Khan v. Department of Healthcare & Family Services , 2020 IL App (1st) 191212 ( 2020 )


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    2020 IL App (1st) 191212
    FIRST DISTRICT
    SIXTH DIVISION
    November 20, 2020
    No. 1-19-1212
    GOWHAR KHAN, M.D.,                           )                    Appeal from the
    )                    Circuit Court of
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                  )                    Cook County.
    )
    v.                                       )
    )                    No. 18 CH 2921
    THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTHCARE AND FAMILY )
    SERVICES and FELICIA F. NORWOOD, Director of )
    Healthcare and Family Services,              )                    Honorable
    )                    Moshe Jacobius,
    Defendants-Appellees.                 )                    Judge presiding.
    JUSTICE HARRIS delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Presiding Justice Mikva and Justice Griffin concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1     Plaintiff Gowhar Khan, M.D., appeals from an order of the circuit court affirming the
    decision of defendant Felicia Norwood, director of defendant Department of Healthcare and
    Family Services (Department), following an evidentiary hearing by a Department administrative
    law judge (Judge), to deny plaintiff’s application for reinstatement from suspension as a Medicaid
    provider and to recover and withhold payment for services plaintiff rendered during his
    suspension. In 2014, defendants had suspended plaintiff for one year, a decision this court
    affirmed. Khan v. Department of Healthcare & Family Services, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 143908
    .
    ¶2     On appeal, plaintiff contends that the Director’s decision was erroneous because (1) a
    suspension cannot last more than a year, (2) certain evidence was erroneously admitted as business
    records in the Department hearing, (3) suspension of a physician as a Medicaid vendor does not
    No. 1-19-1212
    prohibit the physician from treating patients who are on Medicaid, and (4) plaintiff could not
    prevent his Medicaid patients from filling prescriptions. For the reasons stated below, we affirm
    the Director’s decision.
    ¶3                                      I. JURISDICTION
    ¶4     Plaintiff applied to the Department for reinstatement as a Medicaid vendor, which the
    Director denied on February 20, 2018, pursuant to the Judge’s recommended decision following a
    2017 hearing. Plaintiff filed a complaint for administrative review in the circuit court on March 6,
    2018. 735 ILCS 5/3-103 (West 2018) (complaint for administrative review to be filed within 35
    days of service of the administrative decision). The circuit court affirmed the Director’s decision
    in January 2019 and denied plaintiff’s motion to reconsider on May 30, 2019. Plaintiff filed his
    notice of appeal on June 14, 2019. 735 ILCS 5/3-112 (West 2018) (circuit court judgment in
    administrative review appealable “as in other civil cases”). Accordingly, this court has jurisdiction
    over this matter pursuant to article VI, section 6, of the Illinois Constitution and Illinois Supreme
    Court Rules 301 (eff. Feb. 1, 1994) and 303 (eff. July 1, 2017) governing appeals in civil cases.
    ¶5                                     II. BACKGROUND
    ¶6     On January 31, 2014, the Director adopted a May 2013 recommended decision and
    suspended plaintiff from the Medicaid program for one year for providing medical care in the
    Medicaid program that was of grossly inferior quality, placed patients at risk of harm, and was in
    excess of patients’ needs. Khan, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 143908
    , ¶¶ 4-5. The recommended decision
    recommended plaintiff’s suspension for one year, pursuant to section 140.17 of the Social Services
    title of the Illinois Administrative Code. 89 Ill. Adm. Code 140.17 (1992). Neither it nor the
    Director’s decision adopting it directed or required plaintiff to correct the deficiencies underlying
    his suspension. We affirmed. Khan, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 143908
    , ¶¶ 1, 35.
    ¶7     In January 2015, plaintiff applied for reinstatement as a Medicaid provider.
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    No. 1-19-1212
    ¶8     In June 2015, the Department gave plaintiff notice of its intent to deny his application and
    seek $77,870 in civil penalties. The Department alleged that he, while suspended as a Medicaid
    provider, ordered goods or services for Medicaid patients “for which payment will be, has been
    made or has been rejected in whole or in part by the Department,” in violation of 89 Ill. Adm.
    Code 140.32(a)(1) (2013). “In addition to billing the Department for services, [plaintiff] prescribed
    drugs which the Department made payments for pharmacy claims during” his suspension. “The
    total number of prescriptions the Department paid during the period of suspension was 217 for 62
    recipients in the amount of $25,956.80,” with the civil penalty being three times that amount. The
    Department also alleged that plaintiff
    “failed to provide information to establish that he could reasonably be expected to meet the
    written requirements of the Department, including those set forth in the Program
    Handbooks and the Department’s manuals, bulletins and releases or to establish that [he]
    is fit to participate in the Program or that, after reviewing the activities which served as the
    basis for the earlier suspension and all previous actions and conduct involving [plaintiff],
    the application should not be approved,”
    said activities including the aforesaid section 140.32 violation.
    ¶9     Also in June 2015, plaintiff requested a hearing on the allegations.
    ¶ 10   The Department amended its notice in September 2015, adding an allegation that plaintiff
    contracted with a particular managed care organization (Organization) to provide services to
    Medicaid patients in January 2014, after an administrative law judge recommended his suspension
    but before the Director adopted the recommendation and suspended him, and upon his
    representations to the Organization that he was a Medicaid vendor in good standing and had not
    been investigated or disciplined by any government agency. The Department also alleged that
    plaintiff provided services or ordered goods and services for the Organization’s patients while he
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    No. 1-19-1212
    was suspended. A copy of plaintiff’s agreement with the Organization was attached, dated January
    2, 2014, signed by plaintiff on February 1, 2014, and accepted by the Organization in March 2014.
    ¶ 11   Just before the administrative hearing commenced in October 2017, the Department
    withdrew its prayer for civil monetary penalties.
    ¶ 12                                 A. Department Hearing
    ¶ 13   At the hearing, Department employee Jeremy McClung, a computer analyst with the
    Department’s Inspector General office, testified that he worked with the data that the Department
    retains in the course of administering the Medicaid program, including “claims” or billing
    electronically submitted by Medicaid providers for services performed or drugs prescribed. The
    Department keeps claims data in a standard computer system, with each claim assigned a number
    representing in part the date the claim was submitted, and it does so in the ordinary course of its
    business overseeing the Medicaid program including its obligation to review the payments it made
    to Medicaid providers for services rendered to Medicaid patients.
