Heidary v. Superior Court ( 2018 )


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  • Filed 8/14/18
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    PEYMAN HEIDARY,
    Petitioner,                               E068607
    v.                                                (Super.Ct.No. RIF1670175)
    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF                             OPINION
    RIVERSIDE COUNTY,
    Respondent;
    THE PEOPLE,
    Real Party in Interest.
    ORIGINAL PROCEEDINGS; petition for writ of prohibition. Steven G.
    Counelis, Judge. Petition is denied.
    Khouri Law Firm, Michael J. Khouri and Jennifer W. Gatewood, for Petitioner.
    No appearance for Respondent.
    1
    Michael A. Hestrin, District Attorney, Elaina Gambera Bentley, Assistant District
    Attorney, Kelli Catlett, Emily R. Hanks, and Erika L. Mulhere, Deputy District
    Attorneys, for Real Party in Interest.
    In this matter, petitioner Peyman Heidary challenges the trial court’s denial of
    his motion to set aside the indictment pursuant to Penal Code1 section 995,
    subdivision (a)(1)(B). We have determined that the petition must be denied.
    I
    FACTUAL BACKGROUND2
    Petitioner Peyman Heidary (Heidary) allegedly owned and oversaw a network of
    medical clinics to generate fraudulent billings to workers’ compensation and insurance
    carriers. A non-attorney, he also allegedly controlled the day-to-day operations of
    various law firms, including California Injury Lawyers (collectively, the law firm.). He
    allegedly controlled or directed hiring and firing, legal decision making, and income flow
    to and from the law firm. Codefendants (and petitioners in a related writ case discussed
    below) Abramowitz, a lawyer, and Solis allegedly assisted Heidary in these operations.
    A former chiropractor, Heidary also allegedly formed and controlled several
    health clinics in Southern California. Each was staffed by front and back room support
    1   All further citations are to the Penal Code, unless otherwise indicated.
    2  The factual background is compiled from petitioner’s writ petition, the People’s
    return, and petitioner’s traverse. The allegations of the operations of the fraudulent
    scheme are summarized from the most detailed source, the People’s opposition to
    petitioner’s section 995 motion.
    2
    staff for scheduling and basic medical services (regardless of qualifications). Included
    were chiropractors operating as primary treating physicians, providing blanket, cookie-
    cutter services to each patient at Heidary’s direction and making as many medical
    specialist referrals as possible. Despite their qualifications, they also wrote medical legal
    reports (medlegals) using Heidary’s templates, the most expensive report in workers’
    compensation. Medical doctors, or specialists, provided blanket treatment and medlegals
    on Heidary’s orders. Billings were made in each provider’s name, and payments were
    made to their accounts. However, Heidary required fee-splitting and he was the only one
    allowed to withdraw funds. Heidary also had the doctors sell their accounts-receivables
    (AR) to him, which he then sold to third parties.
    Under the alleged fraud scheme, injured workers appeared at the law firm, which
    would fill out boilerplate paperwork and, on Heidary’s order, direct the workers to one of
    his clinics to begin treatment. At the clinic, the workers underwent treatments, regardless
    of need, such as massage, chiropractic, acupuncture, psychiatric and other services. After
    the maximum number of visits, they were discharged regardless of medical status. Each
    provider would fill out a “ ‘super bill,’ ” describing services rendered, which would then
    go to support staff to review compliance with Heidary’s orders. They would forward the
    superbill to a medical billing company. Those companies would generate a form to start
    the claim process. The billing companies contracted with each provider to bill for
    services, on Heidary’s order, including sometimes by forgery. Payment came from two
    sources: workers’ compensation insurers and third-party AR buyers.
