Source: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-ca6-24-01379/USCOURTS-ca6-24-01379-0/pdf.json

Nature of Suit Code: 370
Nature of Suit: Other Fraud
Cause of Action: 

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NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION

File Name: 25a0018n.06

No. 24-1379

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ex rel. STATE 

OF MICHIGAN, et al.,

Plaintiffs,

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ex rel. 

MICHAEL ANGELO; MSP WB, LLC,

Relators-Appellants,

v.

STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE 

INSURANCE COMPANY, et. al.,

Defendants-Appellees.

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ON APPEAL FROM THE 

UNITED STATES DISTRICT 

COURT FOR THE EASTERN 

DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN

OPINION

Before: McKEAGUE, GRIFFIN, and LARSEN, Circuit Judges.

LARSEN, Circuit Judge. Qui tam relators MSP WB, LLC and Michael Angelo sued 316 

private insurers and an insurance-industry service provider, Insurance Services Office, Inc., 

purportedly on behalf of the United States of America and several states. Relators alleged that 

Defendants had engaged in a scheme to defraud Medicare and Medicaid in violation of the False 

Claims Act and related state false claims acts. Defendants moved to dismiss Relators’ first 

amended complaint. The district court granted the motion, denied Relators leave to file a second 

amended complaint, and dismissed the case. Relators now appeal. For the reasons stated, we 

AFFIRM.

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I.

In some circumstances, “an individual who has incurred medical expenses can lawfully 

seek recovery from more than one insurer.” United States ex rel. Angelo v. Allstate Ins. Co., 106 

F.4th 441, 445 (6th Cir. 2024). This is also true when one of those insurers is Medicare. Id. In 

the past, Medicare paid first (as the “primary payer”), while the private insurer would take care of 

the rest (as the “secondary payer”). Id. at 445–46. The Medicare Secondary Payer Act of 1980 

flipped those roles, making the private insurer the primary payer, and Medicare or a 

non‐governmental Medicare Advantage Organization (MAO) the secondary payer.1 Id. “An 

MAO is a private, for-profit company that contracts with [the government] to provide medical 

coverage, based on a capitated (or fixed) monthly payment per enrollee (rather than fees for 

specific services).” Joint Appellees Br. at 6.

Even though Medicare is the secondary payer, Congress authorized Medicare to pay 

“expenses up front” when the primary payer does not “promptly meet its obligations,” “so long as 

the primary payer eventually reimburses Medicare for any amounts it overpaid.” Allstate, 106 

F.4th at 446 (citation omitted). This might happen, for example, when the “primary payer is 

contesting its liability to cover an incurred expense.” Id. “To ensure that Medicare does, in fact, 

get reimbursed for payments it fronts for a primary payer, the Medicare Secondary Payer Act 

authorizes the government to sue the primary payer when the primary payer fails to reimburse the 

government.” Id. 

Congress also has created reporting requirements to cut down on fraud and assist with the 

coordination of benefits. Under § 111 of the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Extension Act of 

1 For Medicaid, regulations make the private insurer the primary payer, and Medicaid the 

secondary payer. See, e.g., 42 C.F.R. § 433.139. The parties treat the requirements for Medicare 

the same as those for Medicaid, so we do too. 

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2007, 42 U.S.C. § 1395y(b)(7)–(8), private insurers must file quarterly reports with the Centers 

for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). Allstate, 106 F.4th at 446. “The reports must identify 

those beneficiaries seeking coverage for medical expenses from the private insurer who the insurer 

has determined may also be covered under Medicare.” Id. Violating § 111 may result in a civil 

monetary penalty. Id. Insurers may file the reports themselves, or they may contract with a 

third-party, such as defendant Insurance Services Office, Inc. (ISO), to help with the reporting 

requirements. Section 111 reports “must be made ‘regardless of whether or not there is a 

determination or admission’” that the insurer is liable for the claim. Id. (quoting 42 U.S.C. 

§ 1395y(b)(8)(C)).

Perhaps not surprisingly, “[t]his statutory scheme has spawned an industry of compliance, 

data analytics, and litigation, of which the parties here are emblematic.” Id. Relator MSP WB, 

LLC and its affiliated entities seek to identify § 111 violations and unreimbursed conditional 

secondary payments made by the government or an MAO. Once uncovered, MSP WB sues the 

primary payers. Relator Michael Angelo “owns and operates a lawyer referral service, as well as 

health care facilities nationwide, including a medical transportation company, radiology clinics, a 

pharmacy, and a surgery center.” Id. at 447.

