Texarkana Gazette

Government opposes defense motions in Lansdell clinics

- By Lynn LaRowe

TEXARKANA, Ark. — The government opposes defense motions to sever allegation­s of opioid distributi­on from ones involving healthcare fraud in a federal criminal case involving Lansdell Family Clinics.

A one-count indictment unsealed in March accused five nurse practition­ers and three pharmacist­s of conspiracy to distribute controlled substances, particular­ly opioids, without a legitimate prescripti­on. A supersedin­g indictment filed in April adds five defendants and allegation­s of health care fraud and wire fraud related to federal pandemic relief funds.

Count 1 of the supersedin­g indictment includes allegation­s identical to those in the original indictment and names as defendants nurse practition­ers Tawnya Lee Lansdell, Claire Terece Russell, Wendy Wynette Gammon, Shelly Rae Eastridge and Bonita Lois Martin and pharmacist­s Candace Michelle Whitley, Gina M. Richardson and Stephen Haden Sullivan.

The only defendant named in the supersedin­g indictment in Count 1 — which alleges conspiracy to distribute opioids — who is also accused of fraud is the lead defendant and owner of Lansdell Family Clinics, Tawnya Lee Lansdell. Defendants added in Counts 2-5, which allege fraud, include Tawnya Lansdell’s husband, Michael Lansdell; her brother, Rusty Lynn Griffin; and her nephew, Michael “Mick” Wallace Martin.

Lansdell Family Clinic PLLC and Lansdell Farms LLC are also charged in the supersedin­g indictment in counts alleging fraud in the form of overbillin­g for services provided, billing for services not provided and misconduct involving pandemic relief funds.

Little Rock lawyer John Wesley Hall filed a motion to sever on behalf of Richardson and Little Rock lawyer Michael O’Quinn filed a motion to sever on behalf of Gammon. The motions argue that with the exception of Tawnya

Lansdell, the nurses and pharmacist­s accused in Count 1 will be prejudiced if they are tried with the defendants accused of fraud.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Anne Gardner filed a response to the motions opposing separating the cases.

According to the government’s response, the nurse practition­er defendants worked at clinics in Texarkana, De Queen, Dierks and Lockesburg, Arkansas, and the pharmacist defendants worked at Pruitt’s pharmacy, which was adjoined to Lansdell Family Clinic in De Queen.

The reponse describes the “overall scheme common to the defendants” as profiting from operating Lansdell Family Clinic and alleges “the evidence required to prove each count is overlappin­g.”

“For example, to prove count one, the United States must offer evidence of the organizati­on of the Lansdell Family Clinic under the direction of Tawnya Lansdell and Michael Lansdell. The United States must offer evidence of each of the practition­ers working at the clinic and the scheme to overprescr­ibe controlled substances. Within that evidence is evidence of overbillin­g for

medical services provided to the same patients, resulting in healthcare fraud,” the response states.

The response continues by stating that the “transactio­ns are inseparabl­y intertwine­d, and the evidence concerning overprescr­ibing opioids, overbillin­g of services, and the operation of the clinic comprising the PPP (Paycheck Protection

Program) loan documentat­ion are overlappin­g,” the response states.

The defense motions argue that the allegation­s in Count 1 of the supersedin­g indictment constitute a “drug case,” while those in the newer counts constitute a separate “fraud case.”

“The health care fraud and PPP fraud counts have nothing at all to do with the other

seven defendants charged with a drug offense and is an entirely unrelated offense,” according to the motion filed by Hall on Richardson’s behalf. “The only link is the lead defendant.”

U.S. District Judge Susan Hickey has not ruled on the motions. The case is pending in the Texarkana Division of the Western District of Arkansas.

 ?? Staff file photo by Lori Dunn ?? ■ Jared Harper, center left, with the Little Rock Office of the DEA, and Connie Overton, right, with the New Orleans DEA division office, speak to media March 7 at the Sevier County Sheriff’s Office in De Queen, Arkansas. Eight federal indictment­s have been issued in an investigat­ion into opioid abuse at Lansdell Clinic and pharmacy locations in Southwest Arkansas.
Staff file photo by Lori Dunn ■ Jared Harper, center left, with the Little Rock Office of the DEA, and Connie Overton, right, with the New Orleans DEA division office, speak to media March 7 at the Sevier County Sheriff’s Office in De Queen, Arkansas. Eight federal indictment­s have been issued in an investigat­ion into opioid abuse at Lansdell Clinic and pharmacy locations in Southwest Arkansas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States