Banerjee v. Super. Ct. ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 10/5/21
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    SANJOY BANERJEE,
    Petitioner,                               E076291
    v.                                                 (Super.Ct.No. RIF1802535)
    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF                              OPINION
    RIVERSIDE COUNTY,
    Respondent;
    THE PEOPLE,
    Real Party in Interest.
    ORIGINAL PROCEEDINGS; petition for writ of prohibition. David A. Gunn,
    Judge. Petition granted in part; denied in part.
    Law Offices of Greenberg & Greenberg, Daniel L. Greenberg, Philip C.
    Greenberg and Charles E. Kenyon for Petitioner.
    No appearance by Respondent.
    Michael A. Hestrin, District Attorney, and Emily R. Hanks, Deputy District
    Attorney, for Real Party in Interest.
    1
    I. INTRODUCTION
    Following a preliminary hearing, petitioner Sanjoy Banerjee, a physician, was
    charged in an information with two counts of presenting a false or fraudulent health care
    claim to an insurer, a form of insurance fraud (Pen. Code § 550, subd. (a)(6), counts 1-2),
    and three counts of perjury (Pen. Code, § 118, counts 3-5). The superior court denied
    Banerjee’s motion to dismiss the information as unsupported by reasonable or probable
    cause. (Pen. Code, § 995, subd. (a)(2)(B).)
    Banerjee petitions for a writ of prohibition, directing the superior court to vacate
    its order denying his Penal Code section 995 motion and to issue an order setting aside
    the information. (Pen. Code, § 999a.) We issued an order to show cause and an order
    staying further proceedings on the information, pending our resolution of the merits of
    Banerjee’s petition. The People have filed a return, and Banerjee has filed a traverse.
    The People claim the evidence supports a strong suspicion that Banerjee
    committed two counts of insurance fraud and three counts of perjury, based on his
    violations of Labor Code section 139.3, subdivision (a) (§ 139.3(a)),1 between 2014 and
    2016. Section 139.3(a) prohibits a physician from referring patients to other persons or
    entities for specified services, to the extent the services are to be paid pursuant to the
    workers’ compensation system (§ 3200 et seq.), if the physician or his or her immediate
    family has a “financial interest” with the person or in the entity receiving the referral.
    1  Unspecified statutory references are to the Labor Code. References to
    subdivisions of sections 139.3 and 139.31 are denoted without the word “subdivision” or
    its abbreviated form. For example, we refer to subdivision (a) of section 139.3 as
    “section 139.3(a),” rather than as “section 139.3, subdivision (a),” or “§ 139.3, subd. (a).”
    2
    Between 2014 and 2016, Banerjee billed a workers’ compensation insurer for
    services he rendered to patients through his professional corporation and through two
    other legal entities he owned and controlled. The insurance fraud charges are based on
    Banerjee’s 2014-2016 billings to the insurer through the two other entities. The perjury
    charges are based on three instances in which Banerjee signed doctor’s reports, certifying
    under penalty of perjury that he had not violated “section 139.3.”
    Banerjee claims the information must be set aside for three reasons. First, he
    claims the evidence shows he did not violate the referral prohibition of section 139.3(a)
    because he complied with the written patient disclosure requirement of section 139.3(e).
    Section 139.3(e) requires a physician who refers a patient to, or who seeks a consultation
    from, an organization in which the physician has a financial interest to disclose the
    financial interest to the patient in writing at the time of the referral. Banerjee claims that
    a physician’s compliance with section 139.3(e) excuses the physician’s noncompliance
    with the referral prohibition of section 139.3(a). That is, he claims a physician may refer
    patients for services specified in section 139.3(a) to a person with whom, or an entity in
    which, the physician has a financial interest (§ 139.3(a)), as long as the physician
    discloses the financial interest to the patient in writing at the time of the referral
    (§ 139.3(e)).
    Second, he claims that, even if he did not comply with section 139.3(e), the
    “physician’s office” exception to the referral prohibition of section 139.3(a)—set forth in
    section 139.31(e)—applies to all of his referrals to his two other legal entities. He
    observes that he treated all of his patients for all of the services he provided to them at the
    3
    same office location, and that the physician’s office exception of section 139.31(e) does
    not prohibit a physician from rendering services through separate legal entities. Third, he
    claims the patient disclosure requirement of section 139.3(e), the referral prohibition of
    section 139.3(a), and the physician’s office exception to the referral prohibition
    (§ 139.31(e)), are unconstitutionally vague. Thus, he argues, he cannot be criminally
    prosecuted based on an alleged violation of section 139.3(a).
    To date, no published court decision has interpreted sections 139.3 or 139.31. We
    conclude that a physician’s compliance with the disclosure requirement of
    section 139.3(e) does not excuse the physician’s noncompliance with the referral
    prohibition of section 139.3(a), and that section 139.3(a) and 139.3(e) are neither in
    conflict nor unconstitutionally vague. To save the physician’s office exception
    (§ 139.31(e)) from an unconstitutionally vague interpretation, we construe the statute as
    allowing a physician to render services to patients through separate legal entities,
    including entities in which the physician has a financial interest, provided that the
    services are rendered within the same “physician’s office” or the office of a group
    practice. (§§ 139.3(b)(5), 139.31(e).)
    Our interpretation of section 139.31(e) means that the physician’s office exception
    applies to Banerjee’s financially interested “self-referrals” to his two other legal entities.
    Thus, Banerjee did not violate section 139.3(a) by referring his patients to his two other
    legal entities. Because Banerjee’s alleged violations of section 139.3(a) was the only
    basis to support the perjury charges, the perjury charges must be dismissed.
    4
    Even though the evidence does not show that Banerjee violated section 139.3(a),
    the evidence supports a strong suspicion that Banerjee specifically intended to present
    false and fraudulent claims for health care benefits, in violation of Penal Code
    section 550, subdivision (a)(6), by billing the workers’ compensation insurer substantially
    higher amounts through his two other legal entities, between 2014 and 2016, than he
    previously and customarily billed the insurer for the same services he formerly rendered
    through his professional corporation and his former group practice. Thus, we grant the
    writ as to the perjury charges but deny it as to the insurance fraud charges.
    II. BACKGROUND
    A. The Charges Against Banerjee
    1. Insurance Fraud (Counts 1 & 2)
    Banerjee is charged in counts 1 and 2 of the information with violating Penal Code
    section 550, subdivision (a)(6), a form of insurance fraud. (See CALCRIM No. 2000.)
    The statute makes it a crime to “[k]nowingly make or cause to be made any false or
    fraudulent claim for payment of a health care benefit.” (Pen. Code, § 550, subd. (a)(6).)