On behalf of the United States and several states, Relators filed a qui tam action against 

316 private insurers (the Insurer Defendants) and ISO. Relators claimed that Defendants engaged 

in a scheme to defraud the Medicare and Medicaid programs. Asserting a “reverse False Claims 

Act (FCA)” violation, Relators alleged that the insurers knowingly made false records or 

statements in violation of § 111 in order to decrease or avoid a payment owed to the government 

or an MAO. They also raised a conspiracy claim under the FCA, as well as claims under the 

various state false claims statutes. The federal government and all states declined to intervene. 

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The Insurer Defendants and ISO moved to dismiss. After a hearing on the motion, but before the 

district court issued its decision, Relators moved for leave to file a second amended complaint. 

The district court subsequently granted the motion to dismiss in its entirety and denied Relators’ 

motion for leave to file a second amended complaint. Relators now appeal.

II.

We review de novo the district court’s decision on a Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 

12(b)(6) motion to dismiss. See Johnson v. Parker-Hannifin Corp., 122 F.4th 205, 212 (6th Cir. 

2024). To survive a motion to dismiss, “a plaintiff must plead ‘sufficient factual matter, accepted 

as true, to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.’” Id. (quoting Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 

U.S. 662, 678 (2009)). Because “the False Claims Act is, at its core, an anti-fraud statute,” the 

“complaint must likewise satisfy Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b)’s requirement that fraud be 

pled with particularity.” Allstate, 106 F.4th at 448.

A.

Relators first challenge the district court’s dismissal of their reverse FCA claim against the 

Insurer Defendants. Relators argue that the Insurer Defendants knowingly made false records or 

statements in violation of § 111 in order to decrease or avoid payments to MAOs.2 

A reverse FCA claim is one in which the person “knowingly makes, uses, or causes to be 

made or used, a false record or statement material to an obligation to pay or transmit money or 

property to the Government, or knowingly conceals or knowingly and improperly avoids or 

2 The parties dispute whether nonpayment or underpayment to MAOs (private contractors), rather 

than the government itself, can be the subject of a reverse FCA claim. In Allstate, the panel noted 

“our sister circuits’ concerns with assigning False Claims Act liability for payments owed to 

MAOs, which are private entities, and not the government.” 106 F.4th at 450. The panel set that 

issue aside, however, because it wasn’t necessary to the resolution of the appeal. Id. We do the 

same here.

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decreases an obligation to pay or transmit money or property to the Government.” 31 U.S.C. 

§ 3729(a)(1)(G). In contrast to a prototypical FCA claim, which penalizes a party for falsely 

obtaining money from the government, a reverse FCA claim is premised on a party’s “false or 

fraudulent effort to avoid a payment owed to the government.” Allstate, 106 F.4th at 448. “Key 

components” of the claim “include knowledge and duty.” Id. “[R]elators must plead, with 

specificity, that [the insurer] had an established duty, which we have interpreted to mean an 

affirmative obligation to pay money or property.” Id. (citations omitted). They must also plead

“knowledge, that is, that [the insurer] knew that it violated its established duty to pay.” Id. at 448–

49.

After the district court issued its decision in this case, a panel of this court affirmed the

dismissal of a nearly identical reverse FCA claim. In United States ex rel. Angelo v. Allstate 

Insurance Co., the same relators (MSP WB and Angelo) sued numerous private insurers and ISO, 

raising the same reverse FCA claim based on analogous purported violations—failing to comply 

with § 111, resulting in underpayment or nonpayment to the government. Id. at 446–47. The 

panel in Allstate concluded that the allegations against Allstate were insufficient to state a reverse 

FCA claim. Id. at 449. As for duty, “the complaint lack[ed] detail as to whether and when Allstate 

incurred an obligation to pay for medical expenses for which it was liable and, relatedly, what 

conditional payments were made by Medicare to fill that void.” Id. Although the complaint 

alleged “that Allstate denied one exemplar’s claims for insurance benefits,” it contained “no facts 

demonstrating that Allstate was responsible for the underlying medical expenses in the first place, 

let alone facts showing that Medicare made conditional payments for those expenses.” Id. Nor 

were the allegations that Allstate and other insurers failed to comply with § 111’s reporting 

requirements sufficient to plead a duty to pay because such reports must be filed regardless of 