    ¶ 14   Regarding plaintiff, McClung was asked for the records of his Medicaid claims after the
    date his suspension took effect, except for claims where Medicare was the primary payer rather
    than Medicaid. McClung then produced two reports of the claims or bills under plaintiff’s provider
    number, one of all claims held by the Department and the other of all claims rejected by the
    Department. For each such claim, the two reports reflected in part plaintiff’s provider number,
    which Medicaid patient was covered, on what date service was provided, what service was
    provided, the amount of payment sought, and by whom it was sought. Some claims were on both
    reports because they were rejected, then corrective action was taken—that is, the Department told
    the claimant why it rejected the claim, and the claimant provided more information—and then the
    Department held the claim. McClung also produced two reports listing all prescriptions that
    plaintiff wrote for Medicaid patients and all such prescriptions where the Department rejected the
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    No. 1-19-1212
    pharmacy’s claim or bill. McClung produced all four reports in the ordinary course of the
    Department’s business using standard computer equipment, and each report was an accurate
    reflection of the data entered into Department records.
    ¶ 15   On cross-examination, McClung testified that he had no input on Department decisions to
    pay or reject claims and that he did not contact any of the providers for the claims at issue. Though
    he created the reports in 2017 based on data going back to 2014, the computer had not changed.
    He denied that the Department computer system was obsolete, as it was “constantly updated.”
    McClung based his computer queries on service dates after plaintiff’s suspension date, the service
    date for a prescription being the date it was filled. While he could have queried based on the dates
    prescriptions were written, he did not because “we base it off service date.” He acknowledged that,
    if a prescription authorizes refills, Department records would show the original prescription date
    and that plaintiff may have written a prescription months before a pharmacy filled it.
    ¶ 16   On redirect examination, McClung testified that the data for a claim would change if the
    processing or disposition of the claim itself changed, as when a claim is rejected or resubmitted.
    ¶ 17   The Department’s exhibits—the reports produced by McClung—were admitted over
    plaintiff’s objections of insufficient foundation of trustworthiness. Plaintiff argued regarding the
    prescription reports that the pharmacists did not testify to the accuracy of the information. Exhibit
    1 was “Held Bills for” plaintiff, exhibit 2 was “Other Rejected Bills for” plaintiff, exhibit 3 was
    “Paid Pharmacy Bills for” plaintiff, and exhibit 4 was “Rejected Pharmacy Bills for” plaintiff.
    ¶ 18   Plaintiff testified that he was still a licensed physician though suspended from the Medicaid
    program. He learned of his suspension on February 4, 2014, in an e-mail message from his counsel,
    and neither he nor anyone in his office submitted Medicaid bills thereafter. Plaintiff opined that he
    has a moral and ethical duty to treat his patients if they seek treatment and that he cannot simply
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    No. 1-19-1212
    ignore a patient. He did not direct his patients to any pharmacy, bill for pharmacy services, or
    control pharmacy billing.
    ¶ 19   On cross-examination, plaintiff reiterated that he did not submit any bills to the Department
    while he was suspended. He acknowledged that he could refer patients to other physicians instead
    of abandoning them but explained that it is difficult to find Medicaid vendors to accept referrals.
    He told Medicaid patients not enrolled in a managed care organization that he could not treat them.
    He had contracts with managed care organizations predating his suspension, so he was required to
    treat those patients, and he served them because he was not directed otherwise by the organizations.
    ¶ 20                               B. Judge’s Recommendation
    ¶ 21   The Judge issued his recommended decision in December 2017. After reciting the
    procedural history, the Judge found:
    “[T]he issues presented are 1) whether the Department properly denied [plaintiff’s]
    reapplication to the Program because he provided services to Program recipients while he
    was suspended; 2) whether the Department is entitled to recoup money paid for services
    rendered by [plaintiff] to Program recipients after January 31, 2014, the date on which [he]
    was suspended; and 3) whether [plaintiff] should be excluded from the Program.”
    ¶ 22   After reciting the relevant Department rules and the hearing evidence, the Judge found that
    plaintiff “provided services and ordered goods for the benefit of Program recipients after January
    31, 2014,” when he was suspended and thereby “violated the terms of his suspension under Section
    140.32,” which “would warrant termination from the Program.” The Judge found that the
    “Department paid $5,162.25 for prescriptions that [plaintiff] ordered while suspended” and
    “withheld $30,125 for bills submitted under [plaintiff’s] provider number while suspended.” The
    Judge recited that the “Department may deny an application to participate in the Program if the
    applicant violated Section 140.32” or “engaged in actions that would warrant termination from the
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    No. 1-19-1212
    Program.” The Judge addressed the issues presented: “The record establishes that the Department
    properly denied [plaintiff’s] application and *** is entitled to recoup overpayments from [him].
    The record does not establish that [he] should be excluded from the Program, however.”
    ¶ 23   The Judge rejected plaintiff’s claim that the Department’s “exhibits were improperly
    admitted because they rely on the business records of other entities” with an insufficient foundation
    for their accuracy; that is, that the business records of Medicaid payees “do not become Department
    business records merely because the records have been transferred to the Department.” Plaintiff’s
    “suppositions that computers and technology are not inherently reliable” could not by themselves
    overcome the Department rule that its computer records accurately reflect the Department’s
    payments and the basis for payment unless shown otherwise. 89 Ill. Adm. Code 104.255 (1981).
    Moreover, even absent that rule, the Judge found plaintiff’s proposition unsupported because the
    Department did not offer into evidence any records that had not come from the Department’s
    records kept in the ordinary course of its business.
    ¶ 24   The Judge also rejected plaintiff’s assertion that, under section 140.19(d) of the Social
    Services title of the Illinois Administrative Code (89 Ill. Adm. Code 140.19(d) (2013)), he must
    “be reenrolled unless there is a finding that he has not corrected the deficiencies that caused his
    suspension,” which was providing inferior care. While the Department must adhere to its rules,
    another rule provided that an application to be a Medicaid provider can be rejected if the applicant
    engaged in activity sufficient to be terminated, suspended, or excluded as a provider. 89 Ill. Adm.
    Code 140.14(a) (2013). The Judge found the latter rule applicable beyond an initial or original
    application. Because plaintiff admitted to performing services for Medicaid patients under his
    contract with the Organization while suspended and because Department records showed that he
    ordered prescriptions during his suspension, the record showed that he violated Department rules
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    No. 1-19-1212
    and the provisions of his suspension, so that the Department had sufficient grounds to deny his
    application.
