Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Justices side with doctors convicted in opioid schemes

- Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court on Monday ruled for doctors who face criminal charges for overprescr­ibing powerful pain medication in a case arising from the opioid addiction crisis.

Justice Stephen Breyer wrote for the court that prosecutor­s must prove that doctors knew they were illegally prescribin­g powerful pain drugs in violation of the federal Controlled Substances Act.

The ruling came as the U.S. has been seeing record numbers of drug overdose deaths, many from the highly lethal opioid fentanyl.

Evaluating the conviction­s of two doctors who are each facing more than two decades in prison, the justices ruled on a subject on which advocates for patients and doctors had urged the court to distinguis­h between criminal behavior and medical errors made in good faith.

It did so in the ruling. Prosecutor­s, Breyer wrote, “must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant knowingly or intentiona­lly acted in an unauthoriz­ed manner.” The justices ruled unanimousl­y for the doctors, though only six endorsed Breyer’s standard for conviction.

Fear of aggressive prosecutio­n already has led doctors to avoid prescribin­g opioids “against their best medical judgment,” the National Pain Advocacy Center told the court in a written filing.

But the justices did not throw out the conviction­s of two doctors whose appeal was heard in February. Instead, it ordered federal appeals courts to take a new look at their cases.

The court ruled on appeals from Xiulu Ruan of Mobile, Alabama, and Shakeel Kahn, who practiced medicine in Ft. Mohave, Arizona, and Casper, Wyoming.

Ruan is serving a 21-year federal prison term. Kahn is in prison for up to 25 years. They will get another chance to argue that their conviction­s should be overturned.

Ruan and a partner, James Couch, were convicted of overprescr­ibing medication­s at their Physicians Pain Specialist­s of Alabama clinic and a pharmacy.

The two doctors “enriched themselves through a long-running scheme of unlawfully issuing prescripti­ons for addictive and potent controlled substances, in response to their own financial incentives rather than the legitimate medical needs of their patients,” Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar, the Biden administra­tion’s top Supreme Court lawyer, told the court in a written filing.

They grossed $20 million between 2012 and a raid in 2015, prosecutor­s said. In 2014, they wrote 66,892 prescripti­ons, prosecutor­s said.

Kahn was convicted of conspiracy to unlawfully distribute and dispense controlled substances resulting in death, including oxycodone, an opioid, and fentanyl, a synthetic opioid.

Kahn “routinely performed only a perfunctor­y examinatio­n – or no examinatio­n at all – before prescribin­g controlled substances for a patient,” the Justice Department said in a Supreme Court brief.

Jessica Burch, of Lake Havasu City, Arizona, was a patient of Kahn’s who died from an overdose in 2015.

Kahn wrote nearly 15,000 prescripti­ons for controlled substances over six years, totaling nearly 2.2 million pills, prosecutor­s said. Nearly half were oxycodone, they said.

 ?? MARIAM ZUHAIB/AP ?? The Supreme Court on Monday ruled for doctors who face criminal charges for overprescr­ibing powerful pain medication.
MARIAM ZUHAIB/AP The Supreme Court on Monday ruled for doctors who face criminal charges for overprescr­ibing powerful pain medication.

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