    3
    The People originally filed a criminal complaint, but later dismissed it in favor of
    a grand jury hearing. On May 16, 2016, a Riverside County criminal grand jury returned
    an indictment against petitioner and codefendants Cary Abramowitz, Ana Solis, and
    Gladys Ross3 in Riverside County case No. RIF1670175. The indictment charges
    count 1 for conspiracy (§ 182, subd. (a)(1)), for conspiring to knowingly make or causing
    to be made any false or fraudulent claims for payment of health care benefits, in violation
    of section 550, subdivision (a)(6) (Heidary, Abramowitz, Solis, and Ross); counts 2
    through 19 for false or fraudulent claims for payment of health care benefits to 18
    different, named insurers (§ 550, subd. (a)) (Heidary, Abramowitz, Solis, and Ross);
    counts 20 through 37 for willfully and unlawfully making and causing to be made a
    knowingly false and fraudulent material statement and material representation to 18
    different named insurers for payment of workers’ compensation (Ins. Code, § 1871.4,
    subd. (a)(1)) (Heidary, Abramowitz, Solis, and Ross); counts 38 through 66 for money
    laundering (Pen. Code, § 186.10, subd. (a)) (Heidary); count 67 for unlicensed practice of
    medicine (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 2052, subd. (a)) (Heidary); count 68 for “capping” (Pen.
    Code, § 549) (soliciting, accepting or referring any business with the knowledge that, or
    with reckless disregard for whether, the individual or entity intends to violate Pen. Code,
    § 550 or Ins. Code, § 1871.4) (Heidary, Abramowitz, and Solis); and count 69 for the
    unlicensed practice of law (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6126, subd. (a)) (Heidary and
    3 Codefendant Ross, who managed medical billing, is named in the indictment.
    She is mentioned here only for background; she does not have an active petition for writ
    review before this court.
    4
    Abramowitz). The indictment also alleges a white-collar crime enhancement (Pen. Code,
    § 186.11, subd. (a)(2)) (Heidary, Abramowitz, Solis, and Ross).
    On July 18, 2016, petitioner filed a demurrer to this indictment, challenging in part
    whether he had received notice of the charges and whether the indictment improperly
    aggregated multiple acts into single counts. The People opposed and petitioner filed a
    reply. The trial court conducted a hearing on August 19, 2016, and overruled the
    demurrer. Petitioner did not seek review of that decision. But, on December 19, 2016,
    petitioner filed a motion to set aside the indictment pursuant to section 995, essentially
    repeating the arguments from demurrer. The People again opposed. The trial court
    issued a ruling denying the motion on June 9, 2017. That order is the subject of the
    instant petition for writ of prohibition, which petitioner filed on June 26, 2017. This
    court summarily denied the petition on August 8, 2017. Petitioner sought review with the
    California Supreme Court.
    On October 11, 2017, the Supreme Court issued the following order: “The
    petition for review is granted. The matter is transferred to the Court of Appeal, Fourth
    Appellate District, Division Two, with directions to vacate its order denying the petition
    for writ of mandate and to issue an order directing respondent court to show cause why
    petitioner is not entitled to the relief requested based on his claims that (1) the indictment
    failed to provide constitutionally adequate notice of the charges against him; and (2) the
    indictment improperly aggregated multiple acts into single counts. The request for stay is
    denied without prejudice to petitioner renewing the request in the Court of Appeal.” This
    5
    court vacated its summary denial of August 8, 2017. Petitioner then requested an
    immediate stay of all further proceedings in the underlying criminal case. This court
    issued the order to show cause, addressing the two points in the Supreme Court’s
    October 11, 2017 order and setting a briefing schedule. This court then denied
    petitioner’s request for immediate stay and petitioner again sought review with the
    Supreme Court.4 On December 13, 2017, the Supreme Court denied the petition for
    review and application for stay. After an extension of time, the parties completed their
    briefing.5
    4  On November 7, 2017, the Fourth District, Division Three, issued Hoffman v.
    Superior Court (2017) 
    16 Cal.App.5th 1086
    , after an order to show cause on substantially
    similar issues at the direction of the Supreme Court. Hoffman involved similar insurance
    fraud charges, aggregated to form felony counts, contained in an information and
    reviewed for probable cause at a preliminary hearing. It was also subject to a demurrer,
    which that superior court overruled. Here, petitioner was indicted by a grand jury, which
    heard testimony and received exhibits into evidence. The case is presented here as a writ
    petition following denial of a section 995 motion. Substantively, the cases are closely
    related. The Supreme Court denied review of Hoffman on February 14, 2018. Because
    of the difference in procedural posture in this case from Hoffman and because this case
    also addresses Insurance Code section 1871.4, which Hoffman does not, we issue
    Heidary v. Superior Court as a published opinion.
