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Nature of Suit Code: 890
Nature of Suit: Other Statutory Actions
Cause of Action: 

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United States Court of Appeals

FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT

Argued December 6, 2011 Decided July 27, 2012

No. 11-5028

MICHAEL FRIEDMAN, ET AL.,

APPELLANTS

v.

KATHLEEN SEBELIUS, IN HER OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS 

SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES 

AND DANIEL R. LEVINSON, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS 

INSPECTOR GENERAL, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN 

SERVICES,

APPELLEES

Appeal from the United States District Court

for the District of Columbia

(No. 1:09-cv-02028)

Carter G. Phillips argued the cause for appellants. With 

him on the briefs were Matthew D. Krueger, Joseph R. 

Guerra, Anand H. Das, Jonathan L. Abram, and Jonathan L. 

Diesenhaus.

Lisa S. Blatt, Jeffrey L. Handwerker, and Dirk C. Phillips

were on the brief for amicus curiae Pharmaceutical Research 

and Manufacturers of America in support of appellants.

USCA Case #11-5028 Document #1386058 Filed: 07/27/2012 Page 1 of 35
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Amar D. Sarwal was on the brief for amicus curiae 

Association of Corporate Counsel in support of appellants.

Michael A. Carvin, Daniel J. Popeo, and Richard A. 

Samp were on the brief for amicus curiae Washington Legal 

Foundation in support of appellants. 

Robin M. Meriweather, Assistant U.S. Attorney, argued 

the cause for appellees. With her on the brief were Ronald C. 

Machen Jr., U.S. Attorney, and R. Craig Lawrence, Assistant 

U.S. Attorney.

Before: SENTELLE, Chief Judge, WILLIAMS and 

GINSBURG, Senior Circuit Judges.

Opinion for the Court by Senior Circuit Judge 

GINSBURG.

Opinion concurring in part, dissenting in part, and 

dissenting from the judgment filed by Chief Judge SENTELLE.

Opinion dissenting in part, concurring in part, and 

concurring in the judgment filed by Senior Circuit Judge

WILLIAMS.

GINSBURG, Senior Circuit Judge: Michael Friedman, 

Paul Goldenheim, and Howard Udell were executives at the 

Purdue Frederick Company when it misbranded a drug, to 

wit, the painkiller OxyContin, a schedule II controlled 

substance. The Company was convicted of fraudulent 

misbranding, a felony, whilst the executives were convicted 

under the “responsible corporate officer” doctrine of the 

misdemeanor of misbranding a drug. Based upon their 

convictions, the Secretary of Health and Human Services later 

excluded the individuals from participation in Federal health 

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care programs for 12 years, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1320a7(b). They sought review of the Secretary’s decision in the 

district court, arguing section 1320a-7(b) does not authorize 

their exclusion and, in any event, the Secretary’s decision was 

unsupported by substantial evidence and was arbitrary and 

capricious because she failed to give a reasoned explanation 

for the allegedly unprecedented length of their exclusions. 

The district court granted summary judgment for the 

Secretary. 

We hold the statute authorized the Secretary’s exclusion 

of the three executives but her decision was arbitrary and 

capricious for want of a reasoned explanation for the length of 

their exclusions. We therefore reverse the judgment of the 

district court and direct it to remand the matter to the 

Secretary for further proceedings.

I. Background

The Appellants were senior corporate officers at Purdue 

when the Company developed and marketed OxyContin. 

According to the Information initiating the criminal cases 

against the Appellants and the Company, the “misbranding” 

occurred when unnamed employees at Purdue, “with the 

intent to defraud or mislead, marketed and promoted 

OxyContin as less addictive, less subject to abuse and 

diversion, and less likely to cause tolerance and withdrawal 

than other pain medications.” United States v. Purdue 

Frederick Co., 495 F. Supp. 2d 569, 571 (W.D. Va. 2007). 

Purdue pleaded guilty to felony misbranding, in violation of 

21 U.S.C. § 331(a) and § 333(a)(2). Id. at 570. Pursuant to 

the plea agreement, the district court put the Company on 

probation for five years, fined it $500,000, and imposed other 

monetary sanctions totaling approximately $600 million, of 

which approximately $160 million was earmarked for 

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restitution to Federal and State health care agencies, which 

had been large buyers of the misbranded drug. Id. at 572. At 

the same time, the Appellants pleaded guilty to misdemeanor 

misbranding, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 331(a) and § 

333(a)(1), for their admitted failure to prevent Purdue’s 

fraudulent marketing of OxyContin; each was sentenced to do 

400 hours of community service, fined $5,000, and put on 

probation for three years. The sentencing court also ordered 

the Appellants to disgorge compensation they had received 

from Purdue totaling approximately $34.5 million.

