines Clause. Because of litigation decisions made by the United States in those
cases, Bickel and Mosby are not useful guides here for determining when a statutory penalty
violates the Excessive Fines Clause.
g. Conclusion
After consideration of the appropriate factors—the reprehensibility of defendants’
conduct, the harm to the victim, the ratio of punitive damages to actual damages, legislative
intent, the financial status of the defendants, and the penalties imposed in similar cases—
the Court concludes that the Excessive Fines Clause permits recovery of no more than
$216,675,248.55 in this matter. This amount consists of $43,335,049.71 of actual damages,
$86,670,099.42 in trebled damages, and $86,670,099.42 in penalties. This amount does
not include post-judgment interest, statutory attorneys’ fees, or other taxable costs.
While no single factor was determinative in reaching that conclusion, the Court
makes the following observations. The amount of the judgment represents five times the
actual damages imposed in this case. If the portion of the judgment amount attributable to
compensatory damages were limited to actual damages, the ratio of punitive damages to
actual damages would be precisely 4-to-1. Alternatively, if a relator’s share of 15 percent
($32,501,287.28) were added to the actual damages figure ($43,335,049.71) and regarded
as compensatory, the punitive damages ratio to actual damages ratio would be
approximately 1.85-to-1.
This latter ratio is somewhat less than that found in many of the cases examined
above. But as the Supreme Court has observed, “[w]hen compensatory damages are
47
substantial, then a lesser ratio, perhaps only equal to compensatory damages, can reach the
outermost limit of” what the constitution permits. State Farm, 538 U.S. at 425. The
compensatory damages assessed in this matter, however calculated, are notably severe.
Additional penalties well exceeding those compensatory damages remain imposed on top
of the compensatory damages. The conduct for which defendants were found liable
warrants such a judgment. The Court is mindful, however, that an amount greater than the
amount imposed here threatens to become grossly disproportional to the gravity of the
offense. Aleff, 772 F.3d at 512.
4. Offset from Settlement
Finally, defendants requested that the original amount of judgment in this matter be
offset by the full amount for which Sightpath, Tiffany, and Swarup paid to the United States
in settlement for claims related to the claims litigated against Paul Ehlen and Precision
Lens. Plaintiffs had “no objection” to applying a partial settlement offset of $2.481 million.
Dkt. 1035 at 7. The Court deducted this amount from the judgment entered in this matter,
while reserving the question of whether a greater amount should be deducted. See Dkt.
1042 at 4-5.
Neither party has vigorously litigated the question subsequently.
Defendants
reference it briefly in their memorandum in support of the motion for post-judgment relief,
see Dkt. 1048 at 26, and defendants do not provide any argument in their responsive brief.
As the offset of additional settlement amounts would not alter the Court’s conclusion
regarding the amount of judgment that could be imposed in this proceeding, the issue is
largely moot. And, after rereviewing defendants’ initial arguments regarding offset a
48
second time, the Court concludes that defendants have not adequately established that more
than $2.481 million of the settlement amounts is attributable to conduct for which
defendants were found liable in this matter. The Court, therefore, would not reduce the
amount of judgment further as a result of that settlement even if the resolution of the
Excessive Fines Clause claim did not render the amount of settlement offset moot.
49
ORDER
Based on the foregoing analysis and all the files, records, and proceedings herein,
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED THAT:
1.
Defendants’ motion for post-judgment relief, Dkt. 1047, is GRANTED IN
PART and DENIED IN PART, as follows:
a.
Defendants’ motion for judgment as a matter of law is GRANTED
regarding the claim related to the trip to New York City of Patrick
Riedel occurring on or about January 1, 2009.
b.
The motion is GRANTED insofar as the penalties imposed upon the
defendants under the False Claims Act constitute a violation of the
Excessive Fines Clause.
c.
2.
The motion is DENIED in all other respects.
The judgment in this matter is AMENDED to reflect a judgment amount of
$216,675,248.55, not including post-judgment interest, statutory attorneys’
fees, or other taxable costs.
LET JUDGMENT BE ENTERED ACCORDINGLY.
Dated: February 8, 2024
s/Wilhelmina M. Wright
Wilhelmina M. Wright
United States District Judge
50
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.
Why Is My Information Online?