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whether there has been a determination or admission of liability. Id. at 450. “In other words, 

insurers file the reports even when it has not been established that the insurer is the ‘primary 

payer,’” so the “reports do not indicate, with any particularity, that an insurer has a financial 

obligation to the government.” Id. As for knowledge, the complaint failed to show “how and 

when [the insurers were] aware of any conditional payments,” “let alone that [they] knowingly 

evaded [their] duty to pay.” Id. at 451. For these reasons, the relators’ reverse FCA claim failed. 

Here, the complaint divides the 316 Insurer Defendants into 14 different groups but 

provides details regarding the conduct of just 9 insurers. Yet, as the Insurer Defendants note, only 

5 of the 9 are named defendants in the case. Comparing the allegations against these five insurers

to the allegations made in Allstate shows that they are materially identical. They describe the 

accidents and injuries, allege that the insurers covered the insureds through no-fault policies, and 

aver that because of the policies, each insurer was “the primary payer responsible for payment 

and/or reimbursement” of the medical expenses. R. 20, Amended Complaint, PageID 486–503; 

United States ex rel. Angelo v. Allstate Ins. Co., 2:19-cv-11615, Second Amended Complaint, R. 

41, PageID 1089–90. Both complaints allege that each insurer reported the information to ISO 

and “admitted its primary payer status related to payment/and or reimbursement” and that “[t]his 

reporting demonstrates that [the insurer] was aware of the accident and its responsibility to 

reimburse” the insured. R. 20, Amended Complaint, PageID 486–503; Allstate, 2:19-cv-11615, 

Second Amended Complaint, R. 41, PageID 1089–90. 

Given that the allegations and examples in Allstate are materially identical to the 

allegations and examples in this case, Allstate controls. As in Allstate, the complaint here fails to 

plead with specificity that the insurers were liable for the underlying medical expenses, that 

Medicare made conditional payments for those expenses, or that the insurers had any obligation to 

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reimburse the government. “All of these questions need answers before relators can show 

plausibly that” the insurers were the “primary payer[s], yet failed to make reimbursement 

payments to Medicare.” Allstate, 106 F.4th at 450. The complaint also is deficient in pleading

knowledge; just as in Allstate, Relators do not sufficiently allege that the insurers knew of 

conditional payments made by Medicare or of their obligation to reimburse Medicare. So Allstate

requires dismissal of the reverse FCA claim against the five Insurer Defendants for which the 

complaint provided specific examples of alleged fraud.

Relators attempt to distinguish Allstate, explaining that, in this case, they have alleged that 

the Insurer Defendants “intentionally d[id] not learn of the beneficiaries’ Medicare status” and that 

Relators offer actual insurance contract numbers. Appellants Br. at 45. But that does not 

distinguish Allstate. The complaint in Allstate contained similar allegations and information. See 

Allstate, 2:19-cv-11615, Second Amended Complaint, R. 41, PageID 1042 (“Primary Plans cannot 

avoid their repayment obligations under the MSP statute by willfully blinding themselves to a 

claimant’s Medicare beneficiary status or to the amount that Medicare has paid for care for an 

individual they know to be a beneficiary.”); id. at 1089 (providing the contract policy number for 

the Allstate exemplar). Allstate requires dismissal of the claims against the five insurers for whom 

the complaint provided specific examples of alleged fraud.

What of the claims against the other defendants? Those must be dismissed too. Relators 

first argue that they were permitted to group some of those defendants with the five defendants for 

which the complaint provided examples of fraud, as a matter of group pleading. We are skeptical. 

See United States ex rel. Bledsoe v. Cmty. Health Sys., 342 F.3d 634, 643 (6th Cir. 2003). But that 

argument is of no consequence, in any event. Because the specific examples of fraud alleged in 

the complaint against the five defendants were insufficient to state a reverse FCA claim, so are the 

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generalized allegations against any insurers whom Relators have attempted to group with them. 