Under the “responsible corporate officer” (RCO) 

doctrine, a “corporate agent, through whose act, default, or 

omission the corporation committed a crime” in violation of 

the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act may be held criminally 

liable for the wrongdoing of the corporation “whether or not 

the crime required ‘consciousness of wrongdoing’” by the 

agent. United States v. Park, 421 U.S. 658, 670 (1975). 

Criminal liability under the RCO doctrine extends “not only 

to those corporate agents who themselves committed the 

criminal act, but also to those who by virtue of their 

managerial positions or other similar relation to the actor 

could be deemed responsible for its commission.” Id. A 

corporate officer may therefore be guilty of misdemeanor 

misbranding without “knowledge of, or personal participation 

in,” the underlying fraudulent conduct. Id. The Appellants, 

as part of their plea agreements, admitted having 

“responsibility and authority either to prevent in the first 

instance or to promptly correct” the misrepresentations certain 

unnamed Purdue employees made regarding OxyContin and 

thereby, under the RCO doctrine, admitted being guilty of 

misdemeanor misbranding.

Several months after the Appellants had been convicted, 

the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) of the Department 

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of Health and Human Services determined the Appellants 

should be excluded from participation in Federal health care 

programs for 20 years, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7(b)(1) 

and (3).* The OIG based the length of the Appellants’ 

exclusion upon three aggravating factors listed in the 

Department’s published regulations — the conduct underlying 

the convictions lasting more than one year, the amount of the 

financial loss, and the significant adverse physical or mental 

impact upon program beneficiaries. See 42 C.F.R. § 

1001.201(b)(2)(i)–(iii); id. § 1001.401(c)(2)(i)–(ii).

The executives appealed the OIG’s determination to an 

Administrative Law Judge and ultimately to the Departmental 

Appeals Board, to which the Secretary had delegated 

authority to review decisions to exclude an individual. 

During the pendency of the appeal to the ALJ, the OIG 

reduced the length of the exclusion to 15 years because the 

 * Section 1320a-7(b)(1)(a) authorizes the Secretary to exclude any 

“individual ... [who] has been convicted ... of a criminal offense 

consisting of a misdemeanor relating to fraud, theft, embezzlement, 

breach of fiduciary responsibility, or other financial misconduct ... 

in connection with the delivery of a health care item or service.” 

Section 1320a-7(b)(3) authorizes the Secretary to exclude any 

“individual ... [who] has been convicted ... of a criminal offense 

consisting of a misdemeanor relating to the unlawful manufacture, 

distribution, prescription, or dispensing of a controlled substance.” 

The length of an exclusion predicated upon a conviction for a 

misdemeanor “shall be 3 years, unless the Secretary determines in 

accordance with published regulations that a shorter period is 

appropriate because of mitigating circumstances or that a longer 

period is appropriate because of aggravating circumstances.” 42 

U.S.C. § 1320a-(7)(c)(3)(D). 42 C.F.R. § 1001.2 provides “items 

and services furnished, ordered, or prescribed by [an excluded 

person] will not be reimbursed under Medicare, Medicaid and all 

other Federal health care programs until [that person] is reinstated 

by the OIG.” 

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Appellants had assisted law enforcement authorities to 

combat abuse of OxyContin, a mitigating factor. The ALJ 

affirmed the 15-year exclusion as being within a “reasonable 

range.” The DAB affirmed that decision, interpreting the 

statute to authorize the exclusion of an individual convicted of 

a misdemeanor when the facts underlying that conviction 

have a “nexus or common sense connection” either to fraud or 

to the distribution of a controlled substance. The DAB found 

the Appellants’ “misdemeanor misbranding offense” had the 

requisite connection to fraud because “[t]he actual 

misbranding that resulted in [their] conviction was the 

[Company’s] fraudulent misbranding of OxyContin.” The 

DAB further reduced the length of the exclusion to 12 years 

on the ground the “ALJ’s finding that [the Appellants’] 

crimes had an adverse impact on program beneficiaries and 

others is not supported by substantial evidence” because there 

is no evidence the misbranded Oxycontin had any adverse 

effect.