    5  Concurrently, a similar scenario played out in the companion case of
    Abramowitz, et al. v. Superior Court, No. E068714, arising from the same facts and
    indictment and subject to the same writ procedures and requests for review in our
    Supreme Court. Because the cases are closely related and similar arguments were raised
    in each, this court waited for briefing to complete in that case also before proceeding.
    Heidary elected to proceed at oral argument; Abramowitz did not. While we issue this
    case as a published opinion, there is no need to publish both, and Abramowitz v. Superior
    Court will issue separately as a nonpublished opinion.
    6
    II
    DISCUSSION
    Petitioner seeks a writ of prohibition to vacate the respondent superior court’s
    order denying his motion to set aside indictment, and that such motion be granted with
    charges against petitioner dismissed. He broadly argues that the indictment lacks
    reasonable or probable cause on all counts for various reasons, and that the indictment
    cannot be amended to effect a demand for an election. Among his arguments are that the
    insurance fraud and workers’ compensation fraud claims are improperly aggregated, and
    that the indictment does not give due process notice of the charges against him to prepare
    a defense for trial. The Supreme Court’s order quoted above focuses on these last two
    points. We disagree with petitioner and specifically address the petition as framed by the
    particular issues the Supreme Court articulated.
    A petition for writ of prohibition lies to prevent a threatened judicial act that is
    without, or in excess of, a court’s jurisdiction. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1102 [“The writ of
    prohibition arrests the proceedings of any tribunal, corporation, board, or person
    exercising judicial functions, when such proceedings are without or in excess of the
    jurisdiction of such tribunal, corporation, board, or person.”]; Abelleira v. District Court
    of Appeal (1941) 
    17 Cal.2d 280
    , 286-291; Green v. City of Oceanside (1987) 
    194 Cal.App.3d 212
    , 220.)
    7
    A.     Jurisdiction
    Preliminarily, the People acknowledge that the order to show cause invoked two
    issues: “Whether petitioner was afforded due process notice of the charges against him
    and whether the indictment improperly aggregated multiple acts into single counts.” But,
    the People argue in addition that this court “does not have jurisdiction over either claim
    in the context of petitioner’s section 999a writ from the denial of his section 995 motion
    to set aside the indictment.” We disagree.
    The main thrust of the People’s argument is that petitioner raised his instant
    arguments in a previous demurrer to the superior court, which overruled the demurrer,
    but petitioner never challenged the ruling. Instead, the People argue, petitioner
    repackaged his arguments into an improper section 995 motion. Yet, it was a section 995
    motion that the trial court and the parties contemplated during the hearing on the parties’
    demurrers. The Hoffman court also found that approach appropriate. (Hoffman, supra,
    16 Cal.App.5th, at pp. 1096-1097 [“where the evidence is truly inadequate to convey the
    circumstances of the alleged offense, defendant’s remedy is a section 995 motion”].)
    This court therefore finds this matter to be procedurally proper and that the court has
    jurisdiction to consider it.
    Having addressed the People’s jurisdiction argument, we turn to the issues the
    Supreme Court identified. However, we will examine the issues in reverse order.
    8
    B.     The Indictment Properly Aggregates Multiple Acts into Single Counts
    The Supreme Court directed us to order the parties to show cause as to whether
    “the indictment improperly aggregated multiple acts into single counts.”