    ¶ 25   The Judge rejected plaintiff’s claim that, while claims were submitted under his provider
    number while he was suspended, he did not cause the Department to be billed. “[T]he submitted
    claims in this case must have been certified either by [plaintiff], his employee whom he authorized
    to submit such claims, or an alternate payee, the actions for whom [plaintiff] is jointly and severally
    liable.” See 89 Ill. Adm. Code 140.24(e) (2014). The Department records in its exhibits created a
    rebuttable presumption that the Department paid claims as reflected in those records, and plaintiff
    did not rebut the presumption. Omitting $375 paid on a claim submitted on the day of plaintiff’s
    suspension, the exhibits showed $30,125 paid, and the Judge found that the Department properly
    withheld that sum. Of the 217 prescriptions at issue, the Judge found that 126 prescriptions were
    written after plaintiff’s suspension and that the Department paid $5162.25 on those prescriptions,
    so it should recover that sum.
    ¶ 26   Lastly, the Judge found it unnecessary to exclude plaintiff from the Medicaid program
    because denying his application would have the same effect of barring him from reapplying for a
    year. 89 Ill. Adm. Code 140.19 (2013).
    ¶ 27                                   C. Director’s Decision
    ¶ 28   Plaintiff filed exceptions to the Judge’s recommended decision. He argued that the
    Department was disregarding its rule that suspensions are for only a year. He also argued that the
    Department hearing was unfair because Department rules waived evidentiary requirements for
    Department records only. Relatedly, he argued that the admission of Department records was
    erroneous because the claims or bills were submitted by Medicaid providers “and merely stored
    by the Department” and because computers are fundamentally unreliable for storing information.
    He argued that he did not bill the Department but that claims were made by pharmacies and
    -8-
    No. 1-19-1212
    managed care organizations. “It was not proved that Dr. Khan designated any pharmacy or MCO
    as an alternative payee” so that the Judge’s reference to alternative payees and joint liability was
    unsupported by evidence. He argued that the Department should not have considered claims after
    he was suspended on January 31. 2014, but before he had notice of the suspension on February 4.
    Lastly, plaintiff argued that the Department was misinterpreting the term “vendor” in its rules and
    that “he should not have to submit an application to become a vendor” when he was suspended for
    a year from January 31, 2014.
    ¶ 29   The Department filed a response to plaintiff’s exceptions. It argued that the Judge was not
    disregarding a Department rule on one-year suspensions but applying other rules: (1) that an
    application to be a Medicaid vendor can be denied for activity that would be grounds for
    termination, suspension, or exclusion and (2) that a suspended vendor cannot provide services, or
    order goods and services, for a Medicaid patient nor be an independent contractor for a vendor.
    The first of those rules applied to applications other than initial applications because “[t]he
    Department may deny an application to participate in the [Medicaid] Program if the vendor has
    engaged in activities which constitute grounds for termination, suspension or exclusion.” 89 Ill.
    Adm. Code 140.14(a) (2013). Relatedly, the Department argued that the Judge properly recited
    and applied the definition of a vendor. The Department argued that the hearing was not unfair
    because the Department rule on admitting Department records has foundational requirements that
    the Department met here and created a rebuttable presumption that plaintiff did not rebut. The
    Department also argued that the Judge did not err in finding that plaintiff performed services for
    Medicaid patients while suspended, because (1) all claims must be certified by a vendor, trusted
    employee, or specifically designated alternate payee, with the vendor and alternate payee being
    jointly and severally liable (89 Ill. Adm. Code 140.20(b) (2018); 89 Ill. Adm. Code 140.24(e)
    (2014)) and (2) plaintiff did not rebut the presumption that the Department paid claims as reflected
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    No. 1-19-1212
    in its records. The Department argued that there was no authority for plaintiff’s claim that he
    should not be responsible for claims after his suspension until he had notice of his suspension.
    ¶ 30   Plaintiff replied in support of his exceptions. He argued that the Judge did not apply the
    rule limiting suspensions to one year because he did not cite or mention it and that any conflict of
    rules should result in the more specific rule being applied, which he argued was the rule providing
    for the reinstatement of a suspended vendor unless the vendor does not correct the deficiencies
    underlying the suspension. Lastly, plaintiff argued that the Department does not generate claims
    or bills and thus did not generate the records at issue.
    ¶ 31   The Director sent plaintiff’s counsel a letter on February 20, 2018, stating that she reviewed
    the Judge’s recommended decision, plaintiff’s exceptions, and the response and reply. The
    Director found the Judge’s recommendation to be warranted and formally adopted it as the final
    decision of herself and the Department. In addition to denying plaintiff’s application, “[t]his means
    the Department is entitled to recover the sum of $5,162.25 from your client and withhold $30,125
    in payments to your client.”
    ¶ 32                                  D. Circuit Court Review
    ¶ 33   Plaintiff filed a complaint for administrative review in the circuit court in March 2018. He
    alleged that the Director “failed to properly apply the law and in so doing misinterpreted the
    applicable rules” including 89 Ill. Adm. Code 140.17 (1992). He also alleged that the Department
    “evidentiary hearing was improperly and unfairly conducted due to the admission of exhibits,
    including but not limited to the admission into evidence of documents that were submitted by other
    vendors and not prepared by the” Department. Lastly, he alleged that the Director’s decision was
    contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence and was arbitrary, capricious, and contrary to law,
    “including the fact that the Department is seeking to recoup from Dr. Khan funds paid to
    - 10 -
    No. 1-19-1212
    pharmacies for medications actually provided to patients when Dr. Khan did not receive any
    portion of the payment for the medications.”
    ¶ 34   The Department and Director appeared in the circuit court and filed the Department record
    regarding plaintiff’s application.
    ¶ 35   Plaintiff filed a memorandum of law in support of his complaint, reiterating his arguments
    from his exceptions to the Judge’s recommended decision.
    ¶ 36   Defendants filed a response in support of the Director’s decision, reiterating the
    Department’s arguments below and arguing that plaintiff “admitted to seeing patients and writing
    prescription[s] during his suspension.”
    ¶ 37   Plaintiff filed a reply, arguing that the pharmacies who submitted claims were not his
    alternative payees and reiterating his arguments that (1) claims are not admissible as Department
    records because they are generated by vendors rather than the Department and (2) the Department
    was misapplying the term “vendor.”
