United States v. Davis — Healthcare Fraud Convictions Reversed on Appeal
Summary
The Fourth Circuit reversed Richard Davis's healthcare fraud convictions, finding insufficient evidence that bills submitted to Medicaid on April 30, 2018 and May 9, 2018 were actually false. Davis, former director of a Medicaid-funded mental health service provider, was convicted after a bench trial of scheming to defraud Medicaid by overbilling for counseling services. The appeals court held that while billing irregularities may have occurred, the government failed to prove the submitted claims were knowingly false as required under 18 U.S.C. § 1347. Chief Judge Diaz wrote the majority opinion, with Judge Heytens joining; Judge Wilkinson dissented.
“Reversed, vacated, and remanded by unpublished opinion. Chief Judge Diaz wrote the opinion, in which Judge Heytens joined. Judge Wilkinson wrote a dissenting opinion.”
Healthcare fraud cases under 18 U.S.C. § 1347 require proof that submitted claims were actually false, not merely that billing practices were irregular or that documentation was incomplete. Providers billing Medicaid for day treatment and similar services should maintain contemporaneous records of reimbursable activities—particularly care coordination performed face-to-face—separated from non-billable tasks like transport and monitoring.
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What changed
The Fourth Circuit reversed Richard Davis's two healthcare fraud convictions, finding the evidence insufficient to prove the bills submitted to Medicaid were actually false. Davis, former director of Innovative Family Services LLC, was convicted of overbilling for day treatment services on April 30 and May 9, 2018. The appeals court held the government failed to meet its burden under 18 U.S.C. § 1347, though the court noted Davis's billing practices contained irregularities.
Healthcare providers billing Medicaid should note this decision emphasizes the importance of clear documentation that services were rendered as billed. While the government may establish billing irregularities, it must prove specific claims were actually false. Providers should ensure care coordination and other Medicaid-reimbursable activities are contemporaneously documented.
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April 24, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note
United States v. Richard Davis
Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
- Citations: None known
- Docket Number: 25-4093
Precedential Status: Non-Precedential
Combined Opinion
USCA4 Appeal: 25-4093 Doc: 66 Filed: 04/24/2026 Pg: 1 of 19
UNPUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 25-4093
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff – Appellee,
v.
RICHARD DAVIS,
Defendant – Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, at
Richmond. John A. Gibney, Jr., Senior District Judge. (3:23−cr−00135−JAG−1)
Argued: February 12, 2026 Decided: April 24, 2026
Before DIAZ, Chief Judge, and WILKINSON and HEYTENS, Circuit Judges.
Reversed, vacated, and remanded by unpublished opinion. Chief Judge Diaz wrote the
opinion, in which Judge Heytens joined. Judge Wilkinson wrote a dissenting opinion.
ARGUED: Robert James Wagner, ROBERT J. WAGNER PLC, Richmond, Virginia, for
Appellant. Shea Gibbons, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Richmond,
Virginia, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Erik S. Siebert, United States Attorney, OFFICE OF
THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellee.
Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
USCA4 Appeal: 25-4093 Doc: 66 Filed: 04/24/2026 Pg: 2 of 19
DIAZ, Chief Judge:
Richard Davis, the former director of a mental health counseling company, appeals
his convictions for two counts of health care fraud. After a bench trial, the district court
found Davis guilty of scheming to defraud Medicaid by overbilling for counseling services
on two specific dates.
But the evidence was insufficient to prove that the bills submitted on those two dates
were actually false. So we must reverse the convictions.
I.
A.
Davis owned and directed Innovative Family Services, LLC, a Medicaid-funded
mental health service provider for at-risk youth. As the clinical director, Davis was
“responsible for assuring that everyone within the company [was] complying [with]
Medicaid billing guidelines.” Joint Appendix (J.A.) 777.
Innovative ran several programs, including therapeutic day treatment, which was an
after-school program to help children with emotional and behavioral issues. During day
treatment, licensed counselors provided individual and group counseling and helped at-risk
youth work on “problem-solving, anger management, community responsibility, increased
impulse control, [and] appropriate peer relations.” J.A. 173.
Innovative could seek reimbursement from Medicaid for certain day-treatment
activities. As relevant here, the Department of Medical Assistance Services, which
administers Virginia’s Medicaid program, permitted reimbursement for face-to-face
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treatment, some planning activities, and “care coordination,” which is the “sharing of
information among [the] health care providers . . . involved with an individual’s health
care.” J.A 143, 173–74. But time spent transporting recipients, documenting contacts, and
monitoring behavior during class wasn’t reimbursable.