As for the remaining defendants, whom Relators do not attempt to tie to any of the five defendants, 

Relators say they should have more leeway when pleading fraud against them because discovery 

hasn’t occurred. That, however, is contrary to our caselaw; the generalized allegations were 

insufficient to meet Rule 9(b)’s pleading requirements and thus to state a reverse FCA claim. See

Bledsoe, 342 F.3d at 643 (stating that relators “may not rely upon blanket references to acts or 

omissions by all of the ‘defendants’” (citation omitted)); United States ex rel. Bledsoe v. Cmty. 

Health Sys., 501 F.3d 493, 504 (6th Cir. 2007) (“We hold that pleading an actual false claim with 

particularity is an indispensable element of a complaint that alleges a FCA violation in compliance 

with Rule 9(b).”). 

For these reasons, the district court didn’t err by dismissing Relators’ reverse FCA claim

against the Insurer Defendants.3

B.

Relators next challenge the dismissal of their conspiracy claim under § 3729(a)(1)(C) of 

the FCA. To state a conspiracy claim under the FCA, a relator must “plead facts showing that 

there was a plan or agreement ‘to commit a violation of’ one or more of the FCA subsections.” 

United States ex rel. Ibanez v. Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., 874 F.3d 905, 917 (6th Cir. 2017) 

(quoting 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1)(C)). “[I]t is not enough for relators to show there was an 

agreement that made it likely there would be a violation of the FCA; they must show an agreement 

was made in order to violate the FCA.” Id. “[R]elators must allege who was [a] party to the 

agreement, how the agreement was reached, when the agreement was reached, and what were its 

3 The district court also determined that the public disclosure bar under 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4) 

required dismissal of Relators’ reverse FCA claim. Because we conclude that Relators failed to 

allege a reverse FCA claim, we don’t address this alternative reason for dismissal.

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terms.” Allstate, 106 F.4th at 452. Relators say they satisfied this standard because they “explicitly 

alleged that ISO, as the Section 111 reporting clearinghouse for every Insurer Defendant, 

facilitated each Insurer Defendant’s obfuscation of their reimbursement obligations and that each 

Insurer Defendant enacted policies and procedures, in coordination with ISO, to avoid collecting 

and reporting (through ISO) the requisite information under Section 111.” Appellants Br. at 68 

(emphasis omitted). 

Dismissal of Relators’ conspiracy claim was appropriate for two reasons. First, as stated 

above, Relators have failed to establish a violation of the FCA. And without an FCA violation, 

there is no injury and no viable conspiracy claim. See United States v. Murphy, 937 F.2d 1032, 

1039 (6th Cir. 1991) (stating that for a FCA civil conspiracy claim, a relator must allege, among 

other things, “that an overt act was committed in furtherance of the conspiracy that caused injury 

to the complainant” (citation omitted)). Second, we affirmed the dismissal of a materially similar 

conspiracy claim in Allstate. See 106 F.4th at 451–53. And Relators make no attempt to 

distinguish Allstate’s dismissal of the conspiracy claim. For these reasons, the district court didn’t 

err by dismissing Relators’ civil conspiracy claim. 

C.

Finally, we note that Relators have peppered their briefs with the suggestion that their 

proffered second amended complaint would have cured any deficiencies in the first. Two 

problems. Relators don’t clearly challenge the district court’s decision to deny leave to amend on 

appeal. See United States. v. Calvetti, 836 F.3d 654, 664 (6th Cir. 2016) (finding forfeited an issue 

not included either “in the table of contents or in the ‘issues presented’ section of [the] appellate 

brief” (quoting Fed. R. App. P. 28(a)(5))). And to the extent they do challenge the district court’s 

decision, they fail to confront the reasons for the district court’s decision. Not only did the district 

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court determine that the proposed amendments would be futile, the court also found that Relators 

unreasonably delayed in moving to file a second amended complaint and exercised bad faith in so 

doing. On appeal, Relators do not even mention the court’s findings of untimeliness and bad faith. 

So either way, Relators have abandoned any challenge to the district court’s decision to deny leave 

to amend. See Castellon-Vogel v. Int’l Paper Co., 829 F. App’x 100, 102–03 (6th Cir. 2020)

(stating that an appellant abandons a claim if he fails to challenge the district court’s conclusion 

on appeal or if he fails to “confront the district court’s reasons for dismissing [his] claims and 

explain why the court was wrong”). 

* * *

We AFFIRM.

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