    ¶ 38   The circuit court issued its order affirming the Director’s decision in January 2019. After
    describing the Department proceedings, the court addressed plaintiff’s challenges in his
    administrative complaint.
    ¶ 39   As to plaintiff’s claim that he had to be reinstated after a year’s suspension unless he did
    not remedy the issues underlying his suspension, which were not the grounds for the Director’s
    decision at issue, defendants argued that the Department rules provide for suspension or revocation
    of a vendor for not complying with the conditions of suspension including being a vendor, ordering
    goods or services from a vendor that the Department will pay for, and being an independent
    contractor for a vendor. The Judge had agreed with the Department, and the circuit court similarly
    found the Department’s interpretation of its rules “to be the more logical and comprehensive one.”
    The rule on one-year suspensions does not require the Department to disregard new violations of
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    No. 1-19-1212
    its rules merely because the original grounds for suspension do not persist, the court found. The
    court found no conflict between rules, as plaintiff argued, but merely different rules applicable
    under different circumstances.
    “Under Dr. Khan’s narrow interpretation of Section 19, the Department would only have
    the authority to discipline vendors who commit the same violation again and again. For
    vendors such as Dr. Khan, who commit multiple, varying violations, the Department would
    be forced to reinstate them at the end of their initial one-year suspension and could never
    seek to have them terminated or suspended for their new violation. This is clearly not what
    the Department intended when it promulgated Section 19 and Section 14.”
    ¶ 40   While plaintiff argued that the Department and Judge misapplied the term “vendor,” the
    court found plaintiff’s argument that a suspended vendor is not a vendor unsupported by the rules.
    Firstly, “[i]f Dr. Khan is correct that he was not a vendor, then Section 19 does not apply to him”
    as plaintiff argued on the previous point. Also, after reciting various rules, the court found,
    “Read together, these regulations show the Department has promulgated separate sets of
    requirements for enrollment and participation. An enrolled provider has a valid license and
    has submitted all necessary paperwork. A participating provider has a valid license, has
    submitted all necessary paperwork, and has also agreed to certain conditions on the
    provider’s provision of goods and services to Medicaid patients.”
    The court found that the evidence established that plaintiff qualified as a vendor, as he had a valid
    medical license and was by his own admission treating Medicaid patients during his suspension.
    Lastly, the court rejected plaintiff’s argument that suspended vendors cannot be vendors because
    they would inherently violate their suspensions, as a suspended vendor would violate Department
    rules not by status but by providing medical services or goods to Medicaid patients during
    suspension.
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    No. 1-19-1212
    ¶ 41   As to plaintiff’s challenge to the Judge’s admission of Department records as hearing
    exhibits, the court found that Department employee McClung generated the exhibits from
    Department records in the ordinary course of Department business. While claims are submitted by
    vendors, they are processed by the Department pursuant to Medicaid statutes and regulations, with
    the Department then recording its disposition of the claims in its records. “McClung’s reports are
    not records from other entities that the Department merely stores. They are records of transactions
    the Department either agrees or refuses to complete.” The court rejected the argument that the
    computer records were not of proven accuracy and found it to be undermined by plaintiff’s
    admission that he treated and wrote prescriptions for Medicaid patients during his suspension.
    Lastly, the Department rule on admitting Department records does not unduly elevate Department
    records over other records or exhibits because it merely creates a rebuttable presumption, which
    plaintiff did not successfully rebut.
    ¶ 42   As to plaintiff’s argument that he did not submit any bills or claims to the Department or
    receive payment on claims, during his suspension, the court noted Department rules that a claim
    must be signed by the service provider, an employee, or designated alternate payee and that the
    Department is not liable to pay claims that do not comply, as such claims are ineligible for
    payment. The court found that, when plaintiff writes a prescription, a pharmacy that fills it acts
    under his authority and carries out his directive. Moreover, when a pharmacy fills a prescription
    for a Medicaid patient that the physician was not authorized to write and the Department pays the
    prescription, it has spent taxpayer funds it was not permitted to pay. “The onus should be borne by
    Dr. Khan, who knew or certainly should have known he was not authorized to write prescriptions
    when he was not allowed to be a Medicaid provider. Unless the pharmacy was informed of such
    fact, there is a minuscule probability it would be privy to such information.” The court found that
    the Judge “was correct to assess the sum of $5,162.25 against Dr. Khan. But for Dr. Khan’s
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    No. 1-19-1212
    prescription, these moneys would have never been erroneously paid by the [Department] and Dr.
    Khan rightfully bears the responsibility of restoring these funds to the [Department] and to the
    taxpayers.” The court also found that this recovery of payments from plaintiff did not take his
    private property. The court rejected plaintiff’s argument that he should not be liable for
    prescriptions written before he had notice of his suspension on February 4, 2014, noting a
    Department rule that a decision is deemed served when mailed and the evidence that the Director’s
    decision was dated and mailed January 31, 2014.
    ¶ 43   Lastly, plaintiff argued that he should not be responsible for claims on prescriptions he
    wrote before his suspension. The court rejected this argument, finding that plaintiff:
    “need only have consulted his own records to determine which prescriptions to Medicaid
    patients with refills were still outstanding when he received notice of his suspension. [His]
    failure to consult these records and his failure to advise his patients that he was no longer
    allowed to order goods for them are not excuses for the fact that certain patients continued to
    refill prescriptions that could no longer he billed to Medicaid after Dr. Khan was suspended.”
    ¶ 44                                    E. Reconsideration
    ¶ 45   Plaintiff filed a motion to reconsider the court’s January 2019 order later that same month.
    Plaintiff argued that the Director’s decision was contrary to the Department rule that a vendor must
    be reinstated after a year’s suspension unless they have not remedied the violations that caused the
    suspension. The Department could separately charge any subsequent violations of its rules rather
    than denying reinstatement and, indeed, had no authority to deny reinstatement except for not
    remedying the grounds for suspension. While the court noted that plaintiff did not offer records to
    counter the Department’s allegations or to show specific inaccuracy within McClung’s reports,
    plaintiff argued that the accuracy of those reports was not proven. Also, a claim presented
    sometime after a prescription was filled is not a contemporaneous note of a transaction for
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    No. 1-19-1212
    business-record purposes, plaintiff argued. Plaintiff argued that his suspension as a Medicaid
    provider did not bar him from treating Medicaid patients, noting the evidence of crossover patients
    covered by both Medicaid and Medicare. He argued that he did not admit to treating Medicaid
    patients, as the court found, because he “would not know if services he rendered without billing
    would result in other providers billing the Medicaid Program for his prescriptions or services.”