    First, only a portion of the 69 counts in the operative indictment involve
    aggregation of multiple acts into single counts. Notably, counts 2 through 19 for
    insurance fraud in violation of Penal Code section 550, subdivision (a)(6), explicitly
    allege that “the aggregate amount of claims and amount at issue exceeded Nine Hundred
    Fifty dollars ($950) . . . .” Counts 20 through 37 for violations of Insurance Code
    section 1871.4, subdivision (a)(1) (the workers’ compensation claims as defined in
    Lab. Code, § 3207), do not overtly use the term “aggregate” regarding multiple acts, but
    the counts are based on such multiple acts. Further, petitioner argues as much in the
    petition and in his traverse, contending that the insurance and workers’ compensation
    fraud claims are improperly aggregated, violate the due process requirement of adequate
    notice of the charges against him (discussed in the next section), and that the other counts
    against him (e.g., conspiracy, capping, etc.) must fall if the fraud claims are improper.
    Counts 38 through 66 for money laundering (Pen. Code. § 186.10, subd. (a)), addressed
    solely against this petitioner, do not aggregate claims, nor do the remaining counts.
    Accordingly, we will only address the aggregation issue with respect to counts 2 through
    19 and 20 through 37.
    Petitioner argues that the insurance fraud counts do not state specifics as to any
    single act, but aggregate claims of fraudulent acts by individual insurer, one insurer per
    9
    count. But, section 550, subdivision (c)(2)(B), permits aggregation of claims: where the
    amount at issue is $950 or less, the claim is a misdemeanor; if over $950 in any 12-
    consecutive-month period, it is a felony. Petitioner relies on People v. Zanoletti (2009)
    
    173 Cal.App.4th 547
    , 560, to argue that aggregation in this manner is improper.
    However, Zanoletti dealt with charges under section 550, subdivision (a)(1).
    Section 550, subdivision (c)(2)(B), explicitly permits aggregating violations of
    section 550, subdivision (a)(6), as applicable here. The People charge each count as a
    felony with amounts exceeding $950, over a five year six month period. The individual
    claims are presented in a manner, described fully in the next section below, through
    which the People may identify claims that exceed in the aggregate the amount of $950 in
    a 12-consecutive-month period contained within the five year six month period, making it
    a matter of proof at trial to show claims aggregated to meet the 12-consecutive-month
    requirement.
    Thus, each of counts 2 through 19 allege that multiple fraudulent claims against
    each insurer aggregate to exceed the minimum of $950 for charging as a felony.
    For example, count 2 (insurance fraud) alleges:
    “For a further and separate cause of action, being a different offense from but
    connected in its commission with the charge set forth in count 1 hereof, the Criminal
    Grand Jury of the County of Riverside by this Indictment hereby accuses PEYMAN
    HEIDARY and CARY DAVID ABRAMOWITZ and ANA SOLIS and GLADYS ROSS
    of a violation of Penal Code section 550, subdivision (a), subsection (6), a felony, in that
    10
    on or about January 1, 2009 through and including July 15, 2014, in the County of
    Riverside, State of California, the defendants did willfully and unlawfully and knowingly
    make and cause to be made a false and fraudulent claim for payment of a health care
    benefit, to wit, from ACE, and the claim and amount at issue exceeded Nine Hundred
    Fifty dollars ($950) and the aggregate amount of claims and amount at issue exceeded
    Nine Hundred Fifty dollars ($950) in a five years and six-month consecutive period.
    “It is further alleged that in the commission and attempted commission of the
    above offense the said defendants, PEYMAN HEIDARY and CARY DAVID
    ABRAMOWITZ and ANA SOLIS and GLADYS ROSS, with the intent so to do, took,
    damaged and destroyed property of a value exceeding $200,000, within the meaning of
    Penal Code section 12022.6, subdivision (a), subsection (2).”
    The aggregated count thus presents a single offense—“a further and separate
    cause of action” in which “the defendants did willfully and unlawfully and knowingly
    make and cause to be made a false and fraudulent claim for payment of a health care
    benefit”—like the counts that Division Three of this court determined to be permissible
    aggregations of claims to constitute a felony count. (Hoffman, supra, 16 Cal.App.5th at
    p. 1095.)