The Department required counselors to bill their day treatment in “units.” J.A. 175.
Counselors could bill one unit when they provided between 2 and 2.99 hours of
reimbursable services, two units when they provided between 3 and 4.99 hours, and three
units when they provided 5 hours or more. But they couldn’t bill more than three units per
day, even if they spent more than 5 hours on reimbursable tasks.
B.
Innovative faced semi-regular audits. A 2019 audit of day-treatment records
revealed significant issues in patient files and sparked a federal investigation into potential
health care fraud.
Following the investigation, a grand jury returned a six-count indictment charging
Davis with “knowingly and willfully execut[ing] and attempt[ing] to execute a scheme and
artifice to commit health care fraud,” in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1347. J.A. 14, 16. The
indictment alleged that Davis submitted several claims for reimbursement for day treatment
(and intensive in-home treatment—another program not at issue in this appeal) that either
didn’t occur or didn’t meet the proper billing requirements.
Crucially for this appeal, each count corresponds to a different date that Davis
allegedly caused false claims to be submitted to Medicaid. The two counts at issue here
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allege that Davis caused false bills to be submitted for care coordination not rendered on
two dates: April 30, 2018 (count three) and May 9, 2018 (count four).
C.
A bench trial ensued. Several Innovative employees testified about the hours they
worked and how Davis instructed them to bill their time.
Employees generally worked from 11:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. They used the afternoon
session, from around 3:00 or 4:00 to 6:00 or 7:00 to complete their face-to-face day
treatment. And, at Davis’s instruction, they completed care coordination and planning
from 11:30 to 1:30 or 2:00, when the children were absent. Several employees testified
that Davis gave them templates to use for timekeeping, and one testified that the template
had the 11:30 to 1:30 time filled in already.
Counselors typically marked their hours on a “daily log” or in “progress notes.”
J.A. 12, 15, 826–27. Another Innovative employee collected those logs or notes and
transferred the time into units for Medicaid billing purposes.
The testimony of two counselors—Kasi Loney and Hazel Bell—is especially
relevant because they provided services on the two dates in question.
1.
Loney logged eight hours of day treatment on April 30, 2018, which translated to
three units billed to Medicaid.
Loney’s progress note for that day reflects a “[s]ession [t]ime” from 11:30 a.m. to
7:30 p.m. J.A. 1590. Loney logged those hours at the direction of her supervisor, who
Davis trained. And she logged eight hours even though actual therapy didn’t start until the
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afternoon, typically beginning around 3:00 and “wrap[ping] up between 6:00 and 7:00
o’clock.” J.A. 739.
Loney didn’t document care coordination on April 30 specifically, but she testified
that it typically occurred in the morning, from 11:30 until 2:00. She admitted that she
didn’t always complete care coordination, but she would still put the full eight hours on
her progress note every day.
2.
Bell logged six hours of day treatment on May 9, 2018, amounting to three units
billed to Medicaid.
Bell’s daily log that day shows two hours of care coordination from 11:30 to 1:30
and four hours of day therapy from 3:00 to 7:00. She billed two hours of care coordination
at Davis’s instruction.
Bell explained that she simultaneously worked as an elementary school teacher
during the day, so she couldn’t have completed two hours of Innovative work at the same
time. But she could still get Innovative work done on breaks and during lunch. Even
though she couldn’t bill the full two hours of care coordination, she still marked that time
on her progress note to avoid Davis questioning why her “note changed” or “look[ed]
different.” J.A. 585.
Davis knew Bell also worked as a teacher and “told [her] to continue doing
everything [she] was supposed to do, and we should be fine.” J.A. 649. But Bell clarified
that Davis “didn’t direct [her] to not work the two hours and bill for them.” J.A. 617–18.
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D.
The district court found Davis guilty on two of the six counts, involving the April
30 and May 9 billing records. As the court found, Davis “set up the system that resulted
in the billing of two hours per day per client” and so “he had to know that that was going
to result in charges being sent to Medicaid that were not legitimate.” J.A. 1397.
Davis moved for a judgment of acquittal and a new trial, both of which the district
court denied. This appeal followed.
II.
Davis contends that the evidence wasn’t sufficient to support his convictions. He
also makes several legal arguments, challenging the district court’s interpretation of the
health care fraud statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1347. 1 But when a defendant challenges a verdict for
sufficiency, we must start there. United States v. Gallagher, 90 F.4th 182, 188 (4th Cir.