    The elements of the crime are (1) the knowing presentation of a false claim for payment
    of a health care benefit, (2) with the intent to defraud the recipient. (See People ex. rel.
    Government Employees Ins. Co. v. Cruz (2016) 
    244 Cal.App.4th 1184
    , 1193.) Insurance
    fraud is a specific intent crime; the defendant must specifically intend to defraud a person
    with a false or fraudulent claim. (People v. Scofield (1971) 
    17 Cal.App.3d 1018
    , 1025-
    1026.) The crime is complete upon the presentation of the claim, regardless of whether
    anyone is defrauded by or anything of value is taken or received in consideration for the
    5
    claim. (People ex. rel. Government Employees Ins. Co. v. Cruz, supra, 244 Cal.App.4th
    at pp. 1193-1194.)
    2. Perjury (Counts 3, 4, and 5)
    Banerjee is charged in counts 3, 4, and 5 with perjury in violation of Penal Code
    section 118. (See CALCRIM No. 2640.) “In order to lawfully hold a person to answer
    on the charge of perjury under [Penal Code] section 118, evidence must exist of a ‘willful
    statement, under oath, of any material matter which the witness knows to be false.’ ”
    (Cabe v. Superior Court (1998) 
    63 Cal.App.4th 732
    , 735.) Perjury is also a specific
    intent crime. To commit perjury, the defendant must (1) knowingly make a false
    statement, and (2) specifically intend that the false statement be made under oath or
    penalty of perjury. (People v. Viniegra (1982) 
    130 Cal.App.3d 577
    , 584-586.)
    B. Sections 139.3 and 139.31, Overview
    The insurance fraud and perjury charges are based on Banerjee’s alleged
    violations of section 139.3(a) between 2014 and 2016. To date, no published court
    decision has interpreted sections 139.3 or 139.31. The statutes were enacted in 1993
    (Stats. 1993, ch. 121, §§ 20, 21, eff. July 16, 1993) as part of Assembly Bill No. 110
    (1993-1994 Reg. Sess.) (Assembly Bill 110), itself part of a comprehensive package of
    legislation that reformed our state’s workers’ compensation laws. (Historical and
    Statutory Notes, 42A West’s Ann. Ins. Code (2013 ed.) foll. Ins. Code § 675, pp. 234-
    235.)2 Assembly Bill 110 was intended to reduce costs and strengthen conflict of interest
    2  Assembly Bill 110 repealed former section 139.3 and reenacted section 139.3 in
    its current form. (Stats. 1993, ch. 121, §§ 19-20.)
    6
    rules in the workers’ compensation system. (See Historical and Statutory Notes,
    42A West’s Ann. Ins. Code, supra, foll. Ins. Code § 675 at p. 235.)3
    Section 139.3(a) makes it unlawful for a physician[4] to refer a person for specified
    services, to the extent the services are paid pursuant to our state’s workers’ compensation
    system (see § 139.3(a) [referencing § 3200 et seq.]), “if the physician or his or her
    immediate family[5] has a financial interest[6] with the person or in the entity that receives
    the referral.” (§ 139.3(a).) The statute lists the services that are covered by its
    prohibition on financially interested physician referrals: “clinical laboratory, diagnostic
    3  Sections 139.3 and 139.31 were most recently amended in 2011. (Stats. 2011,
    ch. 545, §§ 2, 3, eff. Jan. 1, 2012.)
    4  Section 139.3(b) defines several terms for purposes of sections 139.3 and
    139.31. “ ‘Physician’ means a physician defined in Section 3209.3.” (§ 139.3(b)(3).)
    Section 3209.3 defines “physician” as including “physicians and surgeons holding an
    M.D. or D.O. degree, psychologists, acupuncturists, optometrists, dentists, podiatrists,
    and chiropractic practitioners licensed by California state law and within the scope of
    their practice as defined by California State law.”
    5 “ ‘Immediate family’ includes the spouses and children of the physician, the
    parents of the physician, and the spouses of the children of the physician.”
    (§ 139.3 (b)(2).)
    6  Section 139.3(b)(4) defines “a financial interest” as including but not limited to,
    “any type of ownership , interest, debt. Loan lease compensation, remuneration,
    discount, rebate, refund, dividend, distribution, subsidy, or other form of direct or indirect
    payment, whether in money or otherwise, between a licensee and a person or entity to
    whom the physician refers a person for a good or service specified in subdivision (a). A
    financial interest also exists if there is an indirect relationship between a physician and
    the referral recipient, including, but not limited to, an arrangement whereby a physician
    has an ownership interest in any entity that leases property to the referral recipient. Any
    financial interest transferred by a physician to, or otherwise established in, any person or
    entity for the purpose of avoiding the prohibition of this section shall be deemed a
    financial interest of the physician.”
    7
    nuclear medicine, radiation oncology, physical therapy, physical rehabilitation,
    psychometric testing, home infusion therapy, outpatient surgery[7], diagnostic imaging
    goods or services[8], or pharmacy goods, whether for treatment or medical-legal
    purposes.” (§ 139(a).)
    A violation of section 139.3(a) is a misdemeanor. (§ 139.3(g).) Physicians
    convicted of violating section 139.3(a) are also subject to disciplinary action by the
    appropriate licensing board if the licensee physician has committed unprofessional
    conduct, along with civil penalties of up to $5,000 for each violation. (Ibid.)
    Subdivisions (c), (d), (e), and (f) of section 139.3 impose further prohibitions or
    affirmative obligations on licensees, physicians, insurers, and others, regarding section
    7 “Outpatient surgery includes both of the following: [¶] (A) Any procedure
    performed on an outpatient basis in the operating rooms, ambulatory surgery rooms,
    endoscopy unites, cardiac catherization laboratories, or other sections of a freestanding
    ambulatory surgery clinic, whether or not licensed under paragraph (1) of subdivision (b)
    of Section 1204 of the Health and Safety Code. [¶] (B) The ambulatory surgery itself.”
    (§ 139.4, subd. (b)(7).)
    8“ ‘Diagnostic imaging’ includes, but is not limited to, all X-ray, computed axial
    tomography magnetic resonance imaging, nuclear medicine, positron emission
    tomography, mammography, and ultrasound good and services.” (§ 139.3(b)(1).)
    8
    139.3(a)’s prohibition on financially interested physician referrals.9 Violations of
    section 139.3(c), 139.3(d), 139.3(e), and 139.3(f) are public offenses, punishable by a
    fine of up to $15,000 and “appropriate disciplinary action.” (§ 139.3(g).)