    Nor does section 802, subdivision (a), impose a one-year statute of limitations on
    individual claims, as petitioner briefly claims in his traverse. Petitioner contends that
    many of the individual claims are for less than $950 and therefore constitute
    misdemeanors, meaning that section 802, subdivision (a), imposes a one-year statute of
    11
    limitations. Under that theory, petitioner asserts, claims over a year old would have to be
    dismissed. However, he does not support his contention with either substantive argument
    or citation to authority other than section 802, subdivision (a). (Cahill v. San Diego Gas
    & Electric Co. (2011) 
    194 Cal.App.4th 939
    , 956 [arguments not supported by adequate
    argument or authority may be deemed forfeited].)
    Further, he ignores that the People have aggregated and pleaded the counts in the
    indictment as felonies, as permitted under section 550, subdivision (c)(2)(B), which
    impose a three-year limitations period. (See § 801.) Moreover, a longer limitations
    period applies in the case of felony insurance fraud. “Notwithstanding Section 801 or
    any other provision of law, prosecution for any offense described in subdivision (c) of
    Section 803 shall be commenced within four years after discovery of the commission of
    the offense, or within four years after the completion of the offense, whichever is later.”
    (§ 801.5.) Section 803, subdivision (c)(6), includes felony insurance fraud in violation of
    section 550 and Insurance Code section 1871.4, the specific grounds stated in the
    indictment here. The parties may differ as to when claims were discovered or completed,
    and such will be subject to proof at trial.
    Next, petitioner’s contentions relating to counts 20 through 37 are also unavailing.
    As pleaded, these workers’ compensation counts are “connected” to counts 1 through 19,
    including the aggregated claims in counts 2 through 19. However, the charged violations
    of Insurance Code section 1871.4, subdivision (a)(1), do not themselves rely on
    aggregating amounts to reach a felony minimum amount. Instead, they again state a
    12
    single offense of making “a knowingly false and fraudulent material statement and
    material representation” to the victim insurers. For example, count 20 alleges:
    “For a further and separate cause of action, being a different offense from but
    connected in its commission with the charges set forth in counts 1 through 19 hereof, the
    Criminal Grand Jury of the County of Riverside by this Indictment hereby accuses
    PEYMAN HEIDARY and CARY DAVID ABRAMOWITZ and ANA SOLIS and
    GLADYS ROSS of a violation of Insurance Code section 1871.4, subdivision (a),
    subsection (1), a felony, in that on or about January 1, 2009 through and including
    July 15, 2014, in the County of Riverside, State of California, the defendants did willfully
    and unlawfully make and cause to be made a knowingly false and fraudulent material
    statement and material representation, to wit, to ACE, for the purpose of obtaining and
    denying compensation, as defined in Labor Code section 3207.”
    The workers’ compensation claims under Insurance Code section 1871.4,
    subdivision (a)(1), thus present no greater aggregation problem than do those in counts 2
    through 19 for insurance fraud. (See Hoffman, supra, 16 Cal.App.5th at p. 1095.)
    Altogether, the claims discussed above are properly aggregated in the indictment.
    C.     The Indictment Provides Constitutionally Adequate Notice
    The Supreme Court also directed us to order the parties to show cause as to
    whether “the indictment failed to provide constitutionally adequate notice of the charges
    against him[.]” In Hoffman, Division Three of this court observed that, “ ‘Under modern
    pleading procedures, notice of the particular circumstances of an alleged crime is
    13
    provided by the evidence presented to the committing magistrate at the preliminary
    examination, not by a factually detailed information.’ ” (Hoffman, supra, 16 Cal.App.5th
    at p. 1092, quoting People v. Jennings (1991) 
    53 Cal.3d 334
    , 358.) In fact, “ ‘the time,
    place and circumstances of charged offenses are left to the preliminary hearing transcript;
    it is the touchstone of due process notice to a defendant.’ [Citations.]” (Hoffman, at
    p. 1092.) And further, “ ‘Assuming that the indictment is sufficiently definite and certain
    in charging several different offenses, no injury resulted to the defendant by reason of a
    failure to separate the charge into separate counts. Indeed, he is the gainer thereby, as
    only one penalty can be imposed.’ ” (Id. at pp. 1094-1095, quoting People v. Steelik
    (1921) 
    187 Cal. 361
    , 370.)