2024). And “[w]e review the sufficiency of the evidence de novo.” United States v.
McLean, 715 F.3d 129, 137 (4th Cir. 2013).
We “must sustain the verdict if, viewing the evidence and the reasonable inferences
to be drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the government, . . . the evidence
adduced at trial could support any rational determination of guilty beyond a reasonable
doubt.” United States v. Graham, 796 F.3d 332, 373 (4th Cir. 2015) (citation modified).
1
Davis contends that the district court (i) failed to apply the proper mens rea,
specific intent; (ii) erroneously found that he “knowingly” committed the two health care
fraud offenses; and (iii) improperly relied on group billing practices to support his
convictions.
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But if the evidence is insufficient to support such a finding, the defendant is entitled to a
judgment of acquittal. Gallagher, 90 F.4th at 188–89.
III.
“To sustain a conviction under 18 U.S.C. § 1347, the government was required to
prove beyond a reasonable doubt that [Davis] knowingly and willfully executed a scheme
to defraud.” McLean, 715 F.3d at 137–38. But the government also had to prove beyond
a reasonable doubt that Davis “caused to be submitted . . . false claims for [day-treatment]
services not actually rendered” on the two dates in question: April 30, 2018 and May 9,
- J.A. 16.
That’s where the government faltered. It failed to present sufficient evidence to
prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the counselors falsely billed three units to Medicaid
on those two dates.
A.
The relevant inquiry here isn’t whether Loney’s and Bell’s treatment records (the
progress notes or daily logs) contained false or inaccurate information. That may very well
be true.
But Medicaid fraud isn’t concerned with internal timekeeping records. There’s only
fraud if the bills submitted to Medicaid reflect “false or misleading claims for payment.”
United States v. Elfenbein, 144 F.4th 551, 560 (4th Cir. 2025). So we must determine
whether there’s sufficient evidence that both Loney and Bell failed to provide at least five
hours of covered services to reflect the three units billed on April 30 and May 9.
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1.
Start with Loney. She billed three units to Medicaid on April 30. As long as she
completed at least five hours of reimbursable work to reflect the three units billed, there’s
no fraud.
Loney testified that she typically completed face-to-face treatment for between three
and four hours. And she testified that care coordination and planning usually took place
for two-and-a-half hours, from 11:30 to 2:00.
Both are reimbursable tasks. So for example, if Loney provided four hours of day
treatment on April 30 and only one hour of care coordination, that would get her to the five
hours necessary to bill three units. So too if she provided three hours of treatment and two
hours of care coordination.
The government never asked Loney how much time she spent providing counseling
on April 30. And while the government asked why she didn’t document care coordination
on that day, it never asked whether she in fact completed reimbursable work during the
midday period. So we’re left with the government’s speculation that Loney didn’t provide
at least five hours of covered services on April 30. That’s not how proof beyond a
reasonable doubt works.
It was the government’s burden to show that Davis (through his employee Loney)
committed fraud on the date alleged in the indictment. While we must view the evidence
in the government’s favor, “[t]he voids in the proof” here are too great. United States v.
Van Fossen, 460 F.2d 38, 41 (4th Cir. 1972).
We must reverse Davis’s conviction on count three.
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2.
Now, Bell. She billed three units to Medicaid on May 9. So again we ask: did the
government prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Bell didn’t complete at least five hours
of reimbursable work that day? As with Loney, the answer is no.
Bell testified that she didn’t—and couldn’t—provide two full hours of care
coordination as a general rule because of her teaching job. But she documented four hours
of day treatment on May 9, from 3:00 to 7:00, which the government did not challenge.
And she was generally available to do Innovative work on breaks and during lunch. So if
she completed at least one hour of care coordination on that day, she would have notched
the five hours necessary to bill three units.
Yet again, the government failed to elicit any testimony or other evidence that Bell
didn’t complete one hour of care coordination that day. All the government showed is that
she couldn’t complete the full two hours. But that doesn’t prove beyond a reasonable doubt
that Bell did not provide five hours of reimbursable services on May 9.
So we must reverse Davis’s conviction on count four as well.
B.
A brief word about our colleague in dissent. Our friend focuses on systematic or
general billing practices, noting that “[t]here was ample evidence to suggest . . .a general
practice of explicitly directed fraudulent billing.” Dissent at 16 (emphasis added). In the
dissent’s view, it would have been “fruitless” to elicit testimony about how Loney and Bell
spent the midday period on the two dates in question because “[n]either . . . could have
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possibly recalled what they did for two hours on a particular day more than six years ago.”