    The parties dispute whether the written patient disclosure requirement of
    section 139.3(e) is an exception to or excuses a physician’s noncompliance with the
    prohibition on financially interested physician referrals under section 139.3(a) and, if so,
    whether Banerjee complied with section 139.3(e). Section 139.3(e) provides: “A
    physician who refers to or seeks consultation from an organization in which the physician
    has a financial interest shall disclose this interest to the patient or if the patient is a minor,
    to the patient’s parents or legal guardian in writing at the time of the referral.”
    Section 139.31 expressly addresses situations in which “section 139.3” does not
    apply. Section 139.31(e) provides: “The prohibition of section 139.3 shall not apply to
    any service for a specific patient that is performed within, or goods that are that are
    supplied by, a physician’s office, or the office of a group practice. . . .”
    9  Section 139.3(c)(1) prohibits a “licensee” from entering “into an arrangement or
    scheme, such as a cross-referral arrangement, that the licensee knows, or should know,
    has a principle purpose of ensuring referrals by the licensee to a particular entity that, if
    the licensee directory made referrals to that entity, would be in violation of this section.”
    Section 139.3(c)(2) makes it “unlawful for a physician to offer, deliver, receive, or
    accept any rebate, refund, commission, preference, patronage dividend, discount, or other
    consideration, whether in the form of money or otherwise, as compensation or
    inducement for a referred evaluation or consultation.”
    Section 139.3(d) prohibits an “entity” from presenting a claim for payment for a
    referral prohibited under section 139.3, and section 139.3(f) prohibits “any insurer, self-
    insurer, or other payor” from paying “a charge or lien for any goods or services resulting
    from a referral in violation” of section 139.3.
    9
    Section 139.3(b)(5) defines “physician’s office” for purposes of sections 139.3 and
    139.31. “Physician’s office” means either “[a]n office of a physician in solo practice”
    (§ 139.3(b)(5)(A)), or “[a]n office in which the services or goods are personally provided
    by the physician or by employees in that office, or personally by independent contractors
    in that office, in accordance with other provisions of law. . . .” (§ 139.3 (b)(5)(B)). All
    such employees or independent contractors are required to be licensed. (Ibid.)
    The parties also dispute whether the physician’s office exception (§ 139.31(e)) to
    the prohibition on financially interested physician referrals (§ 139.3(a)) applies to
    Banerjee’s patient referrals. Banerjee claims the physician’s office exception applies;
    thus, he did not violate section 139.3(a) because he only referred his patients for services
    that he personally performed within his “physician’s office” (§139.3(b)(5)), at the same
    physical location, even though he performed the services through three separate legal
    entities that he owned and operated from that location. The People maintain that the
    physician’s office exception does not apply to services rendered by a single physician
    through separate legal entities, even if the services are rendered at the same location.
    C. Preliminary Hearing Evidence
    1. The Operative Complaint
    In July 2019, the People filed an amended complaint charging Banerjee with two
    counts of insurance fraud (Pen. Code, § 550, subd. (a)(6)), and three counts of perjury
    (Pen. Code, § 118). At the preliminary hearing, the People presented evidence that the
    insurance fraud and perjury charges were based on Banerjee’s presentation of invoices or
    10
    billings, along with doctor’s reports, to a workers’ compensation insurer, Berkshire
    Hathaway Homestate Companies (BHHC), between 2014 and 2016.
    The billings and doctor’s reports concerned medical services that Banerjee
    provided to patients, between 2014 and 2016, through three entities that Banerjee owned
    and operated from a single location in Wildomar: (1) Sanjoy Banerjee, M.D., Inc., doing
    business as Pacific Pain Care Consultants (PPCC); (2) Kensington Diagnostics, LLC
    (Kensington); and (3) Rochester Imperial Surgical Center, LLC (Rochester). All of the
    services for which Banerjee billed BHHC, through these entities, were payable pursuant
    to the state’s workers’ compensation system. (§ 3200 et. seq.)
    2. Banerjee’s Formation of Three Service Provider Entities
    Banerjee is a licensed physician, specializing in pain management.10 He formed
    his professional corporation, Sanjoy Banerjee, M.D., Inc., in 2005, and in 2010, he began
    operating the corporation under the fictitious name, PPCC. Kensington and Rochester
    were formed in 2014. The articles of organization for Kensington and Rochester state
    that they were to be managed by their members and identify Banerjee as their sole
    member. Statements of information for Kensington and Rochester, filed in 2014, identify
    Kensington’s type of business as a “clinical diagnostic and reference laboratory” and
    Rochester’s as an “ambulatory surgical center.”
    10   The record indicates that Banerjee was also a qualified medical evaluator under
    the state’s workers’ compensation system. (§ 139.2, subd. (b).)
    11
    As indicated, Banerjee operated PPCC, Kensington, and Rochester from a single
    medical office in Wildomar (the Wildomar location).11 Through PPCC, Banerjee billed
    BHHC for “physician-related services.” Banerjee billed BHHC for diagnostic-related
    services through Kensington, and for surgical services (epidurals) through Rochester.
    3. BHHC’s Investigation of Banerjee
    Gordon Oard, an investigator for BHHC, was the only witness who testified at the
    preliminary hearing. Oard was tasked with investigating “suspicious” claims and service
    providers for BHHC, and he began investigating Banerjee in 2017.12 Oard discovered
    that Banerjee had been billing BHHC through three legal entities, namely, PPCC,
    Kensington, and Rochester, which Banerjee owned and operated from the Wildomar
    location.
    Oard visited the Wildomar location, met with Banerjee there, and took pictures “of
    the interior of the clinic.” The Wildomar location had a lobby and front desk area, “a
    small closet-type room” in which toxicology tests were performed, and a “converted
    treatment room . . . [for] the surgery center.” In addition to Banerjee, several staff
    members were working at the Wildomar location. Three plaques, one denoting Sanjoy
    11  PPCC also had an office in Corona. The articles of organization for
    Kensington and Rochester, filed in February and March 2014, respectively, list their
    street addresses as PPCC’s Corona office. But statements of information for both
    Kensington and Rochester, filed in April 2014, show that Kensington and Rochester were
    at that time located at PPCC’s Wildomar location.
    12  Oard testified that Banerjee was linked to a pharmaceutical provider who was
    suspected of offering financial incentives in exchange for its services. Oard’s
    investigation of Banerjee “spun off of that” investigation.
    12
    Banerjee, M.D., as “Pacific Pain,” and two others separately denoting Kensington and
    Rochester, were on display in the lobby of the Wildomar location.