    Plaintiff speculated that “the patient could have paid out-of-pocket for the prescription because the
    medication may not have been covered by the Medicaid program” or “the payment from the
    medication could have come from another program of insurance, such as Medicare.” Plaintiff did
    not bill for pharmacies or supervise their billing, nor were they his alternate payees, and the
    Department could seek recoupment of improper payments to pharmacies from the pharmacies. He
    could not prevent his patients from filling his prescriptions, nor would he know where they were
    having their prescriptions filled to instruct the pharmacies not to fill them. He could not abandon
    his patients, he could not know of the need to transfer or refer his patients until he knew he was
    suspended, and a referral or transfer would have to be to another Medicaid provider so as to not
    impact his patients. Plaintiff argued that the mailbox rule for the Director’s decision was applicable
    to filing an administrative review action, not to having actual notice of the decision.
    ¶ 46   Defendants filed a response to the motion to reconsider, arguing that (1) the Department
    was not required to reinstate plaintiff after a year’s suspension, (2) the Judge properly admitted
    Department records as hearing evidence, (3) plaintiff was properly held responsible for claims to
    the Department during his suspension, as he saw Medicaid patients while suspended but was
    prohibited from providing services or ordering goods for Medicaid patients during his suspension
    that would be paid in part or whole by the Department, and the Department generally does not pay
    pharmacies for prescriptions written by suspended physicians, and (4) the mailbox rule applies to
    the service of administrative decisions.
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    No. 1-19-1212
    ¶ 47   Plaintiff filed a reply in support of his motion to reconsider, reiterating arguments from his
    motion.
    ¶ 48   On May 30, 2019, the court issued its order denying reconsideration of its January 2019
    order. After reciting the procedural history including plaintiff’s reconsideration arguments, the
    court reiterated its analysis from the January 2019 order that the Director’s decision properly
    denied plaintiff’s application for reinstatement. The court also found that doing so was not an
    extension of the 2014 suspension but separate penalties for separate violations. Also, the Director’s
    decision was not contrary to or in excess of the Department’s statutory authority, the court found.
    As to the admission of exhibits, plaintiff’s argument rested on the proposition that the Department
    failed to prove their accuracy, a proposition the court rejected in detail. Also, Department records
    were contemporaneous notes of vendors submitting claims and the Department disposing of them.
    ¶ 49   As to holding plaintiff liable for pharmacies’ claims, “[i]t is not speculative to find Dr.
    Khan should have exercised discretion when accepting patients,” and the court was “unpersuaded
    that Dr. Khan was powerless to prevent prescriptions from being billed to Medicaid during his
    suspension.” Also, the Department is authorized by statute to recover wrongfully paid claims, and
    the “fact that these payments were made to the pharmacies does not change the fact that they were
    made as a result of Dr. Khan improperly writing prescriptions.” The court “did not find that Dr.
    Khan was required to force his patients to [forgo] their medication” but “merely found Dr. Khan
    took no steps to transition his patients’ prescriptions to another provider who was authorized to
    order goods through Medicaid” and that he was aware of his recommended suspension before it
    became a decision on January 31, 2014. Lastly, both statute (735 ILCS 5/3-103 (West 2018)) and
    Department rule provide for a mailbox rule for service of administrative decisions and do not
    provide that a decision is served when a party receives it. This appeal timely followed.
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    No. 1-19-1212
    ¶ 50                                      III. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 51   On appeal, plaintiff contends that the Director’s order was erroneous because (1) a
    suspension cannot last more than a year under the Department’s rules, (2) the Department’s
    hearing exhibits were erroneously admitted as business records, (3) suspension of a physician as a
    Medicaid vendor does not prohibit the physician from treating patients who are on Medicaid, and
    (4) plaintiff could not prevent his Medicaid patients from filling prescriptions.
    ¶ 52   Defendants respond that the Director properly denied the application, plaintiff was required
    to apply for reinstatement and the Director had the authority to deny that application, plaintiff’s
    interpretation of the Department’s rules was unsupported, the Judge did not abuse his discretion in
    admitting evidence, and the Director did not clearly err in determining that the Department could
    withhold payments to plaintiff for services rendered during his suspension.
    ¶ 53   The Illinois statute governing Medicaid, article V of the Public Aid Code (305 ILCS 5/5-1
    et seq. (West 2018)), provides in relevant part:
    “Applicants and recipients shall be entitled to free choice of those qualified practitioners
    *** and other dispensers of medical services meeting the requirements and complying with
    the rules and regulations of the Illinois Department. However, the Director of Healthcare
    and Family Services may, after providing reasonable notice and opportunity for hearing,
    deny, suspend or terminate any otherwise qualified person, firm, corporation, association,
    agency, institution, or other legal entity, from participation as a vendor of goods or services
    under [Medicaid] if the Director finds such vendor of medical services in violation of this
    Act or the policy or rules and regulations issued pursuant to this Act.” 305 ILCS 5/5-9
    (West 2018).
    ¶ 54   The Director’s decision regarding Medicaid vendor eligibility is reviewable, first by the
    circuit court, under the Administrative Review Law. 305 ILCS 5/12-4.25(G) (West 2018); 735
    - 17 -
    No. 1-19-1212
    ILCS 5/3-101 et seq. (West 2018). We review the administrative agency’s decision, not the circuit
    court’s decision. Senno v. Department of Healthcare & Family Services, 
    2015 IL App (1st) 132837
    , ¶ 33. Judicial review of an administrative decision extends to all questions of law and fact
    presented by the entire record, with the findings and conclusions of the administrative agency
    considered prima facie true and correct. 735 ILCS 5/3-110 (West 2018).
    ¶ 55   The standard of review depends on whether the issue presented is a question of fact,
    question of law, or mixed question of law and fact. Senno, 
    2015 IL App (1st) 132837
    , ¶¶ 33-34.
    On a question of fact, including credibility determinations, we reverse only when the findings were
    against the manifest weight of the evidence; that is, if the opposite conclusion is clearly evident.