    Nonetheless, petitioner argues that in Hoffman, supra, 16 Cal.App.5th at p. 1093,
    each count of that felony information “specifically identified the name of the patient, date
    of service at issue, date the claim was submitted, and type of service at issue.” He goes
    on to contend that “Division Three of this Court held that the defendant’s due process
    right to notice was satisfied based on the preliminary hearing transcript and specific
    information, but the information in Hoffman provided far more notice than the indictment
    in this case. In Hoffman, the People set forth the precise time frames, patient files, and
    preliminary exhibit numbers within the felony information. . . . Whereas, the indictment
    in this case fails to specify any of that information. The indictment against the Petitioner
    simply states that over the period of five years, the Petitioner allegedly submitted false
    14
    claims.” However, petitioner misstates Hoffman and misrepresents the information
    presented in this case.
    The Hoffman court reviewed the simplified California pleading rules and the due
    process requirement, and then discussed the accusatory pleading in that case. (Hoffman,
    supra, 16 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1091-1093.) That court stated, “Viewing the amended
    information against this backdrop, we first observe that it contains more information than
    is necessary to satisfy the basic statutory pleading requirements. Each count identifies
    the offense, the victim (for most counts, an insurance provider), the type of alleged
    fraudulent claim, the specific timeframe during which the offense occurred, the patient
    files relevant to the offense, and the preliminary hearing exhibit number containing the
    evidence to support the count. Under [Penal Code] sections 948 through 959, it would
    have been sufficient to simply state: Defendant did . . . knowingly make or cause to be
    made a false or fraudulent claim for payment of a health care benefit. (See § 550,
    subd. (a)(6).) Due process may require that the victim and type of fraud be identified
    (which was the case in the original information). And whether or not due process does so
    require, we believe it to be a best practice where there are so many counts involved. But
    it was certainly unnecessary, under the statutory framework, to identify precise
    timeframes, patient files, or preliminary hearing exhibit numbers. That was the function
    of the preliminary hearing.” (Hoffman, at p. 1093, italics added.) That court also
    referred to the inclusion of, for example, a “ ‘list of patients’ ” for each healthcare claim
    submitted as, “that information is surplusage.” (Id. at p. 1095.) It is apparent that the
    15
    Hoffman court did not “h[o]ld that the defendant’s due process right to notice was
    satisfied based on the preliminary hearing transcript and specific information . . .” in the
    accusatory pleading, as petitioner claims. It is that “specific information” that the
    Hoffman court found unnecessary so long as it was in the transcript and exhibits from the
    preliminary investigation or, here, grand jury proceedings.
    This court has reviewed the indictment, the grand jury transcript, and exhibits
    submitted to the grand jury. Those exhibits collect victim responses to queries pursuant
    to Insurance Code section 1877.3. Typically, individual fraud managers for each of the
    victim insurers prepared the responses to the section 1877.3 letters, in the form of
    spreadsheets and related listings or summaries. Those responses were labeled according
    to victim and presented to the grand jury.6 (The section 1877.3 letters were generally
    included in a file such as CNA-1, LIB-1, or ACE-1, which were discussed during the
    grand jury proceedings, but not included in the record of this petition. A representative
    6 Spreadsheet and other files specifically included in the record of this petition
    are: ACE2, ACE3, ACE4, ACE5, ACM2, ACM3, ACM4, ACM5, AIG2, AIG3, AIG4,
    BERK2, BERK4, BERK6, BERK7, CNA2, CNA3, CNA6, CNA7, CNA8, CRUM2,
    CRUM4, CRUM5, EMP2, EMP4-1, EMP6, EMP8, ENIC1, ENIC2, FARM2, FARM3,
    FARM4, FARM5, FARM6, FIRE2, FIRE4, FIRE5, FIRE6, FIRE7, HART2, HART3,
    HART4, HART5, HART6, ICW2, ICW3, ICW5, ICW6, LIB2, LIB3, LIB4, LIB5, REP2,
    REP3, REP4, REP5, REP6, SCIF2, SCIF3, SCIF4, TRAV1, TRAV2, TRAV3, ZEN2,
    ZEN4, ZUR2, ZUR3, and ZUR4-2. These represent ACE American Insurance Co.;
    American Claims Management; American International Group; Berkshire/Hathaway;
    CNA Insurance; Crum & Forester; Employers Insurance; Everest National Insurance Co.;
    Farmer’s; Fireman’s; Hartford; Insurance Carriers of the West; Liberty Mutual; Republic
    Indemnity; State Compensation Insurance Fund; Traveler’s; Zenith Insurance Co.; and
    Zurich Insurance of North America. Additional files are discussed in portions of the
    grand jury transcript.