    4. Banerjee’s Billings to BHHC
    Between 2015 and 2016, Banerjee presented billings totaling $157,797.01 to
    BHHC, through Kensington and Rochester, for services that Banerjee provided to
    patients between 2014 and 2016. BHHC paid less than 10 percent of the $157,797.01
    amount billed. According to Oard, Banerjee was obligated to disclose his financial
    interests in Kensington and Rochester to BHHC, and BHHC had no business records
    indicating that Banerjee had made this disclosure.
    The People presented additional evidence that in one instance, Banerjee twice
    billed BHHC, through both PPCC and Rochester, for two epidural injections (outpatient
    surgeries) provided to the same patient on the same day. Through PPCC, Banerjee billed
    BHHC $2,650,13 on form 1500,14 for several services he provided to his patient, C.M., on
    March 9, 2016, including an office examination, a urine toxicology test, and two epidural
    injections. It is unclear from the record how much of the $2,650 amount billed was
    attributable to the epidural injections, as opposed to other services provided through
    PPCC. But, through Rochester, Banerjee billed BHHC $12,395, on form UB 92, for the
    13  Oard mentioned that the amount billed was both $2,615 and $2,650, but one of
    these amounts appears to be a typo, and this particular PPCC billing is not part of the
    record in this writ proceeding.
    14Banerjee’s billings to BHHC were submitted on state-approved forms “1500”
    and “UB 92.” Form 1500 is used for medical office visits, while form UB 92 is used for
    medical procedures.
    13
    same two epidural injections he provided to C.M. on March 9, 2016, through PPCC. The
    two billings for the two epidural injections, through PPCC and Rochester, used the same
    “CPT” (current procedural terminology) code numbers: 66483 and 66484.15
    Oard testified that, before Banerjee began practicing “on his own,” he practiced
    with a medical group in Corona that billed BHHC “for similar services at substantially
    less[er] amounts” than the $12,395 that he charged for the two epidurals through
    Rochester. A spreadsheet (People’s exhibit 10) showed that Banerjee customarily billed
    BHHC $12,395 for epidural injections he provided to patients through Rochester. These
    Rochester billings were part of the $157,790.01 total amount that Banerjee billed BHHC,
    through both Kensington and Rochester, between 2015 and 2016. With each $12,395
    billing, Banerjee submitted a document showing how the $12,395 sum was divided
    between various services, including an “operating room charge,” “room nurse,”
    “circulating scrub tech,” and other items related to the process of administering an
    epidural injection.
    15  The parties stipulated to the authenticity and admissibility of numerous
    prosecution exhibits, including billing statements, doctor’s reports, and other documents
    that Banerjee submitted to BHHC with his billings through PPCC, Kensington, and
    Rochester. All of these exhibits were admitted into evidence, but the record does not
    include many of them, including any of Banerjee’s billings to BHHC through
    Kensington. The record indicates that, in each of his billings to BHHC through
    Rochester, Banerjee identified himself as the provider of the services rendered.
    Documents related to Banerjee’s billings to BHHC through Rochester, including requests
    for authorization for the services, patient progress reports, and patient charts, also
    identified Banerjee as the provider of the services rendered through Rochester.
    14
    5. The Defense’s Case
    The defense submitted a single exhibit (defense exhibit A), which was admitted
    into evidence. This exhibit is not part of the record, but the record indicates that the
    exhibit is a form, titled, “Patient Consent to Procedure” (the patient consent form), which
    states: “Your treating physician may have an ownership interest in the center and may
    gain financially by performing a procedure at the center. You, the patient, have the right
    to choose where your procedure is performed. By signing this, you consent you’re
    agreeing to have the procedure performed at Rochester Imperial Surgical Center.”
    Defense counsel adduced the patient consent form while cross-examining Oard, in
    an attempt to show that Banerjee complied, or at least intended to comply, with the
    written patient disclosure requirement of section 139.3(e) before he referred patients to
    Rochester and Kensington. When shown the form, Oard said he had never seen it before,
    and it had never been provided to BHHC. No witness testified that Banerjee had ever
    used the form, and no copies of the form, signed by any patients, were offered into
    evidence.
    6. The Parties’ Arguments
    The insurance fraud charges in counts 1 and 2 are based on Banerjee’s aggregate
    billings to BHHC, through Kensington and Rochester, between 2014 and 2016. The
    prosecutor argued that these billings were false and fraudulent (Pen. Code, § 550,
    subd. (a)(6)), because Banerjee violated section 139.3(a) by referring the patients to
    Kensington and to Rochester—entities in which he had a financial interest—without
    informing BHHC that he had a financial interest in Kensington and Rochester.
    15
    Count 1, a felony charge, is based on the aggregate amount that Banerjee billed
    BHHC, through Kensington, between October 2, 2014, and November 24, 2015. The
    count was chargeable as a felony because this aggregate amount exceeded $950. (See
    Pen. Code, § 550, subd. (c)(2)(A) [Pen. Code, § 550(a)(6) violation chargeable as felony
    if total amount of claims presented during a 12-month period exceeds $950].) Count 2 is
    also a felony charge and is based on the aggregate amount that Banerjee billed BHHC,
    through Rochester, between February 6, 2015, and December 23, 2016, which also
    exceeded $950.
    The prosecution’s theory for the three perjury charges was that, between 2015 and
    2016, Banerjee signed three doctor’s reports for three patients, A.B., C.M., and B.B.,
    attesting under penalty of perjury that he had not violated “section 139.3,” when in fact
    he had violated section 139.3(a) by referring these patients to Kensington and Rochester,
    entities in which he had a financial interest. Each doctor’s report included the following
    attestation near the end of the report: “I have not violated Labor Code section 139.3, and
    the contents of this report and bill are . . . true and correct to the best of my knowledge.
    This statement is made under penalty of perjury.” The reports were submitted to BHHC
    along with Banerjee’s billings for the patients through Kensington and Rochester.
    The prosecutor argued that a physician’s compliance with the written patient
    disclosure requirement of section 139.3(e) is not an exception to, and does not excuse a
    physician’s noncompliance with, the referral prohibition of section 139.3(a), given that
    section 139.31, which expressly provides for exceptions to section 139.3 does not list a
    section 139.3(e) disclosure “as a permissible exception” to section 139.3(a). The
    16
    prosecutor argued, “Just because you tattle on yourself [through a §139.3(e) disclosure],
    doesn’t mean you’re now allowed to do it.” The prosecutor further argued there was no
    evidence that Banerjee had ever disclosed his financial interests in Kensington or
    Rochester to the patients whom he had referred to Kensington and Rochester.