    Id. ¶¶ 34, 40. A mixed question of law and fact concerns the legal effect of a given set of facts
    when the historical facts are admitted or established, the legal rule is undisputed, and the issue is
    whether the facts satisfy the applicable rule. Id. ¶ 34. A mixed question of law and fact is reversed
    only if the administrative decision was clearly erroneous; that is, if we have a definite and firm
    conviction that a mistake was made. Id. ¶¶ 34, 42. A legal question is reviewed de novo. Id. ¶ 34.
    ¶ 56                                A. Denial of Reinstatement
    ¶ 57   Plaintiff first contends that the Director’s decision was erroneous because a suspension
    cannot last more than a year under the Department’s rules, noting that a government agency like
    the Department cannot exceed its authority.
    ¶ 58   Under the Public Aid Code, the “Department may deny, suspend, or terminate the
    eligibility of any person [or entity] to participate as a vendor of goods or services to recipients
    under [Medicaid], or may exclude any such person or entity from participation as such a vendor,
    and may deny, suspend, or recover payments, if after reasonable notice and opportunity for a
    hearing the” Department makes certain findings, including that the “vendor is not complying with
    the Department’s policy or rules and regulations.” 305 ILCS 5/12-4.25(A)(a) (West 2018).
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    No. 1-19-1212
    ¶ 59    When a vendor has been suspended from participation in Medicaid,
    “the Director may require that such vendor correct any deficiencies which served as the
    basis for the suspension. The Director shall specify in the suspension order a specific period
    of time, which shall not exceed one year from the date of the order, during which a
    suspended vendor shall not be eligible to participate. At the conclusion of the period of
    suspension the Director shall reinstate such vendor, unless he finds that such vendor has
    not corrected deficiencies upon which the suspension was based.” 305 ILCS 5/12-4.25(D)
    (West 2018).
    A terminated, suspended, or excluded “vendor shall be barred from participation for at least one
    year.” Id.
    “At the end of one year a vendor who has been terminated, suspended, or excluded may
    apply for reinstatement to the program. Upon proper application to be reinstated such
    vendor may be deemed eligible by the Director providing that such vendor meets the
    requirements for eligibility under this Code. If such vendor is deemed not eligible for
    reinstatement, he shall be barred from again applying for reinstatement for one year from
    the date his application for reinstatement is denied.” Id.
    ¶ 60    Statutory construction is a question of law reviewed de novo. Senno, 
    2015 IL App (1st) 132837
    , ¶ 37. While statutory construction is usually not deferential, we give substantial weight
    and deference to the interpretation of the agency charged with administering a statute, recognizing
    the agency’s expertise, experience, and role as an informed source of legislative intent. 
    Id.
     That
    said, the agency’s interpretation is not binding, and we may reject an interpretation that is
    unreasonable or erroneous. 
    Id.
    ¶ 61    Here, section 12-4.25(D) of the Public Aid Code has two paragraphs addressing the
    duration of suspensions. One provides for a suspension that “shall not exceed one year,” under
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    No. 1-19-1212
    which the Director may require that the vendor correct any deficiencies that served as the basis for
    the suspension and “shall reinstate” the vendor after the period expires unless the Director finds
    that the vendor has not corrected the deficiencies underlying the suspension. (Emphases added.)
    305 ILCS 5/12-4.25(D) (West 2018). The other paragraph provides that a suspended “vendor shall
    be barred from participation for at least one year” and that after a year the vendor “may apply for
    reinstatement to the program” and “may be deemed eligible by the Director providing that such
    vendor meets the requirements for eligibility,” whereas if the “vendor is deemed not eligible for
    reinstatement, he shall be barred from again applying for reinstatement for one year from the date
    his application for reinstatement is denied.” (Emphasis added.) 
    Id.
     For clarity and brevity, we shall
    refer to these unnumbered paragraphs as the “not exceed one year” and “at least one year,”
    paragraphs respectively.
    ¶ 62     The Department implemented these statutory provisions in two rules. Rule 17, as we shall
    call it, provides:
    “In actions based on Section 140.16 in which the Notice states an intent to
    terminate, the final administrative decision may result in suspension for a specific time,
    which shall not exceed one year from the time of the final administrative decision, rather
    than termination, when the Department determines that:
    a) the seriousness and extent of the violations do not warrant termination;
    and
    b) the vendor had no prior history of violations of the Medical Assistance
    Program; and
    c) the lesser sanction of suspension will be sufficient to remedy the problem
    created by the vendor’s violations.” 89 Ill. Adm. Code 140.17 (1992).
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    No. 1-19-1212
    Rule 17 has no parallel provision to the “not exceed one year” paragraph concerning correcting
    deficiencies, either as a requirement of the suspension or a condition for reinstatement. The other
    rule, which we shall refer to as Rule 19, provides in relevant part:
    “a) A vendor that has been terminated, suspended or excluded from the Medical
    Assistance Program may not apply to participate for at least one year after the date of the
    final administrative decision terminating, suspending or excluding eligibility ***.
    ***
    b) After one year, a vendor who has been terminated, suspended or excluded ***
    may apply for reinstatement to the Medical Assistance Program. If a vendor’s application
    for reinstatement is denied by the Department, he or she shall be barred from again applying
    for reinstatement for one year after the date of the final administrative decision denying his
    or her application for reinstatement.
    ***
    d) At the end of a period of suspension, a vendor that has been suspended from the
    Medical Assistance Program shall be reinstated upon completion of the necessary
    enrollment forms and execution of a new vendor agreement unless it is determined that
    such vendor has not corrected the deficiencies upon which the suspension was based. If the
    deficiencies have not been corrected, the vendor shall, after notice and hearing, be
    terminated. The notice in any termination action based on this Section shall notify the
    vendor of the deficiencies not corrected.” 89 Ill. Adm. Code 140.19(a), (b), (d) (2013).
    ¶ 63   We note a significant discrepancy between the statutory provisions and the Department
    rules implementing them. While Rule 17 and the “not exceed one year” statutory provision both
    provide for a suspension not to exceed one year, Rule 17 does not provide for the Director requiring
    correction of the underlying deficiencies, nor does it require reinstatement unless the vendor failed
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    No. 1-19-1212
    to correct the underlying deficiencies. While Rule 19 and the “at least one year” provision both
    provide for suspensions of at least one year and both bar applying for reinstatement for a year after
    an unsuccessful application for reinstatement, the statutory paragraph provides that a suspended
    vendor “may be deemed eligible by the Director providing that such vendor meets the requirements
    for eligibility” (emphasis added) (305 ILCS 5/12-4.25(D) (West 2018)), while Rule 19(d) provides
    that a vendor shall be reinstated unless the vendor did not correct the underlying deficiencies. In
    short, Rule 17 does not directly parallel the “not exceed one year” statutory paragraph, nor does
    Rule 19 directly parallel the “at least one year” paragraph.