Id. at 17.
That’s precisely the point. Loney and Bell were government witnesses. And rather
than allege a conspiracy to defraud, the government sought to prove that Loney and Bell
committed fraud on specific dates with specific students. Yet when called to testify, neither
swore to anything of the kind, even as they conceded that their internal logs and records
may have contained false information about their general billing practices.
True, “the government’s evidence does not need ‘to exclude every reasonable
hypothesis other than that of guilt.’” Dissent at 15 (quoting Holland v. United States, 348
U.S. 121, 139 (1954)). But it must still offer affirmative evidence sufficient to convict.
Given the government’s charging decisions, a whiff of fraud in the air isn’t enough.
We reverse for insufficient evidence only where “the prosecution’s failure is clear.”
United States v. Ashley, 606 F.3d 135, 138 (4th Cir. 2010) (citation modified). Here, it is.
We therefore reverse Davis’s convictions, vacate his sentence, and remand to the district
court with instructions to enter a judgment of acquittal. 2
REVERSED, VACATED, AND REMANDED
2
Because Davis prevails on his sufficiency of the evidence challenge, we needn’t
reach his remaining arguments. Gallagher, 90 F.4th at 188.
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WILKINSON, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
A defendant carries a heavy burden when he challenges the sufficiency of the
evidence supporting his conviction. To prevail, he must demonstrate that “the evidence
adduced at trial could [not] support any rational determination of guilty beyond a
reasonable doubt.” United States v. Powell, 469 U.S. 57, 67 (1984) (emphasis added).
Richard Davis has not met his burden here.
After a four-day bench trial in which eighteen witnesses testified, the district court
carefully considered the evidence and found Davis guilty of two of the six counts of health
care fraud that were charged in the indictment. Rather than defer to the district court’s
judgment, however, the majority decides for itself that reasonable doubts exist regarding
Davis’s guilt. In doing so, it demands a standard of proof that will prove insurmountable
in far too many cases of health care fraud, all to the detriment of Medicaid and the public
fisc. I respectfully dissent.
I.
Therapeutic day treatment (TDT) is a Medicaid program designed to help at-risk
youth address their emotional and behavioral issues. Medicaid reimburses service
providers based on the units of time they spend providing medically necessary,
reimbursable TDT services. Three to five hours of care corresponds to two units of service
while five or more hours of care corresponds to three units of service.
Davis’s company, Innovative Family Services, LLC (IFS), operated an afterschool
program providing TDT services to children in Virginia. Group counseling sessions at IFS
would last for three or four hours, meaning Davis could bill Medicaid for two units of
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service for each child that participated—usually six to eight children per group. But Davis
was interested in “max billing,” J.A. 870, 906–07, so he instructed his employees to log
another two hours of care in the middle of the day for each child that received counseling.
By doing so, Davis could bill Medicaid the maximum of three units of service for every
child, every day.
This practice was troubling for a couple of reasons. The most glaring issue was that
Davis expected his employees to log these two extra hours of care “no matter what the
counselor actually did during that time period.” J.A. 801; see also J.A. 782. For example,
one employee testified that she “always” logged two hours of care in the middle of the day
for each child she counseled and that if she logged anything less, Davis would have
questioned her “on why [her] note changed.” J.A. 583, 585. In fact, one of the timekeeping
templates employees were instructed to use had this two-hour midday period already filled
in. Billing Medicaid for an additional unit of service regardless of whether additional
services were rendered or medically necessary is, of course, fraudulent.
In fairness, Davis told his employees to prepare for their group counseling sessions
during this midday period, and his employees generally did use the time to document their
clients’ progress, coordinate their clients’ care with other service providers, and plan
activities for their group counseling sessions. The problem? For one thing, Medicaid
categorically does not reimburse providers for time spent on documentation. For another,
care coordination could be billed to Medicaid only for the particular child whose care was
being coordinated. Davis was billing this time to Medicaid for every child that attended the
counseling sessions. So too with planning. Medicaid reimburses only the time a provider
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spends planning “individualized” programs and interventions for a child, J.A. 173, yet
Davis was billing this time to Medicaid for every child that attended the counseling
sessions. The result: Davis was systematically billing Medicaid a third unit of service for
every child that attended counseling even though few, if any, children were receiving five
hours of reimbursable TDT services. That too is fraudulent.