    Regarding the physician’s office exception to section 139.3(a), set forth in
    section 139.31(e), the prosecutor argued that the services Banerjee provided through
    Kensington and Rochester were not provided in the same “physician’s office”—the
    Wildomar location—because Kensington and Rochester were “different and separate
    legal entit[ies]” from Banerjee’s professional corporation, PPCC. The prosecutor also
    noted that Banerjee began billing BHHC substantially higher amounts for the same
    services after he formed Kensington and Rochester.
    The defense argued that section 139.3(a)’s referral prohibition did not apply for
    three reasons. First, Banerjee complied with the written patient disclosure requirement of
    section 139.3(e) by having his patients sign his patient consent form. Second, Banerjee
    further complied with section 139.3(e) by placing three plaques in the lobby of the
    Wildomar location, identifying PPCC, Kensington, and Rochester, as separate entities.
    Third, the physician’s office exception (§ 139.31(e)) to section 139.3(a) applied because
    all of the services that Banerjee provided through Kensington and Rochester were
    performed within the same “physician’s office” and physician location, the Wildomar
    location. (§§ 139.31(e), 139.3(b)(5).)
    Regarding the physician’s office exception (§ 139.31(e)), the defense pointed out
    that section 139.31(e) did not prohibit services from being provided within the same
    17
    physician’s office, at the same physical location, through separate legal entities. Defense
    counsel noted that, according to the People’s argument, Banerjee would not have
    committed either insurance fraud or perjury, “if he had just not created these separate
    entities . . . .” In sum, defense counsel argued that Banerjee did not violate
    section 139.3(a) and was therefore not guilty of insurance fraud or perjury.
    7. The Court’s Rulings
    Banerjee was held to answer the insurance fraud and perjury charges. The
    operative second amended information was later filed, and the superior court denied
    Banerjee’s motion to set aside the information as unsupported by reasonable or probable
    cause. (Pen. Code, § 995, subd. (a)(2)(B).) Banerjee timely petitioned this court for a
    writ of prohibition, setting aside the information and the superior court’s commitment
    order denying his section 995 motion. (Pen. Code, § 999a.)
    III. DISCUSSION
    A. Standard of Review
    “On appeal following the denial of a [Penal Code] section 995 motion, we review
    the preliminary hearing magistrate’s determination directly and disregard the
    judge’s [Penal Code] section 995 ruling.” (People v. Ramirez (2016) 
    244 Cal.App.4th 800
    , 813.) “The function of the magistrate at a preliminary hearing is to determine
    whether there is ‘sufficient cause’ to believe defendant is guilty of the charged offense.
    ([Pen. Code,] §§ 871, 872, subd. (a).) ‘ “[S]ufficient cause” ’ equates to ‘ “reasonable
    and probable cause” ’ or ‘a state of facts as would lead a [person] of ordinary caution or
    18
    prudence to believe and conscientiously entertain a strong suspicion of the guilt of the
    accused.’ ” (People v. Ramirez, at p. 813.)
    “ ‘An information will not be set aside or a prosecution thereon prohibited if there
    is some rational ground for assuming the possibility that an offense has been committed
    and the accused is guilty of it. A reviewing court may not substitute its judgment as to
    the weight of the evidence for that of the magistrate, and every legitimate inference that
    may be drawn by the reviewing court from the evidence must be drawn in favor of the
    information.’ ” (People v. Williams (1988) 
    44 Cal.3d 883
    , 924-925.)
    B. A Physician’s Compliance with the Disclosure Requirement of Section 139.3(e) Does
    Not Excuse the Physician’s Noncompliance with the Referral Prohibition of
    Section 139.3(a)
    Banerjee first argues that the information must be set aside because the evidence
    shows he did not violate section 139(a), given that he complied with section 139.3(e). He
    claims that section 139.3(e) provides for an exception to the operation of
    section 139.3(a). That is, he claims that a physician’s compliance with the disclosure
    requirement of section 139.3(e) excuses the physician’s noncompliance with the referral
    prohibition of section 139.3(a), and he complied with section 139.3(e) by having his
    patients sign his patient consent form before he referred the patients to Kensington and
    19
    Rochester for diagnostic and outpatient surgery services described in section 139.3(a).16
    (a) No Evidence Shows Banerjee Complied with Section 139.3(e)
    We first observe none of the evidence shows that Banerjee complied with section
    139.3(e). Although the superior court admitted Banerjee’s unsigned patient consent form
    into evidence, no evidence shows that Banerjee required his Kensington or Rochester
    patients to sign the form before he referred the patients to these entities. Nor did any
    witness testify that it was Banerjee’s custom or practice to have his patients sign the
    form, and no signed patient consent forms, disclosing that Banerjee had a financial
    interest in either Kensington or Rochester, were admitted into evidence.
    Moreover, Banerjee’s patient consent form did not disclose that Banerjee had a
    financial interest in Kensington or Rochester. Section 139.3(e) requires a physician “who
    refers to or seeks consultation from an organization in which the physician has a financial
    interest” to “disclose this interest to the patient . . . in writing at the time of the referral.”
    (Italics added.) By stating that Banerjee “may have” an interest in Rochester (the center)
    or Kensington, and that Banerjee “may benefit financially” from the procedures
    16 Thus, Banerjee argues he did not commit insurance fraud because his billings
    to BHHC through Kensington and Rochester were not false or fraudulent (Pen. Code,
    § 550, subd. (a)(6)), given that he complied with Labor Code section 139.3(a); and he did
    not commit perjury (Pen. Code, § 118) in signing the doctor’s reports, certifying to
    BHHC under penalty of perjury that he complied with Labor Code “section 139.3,”
    because he had, in fact, complied with Labor Code section 139.3.
    20
    performed through these entities,17 the patient consent form did not disclose that
    Banerjee had a financial interest in these entities. (§ 139.3(e).)
    Thus, even if Banerjee had all of his Kensington and Rochester patients sign his
    patient consent form at the time he referred the patients to Kensington and Rochester, the
    form, and therefore Banerjee, did not comply with section 139.3(e).
    (b) Compliance with Section 139.3(e) Does Not Excuse Noncompliance
    with Section 139.3(a)
    As we next explain, a physician’s compliance with section 139.3(e) for a given
    patient referral does not excuse the physician’s noncompliance with section 139.3(a) for
    the referral, if section 139.3(a) applies to the referral. This is a question of statutory
    construction. “Our fundamental task in construing a statute ‘is to ascertain the
    Legislature’s intent [and] effectuate the law’s purpose. [Citation.] We begin our inquiry
    by examining the statute’s words, giving them a plain and commonsense meaning.