    ¶ 64   Here, plaintiff was suspended for one year on January 31, 2014, a term that notably falls
    under either the “not exceed one year” or “at least one year” statutory provisions. The Director’s
    decision suspending him did not require him to correct the deficiencies underlying his suspension
    as provided in the “not exceed one year” paragraph. The recommended decision adopted in the
    Director’s 2014 decision quoted Rule 17 and clearly applied Rule 17’s requirements in concluding
    that suspension for a year was the appropriate sanction. However, as stated above, Rule 17 does
    not directly correspond to the “not exceed one year” paragraph. Under such circumstances,
    plaintiff’s 2014 suspension for a year is ambiguous as to which statutory provision—which source
    of the Department’s authority—governs. In the proceedings now under review, the Department
    and its Judge and Director effectively treated the 2014 suspension as an “at least one year”
    suspension, both in applying that paragraph’s discretion in determining a suspended vendor’s
    eligibility and in barring plaintiff from reapplying for reinstatement for a year. In light of the
    aforesaid ambiguity, we cannot conclude that they exceeded their authority in doing so.
    ¶ 65                                   B. Evidentiary Ruling
    ¶ 66   Plaintiff also contends that the Judge erroneously admitted as evidence in the Department
    hearing the exhibits generated by McClung. Specifically, because the claims described in the
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    No. 1-19-1212
    exhibits came from vendors rather than being generated by the Department, the records in the
    exhibits were not Department records. Plaintiff also argues that the Department rule on admitting
    Department computerized records into hearing evidence is unfair, as it elevates Department
    records over other records and the rules applicable to civil cases in the courts should apply.
    ¶ 67   Those rules are in the Illinois Rules of Evidence. In particular, the rule of evidence defining
    public records as an exception to hearsay is:
    “The following are not excluded by the hearsay rule, even though the declarant is
    available as a witness:
    ***
    Records, reports, statements, or data compilations, in any form, of public
    offices or agencies, setting forth (A) the activities of the office or agency, (B)
    matters observed pursuant to duty imposed by law as to which matters there was a
    duty to report, excluding, however, police accident reports and in criminal cases
    medical records and matters observed by police officers and other law enforcement
    personnel, or (C) in a civil case or against the State in a criminal case, factual
    findings from a legally authorized investigation, but not findings containing
    expressions of opinions or the drawing of conclusions, unless the opposing party
    shows that the sources of information or other circumstances indicate lack of
    trustworthiness.” Ill. R. Evid. 803(8) (eff. Sep. 28, 2018).
    ¶ 68   The principles underlying Rule 803(8) are well established: the requirements for admitting
    public records as an exception to the hearsay rule are that the record was made in the ordinary
    course of business and was authorized by statute, rule, or regulation or required by the nature of
    the public office. Village of Arlington Heights v. Anderson, 
    2011 IL App (1st) 110748
    , ¶ 17.
    Documents reflecting regularly conducted governmental activities are made reliable by systematic
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    No. 1-19-1212
    checking or regularity, actual experience of reliance upon them, or a duty to make an accurate
    record. Id. ¶ 13. Rule 803(8) makes no distinction between public records and computerized public
    records. Id. ¶ 18. “[E]vidence of public records may be authenticated by producing ‘Evidence that:
    (A) a document was recorded or filed in a public office as authorized by law; or (B) a purported
    public record or statement is from the office where items of this kind are kept.’ ” (Emphasis added.)
    Id. (quoting Fed. R. Evid. 901(b)(7)).
    ¶ 69   The Department rule on admitting its computerized records into evidence is “Unless proven
    otherwise, computer generated documents prepared by the Department shall be presumed to
    constitute an accurate reflection of the Department records as to the amount and type of payment
    made to the vendor as well as the basis for such payment.” 89 Ill. Adm. Code 104.255 (1981).
    ¶ 70   Here, we conclude that the exhibits were not erroneously admitted. McClung’s testimony
    laid an ample foundation, whether under the Department rule or Rule 803(8): the Department keeps
    claims data in a standard computer system in the ordinary course of its business overseeing the
    Medicaid program, including its obligation to review the payments it made to Medicaid providers
    for services rendered to Medicaid patients. McClung testified to producing the reports in the
    ordinary course of Department business using the Department’s standard computer equipment and
    that each report accurately reflected the data in Department records.
    ¶ 71   As to the fact that vendors submitted the claims data, the Department claims records
    nonetheless “set[ ] forth *** the activities of the” Department as provided in Rule 803(8). The core
    activity of the Medicaid program, implemented in Illinois by the Department, is paying vendors to
    provide medical services or goods to Medicaid patients. In other words, taking in claims from
    Medicaid vendors and processing them is required by the nature of the Department. As McClung’s
    testimony established, the Department receives claims and acts upon them by paying them,
    rejecting them, holding them, or otherwise processing them, and the Department records that
    - 24 -
    No. 1-19-1212
    processing in the same claims records. The data received from vendors in claims—including which
    physician provided care or wrote a prescription—affects the Department’s decision on a claim,
    which in turn may elicit more information from a vendor, which again affects the Department’s
    decision, all of which is recorded in the claims records at issue. As the circuit court stated,
    “McClung’s reports are not records from other entities that the Department merely stores. They
    are records of transactions the Department either agrees or refuses to complete.”
    ¶ 72   Plaintiff’s argument that Medicaid fraud exists goes to the weight of the evidence and not
    its admissibility. The Department routinely pays vendors based on vendor-submitted claims like
    the ones that commenced the claims records here, showing its reliance on claims in one of the most
    concrete manners possible. The fact that some claims vary from that routine and are rebutted does
    not render claims records generally untrustworthy.
    ¶ 73   Finally, we do not find the Department rule to be unfair, as both it and Rule 803(8)
    expressly create a rebuttable presumption that public records are trustworthy and admissible.
    Plaintiff’s general challenges to the reliability of computers were reasonably rejected by the Judge
    as insufficient rebuttal, and we see no reason to conclude that they would not be similarly rejected
    under Rule 803(8).