    16
    sample of a section 1877.3 letter is the first document in file SCIF3, titled “claims binder
    SCIF Martinez Figueroa Alvarez.” The People took the testimony of the insurers’ fraud
    managers, or their representatives (such as in-house data analysts or third-party managers
    who collected the data for the responses), before the grand jury to walk through the
    spreadsheets and explain the data within them.
    For example, Oliver Glover, who manages the health care fraud investigations
    team at Zenith Insurance Company, testified as to the fraud investigation process at
    Zenith. In response to the Insurance Code section 1877.3 letter (discussed as file ZEN-
    1), Mr. Glover directed the preparation of Zenith’s response with a company data analyst.
    Mr. Glover explained that a document in file ZEN-2 provided a key to understanding the
    spreadsheet of data in response to the request. He further explained that the company’s
    data systems extracted all information from each bill to analyze what went on with
    particular patients, doctors and trends in medical care. The spreadsheet itself—titled
    “Zenith Data for 1877 Request 2014-04-08 – Excel”—could be searched by the injured
    worker’s name, by client number, by IRS number, by service address, by pay to address,
    and other means. The spreadsheet provides detailed tracking information as to each
    claim, each billing, the amount of the billing, how much was received, the dates of the
    billing, any denial of charges, the service that was billed (i.e., the particular treatment)
    with its five-digit code and any modifier of the treatment, any unique flags, and other
    information captured under columns A through AQ. The People have explained several
    times that each entry—that is, each service with its related billing and all other
    17
    modifications as described above—represents a separate fraudulent claim on petitioner’s
    part. A separate tab on the spreadsheet provides payment information by date, amount,
    and entity paid. The information provides petitioner with specific notice of each
    transaction, aggregated for indictment counts 18 and 36 involving allegedly fraudulent
    claims against Zenith for the purpose of meeting the $950 in a 12-consecutive-month
    period requirement under Penal Code section 550, subdivision (a)(6), as well as under
    Insurance Code section 1871.4, subdivision (a)(1). The notice is contained within the
    grand jury exhibits and testimony and is adequate. (Hoffman, supra, 16 Cal.App.5th at
    p. 1093.)
    Similarly, Glen Smith, a special investigator for Zurich Insurance of North
    America, testified about the fraud investigation process at Zurich. He also received an
    Insurance Code section 1877.3 letter and prepared Zurich’s response in the form of
    spreadsheets. Two spreadsheets in file ZUR-2 include one entitled “Zurich Copy of
    Peymen [sic] Heidary link to PO Box ZNA Exposure – Excel,” which lists payees by
    name and tax identification number (TIN) and by year for the total amounts actually paid
    to each in the first tab, “PD by provider.” The next tab, “PD by claim,” identifies claim
    numbers line by line, with the amount paid for each by year with a grand total. The
    “detail” tab provides detailed information by claim number, TIN, line of business, the
    handling office, the claimant’s name, the name of the insured, the payee by name and
    address information over multiple columns, the loss state, the payee TIN, the date of loss
    (date on which the claim occurred), claim entry date into the Zurich system, payment date
    18
    and year, the “pay kind” code used to identify the service, date of service, from and to
    (i.e., range of dates paid), total billed and total paid. The final tab, “Heidary TINS,” is
    simply a list of TINs to identify claims paid to petitioner.