    [Citation.] In doing so, however, we do not consider the statutory language “in
    isolation.” [Citation.] Rather, we look to “the entire substance of the statute . . . in order
    to determine the scope and purpose of the provision . . . . [Citation.]” [Citation.] That is,
    we construe the words in question “ ‘in context, keeping in mind the nature and obvious
    purpose of the statute . . . .’ [Citation.]” We must harmonize “the various parts of a
    17  As noted, the patient consent form stated: “Your treating physician may have
    an ownership interest in the center and may gain financially by performing a procedure at
    the center. You, the patient, have the right to choose where your procedure is performed.
    By signing this, you consent you’re agreeing to have the procedure performed at
    Rochester Imperial Surgical Center.” (Italics added.)
    21
    statutory enactment . . . by considering the particular clause of section in the context of
    the statutory framework as a whole.” [Citations.] We must also avoid a construction that
    would produce absurd consequences, which we presume the Legislature did not intend.’ ”
    (In re Greg F. (2012) 
    55 Cal.4th 393
    , 406.) Every statute is to be read “ ‘with reference
    to the entire scheme of law of which it is part so that the whole may be harmonized and
    retain effectiveness.’ ” (People v. Pieters (1991) 
    52 Cal.3d 894
    , 899.)
    Banerjee argues that a physician’s compliance with section 139.3(e) for a given
    patient referral must be interpreted as an exception to, or as excusing the physician’s
    noncompliance with, section 139.3(a) for the same referral because the two statutes are
    “in complete conflict” and cannot otherwise be reconciled. The statutes are not in
    conflict. Section 139.3(a) prohibits a physician from making a financially interested
    referral of a patient for services specified in section 139.(a), if the services are to be paid
    pursuant to the worker’s compensation system (§ 3200 et. seq.)18 That is,
    section 139.3(a) prohibits a physician from making a financially interested patient
    referral, but only for the services specified in section 139.3(a). In contrast, the written
    patient disclosure requirement of section 139.3(e) applies to all financially interested
    patient referrals, regardless of whether the services for which the patient is referred are
    18  As indicated, the specified services are: “clinical laboratory, diagnostic nuclear
    medicine, radiation oncology, physical therapy, physical rehabilitation, psychometric
    testing, home infusion therapy, outpatient surgery, diagnostic imaging goods or services,
    or pharmacy goods, whether for treatment or medical-legal purposes.” (§ 139.3(a).)
    22
    specified in section 139.3(a). In addition, section 139.3(a) applies “notwithstanding any
    other law,” which includes section 139.3(e).19
    Our interpretation of section 139.3(a) and 139.3(e) is bolstered by the broader
    structure and scheme of sections 139.3 and 139.31. Subdivisions (a), (c), (d), (e), and (f)
    of section 139.3 impose separate and independent obligations on physicians, licensees,
    insurers, and others.[20] Each of these obligations can be performed independently of the
    others, regardless of whether the other obligations will be performed or have been
    performed. Violations of section 139.3(a), 139.3(c), 139.3(d), 139.3(e), and 139.3(f) are
    also separately and independently punishable under section 139.3(g). Nothing in section
    139.3 makes a person’s duty under one subdivision of the statute dependent upon or
    excused by the person’s performance of a duty under another subdivision.
    Additionally, unlike section 139.3, section 139.31 expressly provides for
    exceptions to “section 139.3.” Section 139.31 is titled, “Permissible Referrals,” and
    begins by stating: “The prohibition of Section 139.3 shall not apply to or restrict any of
    the following.” Section 139.31 proceeds to list several scenarios or conditions in which
    19  Section 139.3(a) provides: “Notwithstanding any other law, to the extent those
    services are paid pursuant to Division 4 (commencing with Section 3200), it is unlawful
    for a physician to refer a person for [specified services] . . . if the physician or his or her
    immediate family has a financial interest with the person or in the entity that receives the
    referral.” (Italics added.) In contrast, section 139.3(e) provides: “A physician who
    refers to or seeks consultation from an organization in which the physician has a financial
    interest shall disclose this interest to the patient . . . in writing at the time of the referral.”
    20   See fn. 9, ante.
    23
    section 139.3(a) does not apply. (§ 139.31(a)-(j).)21 Nothing in section 139.31 indicates
    that any of the subdivisions of section 139.3 are exceptions to its other subdivisions, or
    that compliance with one subdivision excuses noncompliance with another. The
    obligation imposed by section 139.3(e), that a physician disclose the physician’s financial
    interest in an organization to which the physician is referring the patient at the time of the
    referral, is not included in the list of exceptions to the prohibition of such referrals in
    section 139.31.
    It is a settled principle of statutory construction that, “where exceptions to a
    general rule are specified by statute, other exceptions are not to be implied or presumed.”
    (Wildlife Alive v. Chickering (1976) 
    18 Cal.3d 190
    , 195.) Construing section 139.3(e) as
    an exception to section 139.3(a) would violate this principle. It would also fail to
    harmonize sections 139.3 and 139.31 in a manner that gives effect to each of their
    provisions. (People v. Pieters, 
    supra, 52
     Cal.3d at p. 899.)
    Banerjee argues it is nonsensical to require a physician to disclose to a patient that
    the physician has a financial interest in a referred or consulted organization (§ 139.3(e)),
    if the physician is prohibited from referring the patient to the organization for services
    described in section 139.3(a). He further argues that, unless a physician’s compliance
    21  For example section 139.31(a) allows a physician to refer a patient for goods or
    services “otherwise prohibited by” section 139.3(a) “if the physician’s regular practice is
    where there is no alternative provider of the service within either 25 miles or 40 minutes
    traveling time, via the shortest route on a paved road.” (§ 139.31(a).) Section 139.31(a)
    reiterates section 139.3(e) by requiring “[a] physician who refers to, or seeks consultation
    from, an organization in which the physician has a financial interest under this
    subdivision to disclose this interest to the patient or the patient’s parents or legal guardian
    in writing at the time of referral.” (§ 139.31(a).)
    24
    with section 139.3(e) is construed as an exception to or as excusing the physician’s
    noncompliance with section 139.3(a), then section 139.3(e) would effectively require a
    physician to incriminate himself for violating section 139.3(a). We disagree.
    A physician’s disclosure to a patient that the physician has a financial interest in
    an organization to which the physician refers the patient or seeks a consultation
    (§ 139.3(e)) makes perfect sense as a means of informing the patient that the physician
    has a conflict of interest with the organization, regardless of whether the services for
    which the patient is referred make the referral unlawful under section 139.3(a). The
    section 139.3(e) disclosure informs the patient that the patient’s interests may best be
    served by seeking the services or the consultation from another organization, given that
    the referring physician’s financial interest, rather than the patient’s best interests, may be
    motivating the physician to make the referral or to seek the consultation.