    ¶ 74                                  C. Director’s Decision
    ¶ 75   Lastly, plaintiff contends that the Director’s decision was erroneous because suspension of
    a physician as a Medicaid vendor does not prohibit him from treating patients who are on the
    Medicaid program and because plaintiff could not prevent his Medicaid patients from filling
    prescriptions.
    ¶ 76   Under the Public Aid Code, the “Department may deny, suspend, or terminate the
    eligibility of any person [or entity] to participate as a vendor of goods or services to recipients
    under [Medicaid], or may exclude any such person or entity from participation as such a vendor,
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    No. 1-19-1212
    and may deny, suspend, or recover payments, if after reasonable notice and opportunity for a
    hearing the” Department makes certain findings, including that a “vendor is not complying with
    the Department’s policy or rules and regulations.” 305 ILCS 5/12-4.25(A)(a) (West 2018). The
    Department “may recover money improperly or erroneously paid, or overpayments, either by
    setoff, crediting against future billings or by requiring direct repayment to the” Department, and
    “may suspend or deny payment, in whole or in part, if such payment would be improper or
    erroneous or would otherwise result in overpayment.” 305 ILCS 5/12-4.25(E) (West 2018).
    “Payments may be suspended, denied, or recovered from a vendor or alternate payee *** for
    services rendered in violation of the Illinois Department’s provider notices, statutes, rules, and
    regulations ***.” 305 ILCS 5/12-4.25(E)(1)(i) (West 2018).
    ¶ 77   A Department rule provides in relevant part,
    “1) Upon being terminated, suspended, excluded or barred, and while the disability from
    Medical Assistance Program participation remains in effect, an entity:
    A) Cannot be a vendor, ***;
    B) Cannot be an employer of a vendor; a person with management responsibility
    for an employer of a vendor; an officer of an employer of a vendor; ***
    C) Cannot order goods or services from a vendor when payment for such goods or
    services will be made in whole or in part by the Department; [or]
    D) Cannot render goods or services as an employee of a vendor or as an independent
    contractor with a vendor for which payment will be made in whole or in part by the
    Department[.]
    ***
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    No. 1-19-1212
    4) After the provision of written notice to the affected parties, the Department may deny
    payment for goods or services rendered or ordered by an entity that violates the provisions
    of subsection (a)(1)(A), (B), (C) or (D).” 89 Ill. Adm. Code 140.32(a)(1), (4) (2013).
    ¶ 78    Here, we conclude that the Director’s decision was not clearly erroneous. Plaintiff
    acknowledges that a physician suspended from Medicaid participation cannot order for Medicaid
    patients goods and services for which payment will be rejected, in whole or part, by the
    Department, but plaintiff maintains that he should not be held responsible because he did not
    submit the claims for which he was held liable. However, nothing in section 12-4.25(A) or (E)
    limits the Department’s recovery of payments from a vendor for services rendered in violation of
    statutes or Department rules to the vendor’s own claims or payments. By issuing prescriptions and
    providing medical service for Medicaid patients during his suspension, he ordered goods and
    services for which he knew or should know that Medicaid claims would be presented. While he
    did not present claims, he continued to perform acts that would cause claims to be presented, and
    it would not require plaintiff to “predict the future” (as he argues) to know that he was causing
    Medicaid claims to be presented. As the circuit court stated, the “onus should be borne by Dr.
    Khan, who knew or certainly should have known he was not authorized to write prescriptions when
    he was not allowed to be a Medicaid provider. Unless the pharmacy was informed of such fact,
    there is a minuscule probability it would be privy to such information.”
    ¶ 79    Plaintiff points to crossover patients, those covered by both Medicare and Medicaid, but it
    does not follow from the fact that such patients exist or that the Department excluded such patients
    from the hearing exhibits that plaintiff “was entitled to write prescriptions for these patients” as he
    claims without citing authority. Moreover, because crossover patients were excluded from the
    exhibits, plaintiff was not held liable for their claims.
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    No. 1-19-1212
    ¶ 80   Plaintiff raises the specter of leaving Medicaid patients unserved if he simply stopped
    serving them, and in the Department hearing he dismissed the idea of having to refer his patients
    to other physicians after his suspension. However, his suspension did not fall suddenly from a
    cloudless sky: his January 2014 suspension was recommended in May 2013. Moreover, he was
    providing care to Medicaid patients through the Organization, which would mitigate the
    difficulties of referral. Indeed, right around the time of his suspension and well after his suspension
    was recommended, plaintiff renewed his agreement with the Organization, through which he
    served Medicaid patients and to which he represented that he was a Medicaid provider in good
    standing with no investigations against him. While plaintiff testified that he kept providing care to
    Medicaid patients through the Organization because it did not tell him to stop, his false and
    misleading representations to the Organization would have kept it from doing so unless and until
    it learned of his suspension.
    ¶ 81   As to plaintiff’s argument that he could not keep his patients from filling their prescriptions,
    the Director’s decision did not require him to do so. The Director adopted the Judge’s
    recommendation that the Department recover $5162.25 from plaintiff, which the Judge derived by
    narrowing the 217 prescriptions at issue to 126 prescriptions written after plaintiff’s suspension.
    Plaintiff’s renewal of his contract with the Organization and continuing provision of care to
    Medicaid patients through the Organization, and the fact that he was held liable only for
    prescriptions written after his suspension, belie his argument that he could not control the
    presentation of claims.
    ¶ 82                                    IV. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 83   Accordingly, we affirm the decision of the Director of the Department of Healthcare and
    Family Services.
    ¶ 84   Affirmed.
    - 28 -
    No. 1-19-1212
    No. 1-19-1212
    Cite as:                 Khan v. Department of Healthcare & Family Services, 
    2020 IL App (1st) 191212
    Decision Under Review:   Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 18-CH-
    2921; the Hon. Moshe Jacobius, Judge, presiding.
    Attorneys                Alan Rhine, of Chicago, for appellant.
    for
    Appellant:
    Attorneys                Kwame Raoul, Attorney General, of Chicago (Jane Elinor Notz,
    for                      Solicitor General, and Carson R. Griffis, Assistant Attorney
    Appellee:                General, of counsel), for appellees.
    - 29 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1-19-1212

Citation Numbers: 2020 IL App (1st) 191212

Filed Date: 11/20/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/24/2020