Davis insists that he believed he was allowed to group bill for planning and that
Medicaid’s regulations on the issue were ambiguous. But there is nothing ambiguous about
the requirement that planning be “individualized.” J.A. 173. And even if Medicaid’s
regulations were “somewhat ambiguous,” “fraud defendants [do not] benefit from
Chevron-like safe harbors.” United States v. Elfenbein, 144 F.4th 551, 568 n.14 (4th Cir.
2025). It is up to the trier of fact to determine what the best interpretation of an arguably
ambiguous provision is, id. at 567 & n.14, and here the district court found that the
government’s reading of the applicable Medicaid regulations was “the only objectively
reasonable interpretation,” J.A. 479 (quoting United States v. Harra, 985 F.3d 196, 215 (3d
Cir. 2021)).
At any rate, the fact remains that Davis directed his employees to log two hours for
the midday period every day, for every child, without regard to how much time they spent
on group planning. That meant IFS was overbilling Medicaid irrespective of whether group
billing for planning was permissible. Consider, for example, an IFS employee who spends
one hour on documentation and one hour coordinating the care of two children. If the
corresponding group counseling session lasts three hours and includes eight children, IFS
should bill Medicaid two units of service for each of the eight children. Under Davis’s
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“max billing” strategy, however, IFS would bill three units of service per child, or eight
additional units in total.
II.
The two counts of health care fraud Davis was convicted of are emblematic of this
fraudulent practice. In both cases, IFS employees were logging the same midday hours for
every child they counseled that day without regard to the work they engaged in.
A.
The first count concerns the services Kasi Loney provided to a child, A.J., on April
30, 2018. Loney logged eight hours of therapeutic treatment that day: 11:30 a.m. to 7:30
p.m. Loney testified that she was directed to log eight hours every day for every child she
counseled even though her counseling sessions would last for only three or four hours. The
remainder of Loney’s workday consisted of transporting children—which is not
reimbursable—and the two or two-and-a-half hours that she had for planning, care
coordination, and documentation—which, again, cannot be billed to every child or, in the
case of documentation, cannot be billed at all.
Loney’s daily progress note for A.J. does not reflect any time spent coordinating
A.J.’s care or planning for the counseling session. IFS should thus have only billed
Medicaid for two units of service.
B.
The second count concerns the services Hazel Bell provided to another child, J.R.,
on May 9, 2018. Bell logged six hours of therapeutic treatment that day: 11:30 a.m. to 1:30
p.m. and 3:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. Bell testified that Davis directed her to log two hours for
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the midday period every day for every child she counseled. However, Bell explained that
she worked as an elementary school teacher during the day, making it impossible for her
to spend 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. on her IFS work. At most, she was able to spend only
“some” time during her lunch break and free period working on IFS matters. J.A. 584.
Davis knew that Bell’s teaching job conflicted with her IFS work, but he told her “to
continue doing everything [she] was supposed to do, and [they] should be fine.” J.A. 649.
Bell’s progress note for J.R. does not reflect that she spent any time coordinating
J.R.’s care. In terms of planning, the progress note says only that Bell “planned an activity
in reference to developing teamwork.” J.A. 1521. Bell logged the same two-hour planning
period for at least two other children that day. IFS should thus have only billed Medicaid
for two units of service.
III.
Despite all this inculpatory evidence, the majority holds that no rational trier of fact
could have found Davis guilty of health care fraud. In its view, because the government
did not conclusively rule out the possibility that Loney and Bell provided A.J. and J.R. with
five hours of reimbursable TDT services, it failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that
IFS falsely billed Medicaid for three units of service on the days in question. In so holding,
the majority exceeds the limited scope of our appellate review and unduly raises the
government’s burden of proof.
To establish guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, the government’s evidence does not
need “to exclude every reasonable hypothesis other than that of guilt.” Holland v. United
States, 348 U.S. 121, 139 (1954); see also United States v. Burgos, 94 F.3d 849, 866 (4th
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Cir. 1996) (en banc). Where the government’s case rests on testimonial or circumstantial
evidence, it is for the trier of fact—not us—“to weigh the chances that the evidence
correctly points to guilt against the possibility of inaccuracy or ambiguous inference.”
Holland, 348 U.S. at 140. So long as the trier of fact “is convinced beyond a reasonable
doubt, we can require no more.” Id. Yet “more” is exactly what the majority demands.