    In addition, the Legislature could have reasonably determined that section 139.3’s
    purpose of reducing costs and strengthening conflict of interest rules in the workers’
    compensation system would best be served by making section 139.3(e) apply to all
    financially interested physician referrals, regardless of whether the referral is for services
    specified in section 139.3.(a). If referrals prohibited by section 139.3(a) were exempted
    from the disclosure requirement of section 139.3(e), then referrals prohibited by section
    139.3(a) might never come to light, and the cost-saving and conflict-of-interest-
    strengthening purposes of section 139.3 would be undermined.
    Lastly, given that section 139.31 provides for exceptions to section 139.3(a), a
    physician may disclose that the physician has a financial interest in an organization to a
    25
    patient, and refer the patient to that organization for services described in
    section 139.3(a), without violating section 139.3(a), if one or more of the exceptions
    listed in section 139.31 applies. For this reason, and because section 139.3(e) applies to
    all financially interested physician referrals, including referrals that are not prohibited by
    section 139.3(a), the physician does not necessarily incriminate himself for violating
    section 139.3(a) by complying with section 139.3(e).
    C. Sections 139.3(a), 139.3(e), and 139.31(e) Are Not Unconstitutionally Vague
    Banerjee claims that the interplay or combined operation of sections 139.3(a),
    139.3(e), and 139.31(e) are unconstitutionally vague; therefore, he cannot be criminally
    charged, as he is here, with any crime based on his alleged violation of section 139.3(a).
    We disagree that the statutes are unconstitutionally vague.
    1. Applicable Legal Principles
    The government violates a person’s Fifth Amendment right to due process of law
    “by taking away someone’s life, liberty, or property under a criminal law so vague that it
    fails to give ordinary people fair notice of the conduct it punishes, or so standardless that
    it invites arbitrary enforcement.” (Johnson v. U.S. (2015) 
    576 U.S. 591
    , 595.) Thus,
    “[t]o satisfy due process, ‘a penal statute [must] define the criminal offense [1] with
    sufficient definiteness that ordinary people can understand what conduct is prohibited and
    [2] in a manner that does not encourage arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.’ ”
    (Skilling v. U.S. (2010) 
    561 U.S. 358
    , 402-403.) A statute is void as unconstitutionally
    vague unless it satisfies both of these requirements. (Id. at p. 403.)
    26
    Courts are required to construe statutes in a limited way, in order to save the
    statutes from being unconstitutionally vague, if this is fairly possible. (Skilling v. U.S.,
    supra, 561 U.S. at p. 403.) As courts have long observed, “[t]he elementary rule is that
    every reasonable construction must be resorted to, in order to save a statute from
    unconstitutionality.” (Hooper v. Cal. (1895) 
    155 U.S. 648
    , 657.) That is, a statute will
    not be construed as void for vagueness “ ‘ “ ‘if any reasonable and practical construction
    can be given to its language’ ” ’ ” (In re Perdue (2013) 
    221 Cal.App.4th 1070
    , 1077), or
    “ ‘ “if its terms may be made reasonably certain . . . ” ’ ” (People v. Hall (2017) 
    2 Cal.5th 494
    , 500-501).
    2. Section 139.3(a) and 139.3(e)
    Banerjee first argues that sections 139.3(a) and 139.3(e) are “unconstitutionally
    conflicting” for the same reasons he claims that compliance with section 139.3(e) must be
    construed as an exception to or as excusing noncompliance with section 139.3(a). As we
    have explained, section 139.3(a) and 139.3(e) are not in conflict, and the language of
    each statute is sufficiently definite to apprise a person of ordinary intelligence of what it
    prohibits and requires. (Skilling v. U.S., supra, 561 U.S. at pp. 402-403.)
    Banerjee next argues that section 139.3(e), standing alone, is unconstitutionally
    vague because it does not “state with definiteness how specific a disclosure must be, or
    what specific language a physician must use in a disclosure.” The statute provides: “A
    physician who refers to or seeks consultation from an organization in which the physician
    has a financial interest shall disclose this interest to the patient or if the patient is a
    minor, to the patient’s parents or legal guardian in writing at the time of the referral.”
    27
    (§ 139.3(e), italics added.) Section 139.3(e) is not unconstitutionally vague simply
    because it does not require any particular language to be used in the disclosure, or
    precisely state how specific the disclosure must be. The terms of section 139.3(e) are
    reasonably certain. (Ivory Education Institute v. Department of Fish & Wildlife (2018)
    
    28 Cal.App.5th 975
    , 981 [Only a reasonable degree of certainty is required to save a
    statute from being void for vagueness.].)
    A physician may comply with section 139.3(e) by disclosing to the patient in
    writing at the time of the referral that the physician “has a financial interest” in the
    referred or consulted organization. (§ 139.3(e).)22 Nothing in section 139.3(e) requires
    the physician to disclose the precise nature or extent of the financial interest. In addition,
    the disclosure of details concerning the financial interest is unnecessary to inform the
    patient that the physician has a conflict of interest in the referral. If the physician’s
    financial interest disclosure form states that the physician has “a financial interest” in the
    organization referred or consulted, the physician will have complied with section
    139.3(e).)
    3. The “Physician’s Office” Exception (§ 139.31(e))
    Section 139.31(e) provides: “The prohibition of section 139.3 shall not apply to
    any services for a specific patient that is performed within, or goods that are supplied by,
    a physician’s office . . . .” Banerjee claims that section 139.31(e) is unconstitutionally
    22Section 139.3(b)(4) defines “financial interest” for purposes of sections 139.3
    and 139.31. See fn. 6, ante.
    28
    vague because it does not specify what “ ‘within . . . a physician’s office’ ” means, and
    because other parts of section 139.31 do not provide guidance.
    Section 139.3(b)(5) defines “physician’s office,” for purposes of sections 139.3
    and 139.31, as “either of the following: [¶] (A) An office of a physician in a solo
    practice,” or “(B) An office in which the services or goods are personally provided by
    the physician or by employees in that office, or personally by independent contractors in
    that office, in accordance with other provisions of law. . . .” Thus, neither the definition
    of “physician’s office” (§ 139.3(b)(5)) nor the language of section 139.31(e) specifies
    whether the physician’s office exception (§ 139.31(e)) to the referral prohibition of
    section 139.3(a) applies only if the services described in section 139.3(a) are provided at
    (1) the same physical office location, (2) are provided through a single legal entity, or
    (3) are provided both at the same physical office location and through a single legal
    entity.