    The next spreadsheet, “Zurich Peyman Heidary and California Injury Lawyers,”
    also includes tabs. The first is “billed versus PD by year, by address.” It provides a
    listing of payments made by years (2009 through 2014) by address of the payee. The two
    remaining tabs (“CA Injury Lawyer detail” and “P.O. Box 76002 detail”) include detail
    columns, similar to the first spreadsheet, for the summary totals in the first tab. File
    ZUR-3 compiles each individual Division of Workers’ Compensation form 1 (DWC-1)
    for Zurich, completed by each claimant to verify the date and type of injury.
    It is a straightforward matter to determine each claim line item and identify the
    dates and amounts of the claim paid for aggregation purposes. Again, as the People have
    explained, each entry represents a separate allegedly fraudulent claim by petitioner. As
    with the Zenith example, above, the Zurich information arrayed in this manner is easily
    discerned and, with the grand jury transcript, provides adequate notice of each transaction
    for the individual indictment counts. (Hoffman, supra, 16 Cal.App.5th at p. 1093.)
    In another example, Nicole Sullivan is a provider fraud program manager for
    American Claims Management (ACM), a third-party administrator that administers
    claims for insurance companies insuring employers. She also responded to an Insurance
    Code section 1877.3 letter on the parts of multiple insurers, among them California
    Restaurant Mutual Benefit Corporation (CRMBC). She similarly testified to the contents
    19
    of a spreadsheet of patients, claims, billings, types of treatment, dates of services and
    billings, date of check processing, entity to whom payment was made, etc., contained in
    file ACM-2. The People briefly reviewed file CRMBC1 with Ms. Sullivan, a file not
    included in the record here, but determined not to admit it because it duplicated the data
    in ACM-2. Supplemental information was available in ACM-3, including all documents
    within each claim file. Counts 6 and 24 involve allegedly fraudulent claims against
    CRMBC. Although there is no dedicated file labeled “CRMBC,” the data in the ACM
    file and Ms. Sullivan’s testimony provides adequate notice to petitioner. (Hoffman,
    supra, 16 Cal.App.5th at p. 1093.)
    Other files for other victim insurers are in the record and were similarly presented
    to the grand jury and were subject to detailed descriptive testimony by insurer fraud
    agents or representatives. All told, the testimony and exhibits in the grand jury transcript
    provide an effective roadmap to satisfy the due process notice requirement.
    Regardless, petitioner contends that he must prepare to defend against thousands
    of potential fraud claims. The court in Hoffman addressed this specific point as well.
    “The court has tools at its disposal to mitigate that difficulty, such as severing offenses
    into separate trials pursuant to section 954, or, under appropriate circumstances,
    continuances to address any shift in the prosecutor’s strategy pursuant to section 1050.
    [Citation.]” (Hoffman, supra, 16 Cal.App.5th at p. 1098.) Additionally, the trial court
    may issue a unanimity instruction. (Id. at p. 1095.)
    20
    To the extent that petitioner continues to claim that the indictment, along with the
    grand jury transcript and exhibits, does not provide him notice of the charges against him,
    the court can only conclude that it is because petitioner is turning a blind eye while
    advancing his argument. Between the indictment, the contents of the thorough and
    detailed grand jury transcript, and the exhibits presented to the grand jury and contained
    in the record (including the record here), due process has been satisfied and petitioner has
    been given adequate notice of the charges against him. (Hoffman, supra, 16 Cal.App.5th
    at p. 1092 [information and preliminary hearing transcript provide due process notice].)
    In that light, this case does not fall under the “ ‘unusual circumstances’ ” in which “ ‘an
    otherwise proper pleading may . . . fail to afford due process notice[.]’ ” (Ibid., quoting
    People v. Lucas (1997) 
    55 Cal.App.4th 721
    , 737.)
    Accordingly, there is no basis for issuing a writ of prohibition.
    III
    DISPOSITION
    The petition for writ of prohibition is denied.
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    RAMIREZ
    P. J.
    We concur:
    MILLER
    J.
    21
    FIELDS
    J.
    22
    

Document Info

Docket Number: E068607

Filed Date: 8/14/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/14/2018