Rather than “viewing the evidence and the reasonable inferences to be drawn
therefrom in the light most favorable to the Government,” Burgos, 94 F.3d at 863, the
majority speculates that Loney and Bell could have spent an hour or two coordinating A.J.
and J.R.’s care on the days in question. Again, “[w]e cannot . . . find the evidence of guilt
insufficient simply because it failed to disprove every possible hypothesis regarding”
Davis’s “purported innocence.” Id. at 866. In any event, no evidence supports the
majority’s conjecture. The relevant progress notes do not so much as mention care
coordination, let alone indicate that Loney and Bell spent an hour or more engaging in it.
That is consistent with Loney’s testimony that she did not engage in care coordination
every day for every child and that she never performed ten hours of care coordination in a
week. Given Bell’s teaching position, she had even less time to spend providing care
coordination than Loney did.
When this evidence is considered in conjunction with Davis’s direction to log two
hours of care without regard to the services rendered, what more is required before a
rational trier of fact could find Davis guilty beyond a reasonable doubt? There was ample
evidence to suggest that there was a general practice of explicitly directed fraudulent billing
during the time period in question. The majority faults the government for not eliciting
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testimony about how exactly Loney and Bell spent that midday period, but doing so would
have been fruitless. Neither of them could have possibly recalled what they did for two
hours on a particular day more than six years ago. If the majority feels that a witness’s
recall is insufficient, that is simply another matter for the trier of fact to weigh. It in no way
justifies usurping the factfinder’s role in reversing the conviction.
Moreover, any evidentiary deficiency on this front makes no difference: “[I]f the
evidence supports different, reasonable interpretations, the [trier of fact] decides which
interpretation to believe.” United States v. Murphy, 35 F.3d 143, 148 (4th Cir. 1994); see
also Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 317 n.8 (1979). At the end of the day, the majority
“overturn[s] [the] substantially supported verdict merely because it finds the verdict
unpalatable.” Burgos, 94 F.3d at 862. That is the very thing it cannot do. Id. at 862–63.
Even if Loney and Bell had spent their midday hours coordinating the care of A.J.
and J.R. as the majority suggests, all that would mean is that IFS falsely billed a third unit
of service to Medicaid for every other child they counseled that day. According to the
majority’s reasoning, however, Davis could not be convicted of those crimes either. For
any given child, he could simply claim that Loney and Bell spent their midday period
coordinating that child’s care. We are left with a situation in which Davis was clearly
overbilling Medicaid, but no rational trier of fact could find him guilty of fraud because
the government cannot prove to the majority’s satisfaction which children in particular he
was submitting false claims for. That is just wrong. The infirmities to which the majority
points are nothing more than issues of evidentiary weight for the factfinder to consider.
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The exactitude that the majority requires is going to scuttle the ability of factfinders to draw
particular inferences even from a pervasive general practice.
Billing an additional unit of service to Medicaid without regard to the services
rendered is garden-variety health care fraud. IFS employees might on some days have spent
five hours providing services to one or two children, but they could not have spent five
hours providing services to every child they counseled, every day. Yet Davis directed his
employees to log those hours anyway. The intended consequence of this practice was to
systematically overbill Medicaid for services. A rational trier of fact could have found
Davis guilty on that basis. He is not entitled to acquittal simply because the design of his
fraudulent scheme makes it difficult to identify which particular children IFS was falsely
billing for. See United States v. Johnson, 319 U.S. 503, 517–18 (1943) (“To require more
or more meticulous proof than this record discloses that there were unreported profits from
an elaborately concealed illegal business, would be tantamount to holding that skilful
concealment is an invincible barrier to proof.”).
IV.
Congress enacted the Medicaid program for good, humane, and sufficient reasons.
It did not enact it to be bled by the persistent fraudulent activities evidenced in this case.
Yet as a result of the majority’s decision, Davis will now be able to retain the $200,000 in
ill-gotten gains he had been ordered to return to Medicaid. Even more troubling is how the
majority’s decision will hamper Medicaid’s recovery efforts in the future. This is no small
matter. Medicaid recovers roughly one billion dollars a year from prosecuting fraud. See
18
USCA4 Appeal: 25-4093 Doc: 66 Filed: 04/24/2026 Pg: 19 of 19
Dep’t of Health & Hum. Servs., Medicaid Fraud Control Units Annual Report: Fiscal Year
2025, at 2 (2026).
While the potential loss of these much-needed funds does not diminish Davis’s right
to be found guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, neither is it any reason to overlook “the
deference owed to the trier of fact and, correspondingly, the sharply limited nature of”
sufficiency-of-the-evidence review. Wright v. West, 505 U.S. 277, 296 (1992) (plurality
opinion). Accordingly, I would affirm the district court’s well-reasoned judgment.
19
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