The Appellants sought review in the district court, which 

held the statute authorized their exclusion because, “by its 

plain terms, section 1320a-7(b)(1) appears to permit the 

exclusion of anyone convicted of an offense ‘having a 

connection with or reference to’ fraud or financial misconduct 

in the delivery of a health care item or service.” Friedman v. 

Sebelius, 755 F. Supp. 2d 98, 107–08 (D.D.C. 2010) (quoting 

Morales v. Trans World Airlines, Inc., 504 U.S. 374, 384 

(1992)).*

 * Because we hold the exclusion was lawful under section (b)(1), 

we do not pass upon the parties’ dispute over whether the 

Appellants could be excluded pursuant to section (b)(3).

 The district court upheld the length of the exclusion 

because it concluded the DAB’s application of the 

aggravating and mitigating factors was supported by 

substantial evidence. Id. at 117.

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II. Analysis

We review the judgment of the district court de novo. Se. 

Ala. Med. Ctr. v. Sebelius, 572 F.3d 912, 916 (D.C. Cir. 2009) 

(“In reviewing HHS’s actions on appeal from the district 

court, this court addresses the issue de novo, without 

deference to the decision of the district court” (internal 

quotation marks and citation omitted)). We are to uphold the 

Secretary’s decision to exclude the Appellants if it was “based 

on substantial evidence in the record and correctly applie[d] 

the relevant legal standards.” Rosello v. Astrue, 529 F.3d 

1181, 1184 (D.C. Cir. 2008) (internal quotation marks and 

citation omitted); see also 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7(f) (providing 

for review pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 405(g) of the Secretary’s 

decision to exclude an individual); id. § 405(g) (“The findings 

of the [Secretary of Health and Human Services] as to any 

fact, if supported by substantial evidence, shall be 

conclusive”). We will defer to the Secretary’s reasonable 

interpretation of the statute she administers. Sullivan v. 

Everhart, 494 U.S. 83, 88–89 (1990) (applying Chevron

deference in reviewing per § 405(g) Secretary’s interpretation 

of the Social Security Act). 

The Appellants contend section 1320a-7(b)(1) does not 

authorize their exclusion because misdemeanor misbranding 

is not a “misdemeanor relating to fraud.” They also argue 

that, even if the statute authorizes their exclusion, the 

Secretary’s decision to exclude them for 12 years was 

unsupported by substantial evidence and was arbitrary and 

capricious.

A. Statutory Grounds for the Appellants’ Exclusion

The Appellants first argue misdemeanor misbranding is 

not a “criminal offense consisting in a misdemeanor relating 

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to fraud” because it lacks the allegedly requisite “‘generic’ 

relationship to fraud.” On their view, it is not enough for the 

conduct underlying a particular conviction to be factually 

related to fraud; the generic misdemeanor must comprise the 

“core elements” of fraud, one of which is scienter. 

Misdemeanor misbranding does not necessarily require a 

culpable mental state because a conviction for the offense 

may be, and in this case was, predicated upon the responsible 

corporate officer doctrine, which entails strict liability. The 

Secretary defends her interpretation by arguing that under the 

DAB’s “‘intuitive, ordinary reading’ of the statute, [the 

Appellants’] convictions ... ‘relate to’ fraud or unlawful 

distribution of a controlled substance [because] there is a 

‘nexus’ or ‘common sense connection’ between their 

convictions and those statutory bases for exclusion.”

This case therefore presents the question whether the 

phrase “misdemeanor relating to fraud” in section 1320a7(b)(1)(A) refers to a generic criminal offense or to the facts 

underlying the particular defendant’s conviction. As the 

Supreme Court has pointed out, “in ordinary speech words 

such as ‘crime,’ ‘felony,’ ‘offense,’ and the like sometimes 

refer to a generic crime, say, the crime of fraud or theft in 

general, and sometimes refer to the specific acts in which an 

offender engaged on a specific occasion, say, the fraud that 

the defendant planned and executed last month.” Nijhawan v. 