    But section 139.31(e) can be fairly construed as applying to services and goods
    described in section 139.3(a), that are provided to a patient in more than one physical
    office location, through more than one legal entity, or both provided that the services are
    performed and the goods are provided either (1) by a single physician in a “solo practice”
    (§ 139.3(b)(5)(A)), or (2) by licensed employees or independent contractors working
    under the auspices of a single physician (§ 139.3(b)(5)(B)). Nothing in sections 139.3 or
    139.31 is inconsistent with this interpretation of section 139.31(e).
    This interpretation of section 139.31(e), together with the operation of section
    139.3(e), ensures that patients who are treated for services or who are provided with
    29
    goods specified in section 139.3(a), whether by a single physician or by other licensed
    health care providers working under the auspices of a single physician (§ 139.3(b)(5)),
    will have been informed that the physician has a financial interest in any legal entities
    that are part of the physician’s practice (§ 139.3(e)), and to which the patient is referred
    for services or goods specified in section 139.3(a).
    This interpretation of section 139.31(e) is also supported by the second sentence of
    section 139.31(e), which states, “Further, the provisions of section 139.3 shall not alter,
    limit, or expand a physician’s ability to deliver, or direct and supervise the delivery of, in-
    office goods or services according to the laws, rules and regulations governing his or her
    scope of practice.” The parties have not pointed to nor are we aware of any laws, rules,
    or regulations that would prohibit a physician, who specializes in pain management such
    as Banerjee, and who treats patients for services paid pursuant to the workers’
    compensation system (§ 3200 et seq.), from providing services or goods described in
    section139.3(a) through separate legal entities.
    D. Our Interpretation of Section 139.31(e) Means That the Perjury Charges Are
    Unsupported, but Probable Cause Supports the Insurance Fraud Charges
    Our interpretation of the physician’s office exception of section 139.31(e) means
    that the exception applied to Banerjee’s referrals of patients to Kensington and Rochester
    (§ 139.3(a)), and that Banerjee did not violate section 139.3(a) by referring patients for
    services specified in section 139.3(a) to Kensington and Rochester. Thus, Banerjee’s acts
    of signing three doctor’s reports, under penalty of perjury, certifying to BHHC that he
    had complied with “section 139.3” was not false (§ 118). Given that Banerjee’s allegedly
    30
    false certification of his compliance with “section 139.3” was the only basis to support
    the perjury charges, the perjury charges must be dismissed.23
    The People’s theory for the insurance fraud charges is that Banerjee presented
    false and fraudulent billings to BHHC for services described in Labor Code section
    139.3(a), after he referred the patients to Kensington and Rochester for the services, in
    violation of Labor Code section 139.3(a). (Pen. Code, § 550, subd. (a)(6).) Even though
    the People did not show that Banerjee violated section 139.3(a), because the physician’s
    office exception applied to the otherwise prohibited referrals (§ 139.31(e), the record
    supports an alternative basis to support the insurance fraud charges.
    As discussed, Penal Code section 550, subdivision (a)(6), a form of insurance
    fraud, is committed when the defendant knowingly makes or causes to be made any false
    or fraudulent claim for a health care benefit. (People v. rel. ex re. Government
    Employees Ins. Co. v. Cruz, supra, 244 Cal.App.4th at p. 1193.) Insurance fraud is a
    specific intent crime; the defendant must specifically intend to defraud a person with a
    false or fraudulent claim. (People v. Scofield, supra, 17 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1025-1026.)
    The evidence adduced at the preliminary hearing shows that the superior court had
    probable cause to believe that Banerjee was guilty of the insurance fraud charges.
    (People v. Ramirez, supra, 244 Cal.App.4th at p. 813.)
    23  Although the evidence adduced at the preliminary hearing does not show that
    Banerjee complied with the patient disclosure requirement of section 139.3(e), Banerjee’s
    noncompliance with section 139.3(a) was the sole basis the People offered to support the
    perjury charges. The People did not attempt to show that Banerjee committed perjury by
    failing to comply with section 139.3(e). Banerjee’s failure to show that he complied with
    section 139.3(e) does not foreclose the possibility that he complied with section 139.3(e).
    31
    The evidence showed that, between 2014 and 2016, Banerjee presented false and
    fraudulent claims for health care benefits to BHHC through Kensington and Rochester,
    with the specific intent to defraud BHHC. Banerjee’s billings through Kensington and
    Rochester were for substantially higher amounts than Banerjee had previously billed
    BHHC for the same or similar services that he provided solely through PPCC, and that
    BHHC had been billed by the group practice with whom Banerjee had formerly
    practiced. Banerjee did not inform BHHC that he owned and operated Kensington and
    Rochester; and in one instance, Banerjee double billed BHHC for two epidural injections
    provided to the same patient on the same day, through PPCC and Rochester. The
    Rochester billing for the two epidural injections was approximately $9,000 higher than
    the total billing for the patient through PPCC.
    The record also supports a strong suspicion that Kensington and Rochester were
    sham entities, and that Banerjee formed Kensington and Rochester with the specific
    intent to defraud BHHC through his Kensington and Rochester billings. The Kensington
    and Rochester billings gave the appearance that the entities were not part of Banerjee’s
    medical practice but were stand alone, diagnostic testing and surgical centers, operating
    independently of any physician’s office. But when BHHC’s investigator, Oard, visited
    Banerjee’s Wildomar location, he discovered that Banerjee was operating Kensington
    from “a small closet-type room,” and that Banerjee was operating Rochester from a
    “converted treatment room.” The evidence supports a strong suspicion that Banerjee had
    no business reason for forming Kensington and Rochester, other than to use them to
    present highly inflated billings for his diagnostic and surgical services to BHHC. (People
    32
    v. Ramirez, supra, 244 Cal.App.4th at p. 813.) The information cannot be set aside as to
    the insurance fraud charges because the evidence demonstrates that there is some rational
    ground for assuming the possibility that those offenses have been committed and the
    defendant is guilty of them.
    IV. DISPOSITION
    Let a writ of prohibition issue, ordering the respondent superior court to set aside
    its order denying Banerjee’s Penal Code section 995 motion and to enter a new order
    granting the motion, in part, as to the three perjury charges (counts 3, 4, and 5.) Further
    proceedings may continue, and this court’s previous order staying further proceedings on
    the information is lifted, insofar as the stay order concerned the pending criminal
    prosecution against Banerjee for the two insurance fraud charges. (Pen. Code, § 550,
    subd. (a)(6).) Banerjee is directed to prepare and have the writ of prohibition issued,
    copies served, and the original filed with the clerk of this court, together with proofs of
    service on all parties.
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    FIELDS
    J.
    We concur:
    MILLER
    Acting P. J.
    CODRINGTON
    J.
    33
    

Document Info

Docket Number: E076291

Filed Date: 10/5/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/5/2021