Holder, 557 U.S. 29, 33–34 (2009). The “categorical 

approach,” according to which the statutory term refers to the 

generic criminal offense, “prohibits the later court from 

delving into particular facts disclosed by the record of 

conviction” and directs that court to “look only to the fact of 

conviction and the statutory definition of the prior offense,” 

including the elements of that offense. Shepard v. United 

States, 544 U.S. 13, 17 (2005) (internal quotation marks and 

citation omitted). Under the “circumstance-specific” 

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approach, by contrast, the statutory term refers to the 

particular conduct giving rise to the conviction and so the 

court “must look to the facts and circumstances underlying an 

offender’s conviction” to determine whether that conviction is 

covered by the statute. Nijhawan, 557 U.S. at 34. Whether 

the Congress intended the categorical or the circumstancespecific approach is to be discerned from the text, structure, 

and purpose of the particular statute at issue. Compare Taylor 

v. United States, 495 U.S. 575, 600–602 (1990) (applying 

“formal categorical approach” to phrase “any crime ... that ... 

is burglary” in statute providing for sentencing enhancement 

based upon defendant’s prior convictions), with Nijhawan, 

557 U.S. at 36 (applying circumstance-specific approach to 

phrase “fraud or deceit in which the loss to the victim or 

victims exceeds $10,000” in statute providing for 

deportation).

Although a reviewing court proceeding under section 

405(g) generally defers to the Secretary’s interpretation of an 

ambiguous provision of a statute she administers, see 

Everhart, 494 U.S. at 88–89, the Appellants argue her 

interpretation of section 1320a-7(b)(1)(A) in this case does 

not warrant deference: “Nothing in the exclusion statute 

evinces Congress’ intent to empower the agency to ‘speak 

with the force of law’ ... when addressing ambiguities in the 

phrase[] ‘misdemeanor relating to fraud.’” Brief at 20, 

quoting United States v. Mead Corp., 533 U.S. 218, 229 

(2001). They contend the Congress did not delegate authority 

to interpret the phrase “misdemeanor relating to fraud” 

because that phrase is a term of art in criminal law and 

therefore outside the scope of the Secretary’s subject-matter 

expertise and more suited to judicial interpretation. 

Courts defer to an agency’s interpretation of a law it 

administers only to the extent the Congress has delegated 

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interpretive authority to the agency. Adams Fruit Co. v. 

Barrett, 494 U.S. 638, 649 (1990).*

 * There appears to be a split in authority on the question whether to 

defer to an agency’s interpretation of a term drawn from criminal 

law but used in a statute the agency administers. Compare, e.g.,

Wong Park v. Att’y Gen., 472 F.3d 66, 70 (3d Cir. 2006) (“[N]either 

the Attorney General nor the BIA ... is entitled to Chevron

deference as to whether a particular federal offense is an aggravated 

felony [as that term appears in the Immigration and Naturalization 

Act]” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)), with James 

v. Mukasey, 522 F.3d 250, 254 (2d Cir. 2008) (“we defer to the 

BIA’s interpretation of [the INA] in determining the meaning of 

‘sexual abuse of a minor’” as it appears in the INA but not to its 

“interpret[ation] of state or federal criminal laws” themselves), and

Mugalli v. Ashcroft, 258 F.3d 52, 56 (2d Cir. 2001) (“[W]e defer to 

the BIA’s interpretation of [the INA] in determining the meaning of 

‘sexual abuse of a minor’”). In Nijhawan the Supreme Court, 

neither deferring nor mentioning the Government’s argument for 

deferring to the BIA’s interpretation of the INA, decided the term 

“fraud or deceit in which the loss to the victim or victims exceeds 

$10,000” calls for the circumstance-specific approach, 557 U.S. at 

36, even though the Court had only recently made clear that, 

“[c]onsistent with the rule in Chevron ..., the BIA is entitled to 

deference in interpreting ambiguous provisions of the INA,” 

Negusie v. Holder, 555 U.S. 511, 516 (2009) (denying Chevron

deference where BIA decision was based upon “mistaken legal 

premise” regarding a prior decision of the Court).

 With respect to section 

1320a-7(b)(1), however, we need not decide whether the 

Congress authorized the Secretary “to speak with the force of 

law when [she] addresses ambiguity in the statute,” Mead 

Corp., 533 U.S. at 229, because the statute unambiguously 

authorizes her to exclude the Appellants. The text, structure, 

and purpose of the statute, viz., to protect Federal health care 

programs from financial harm wrought by untrustworthy 

providers, all indicate the Secretary’s circumstance-specific 

approach is proper; i.e., the statute authorizes exclusion of an 

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individual whose conviction was for conduct factually related 

to fraud.

Section 1320a-7(b)(1)(A), 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7(b)(1),*

provides:

(b) Permissive exclusion 

The Secretary may exclude ... from participation in 

any Federal health care program ...

(1) Conviction relating to fraud 

Any individual or entity that has been 

convicted ...

(A) of a criminal offense consisting of 

a misdemeanor relating to fraud, theft, 

embezzlement, breach of fiduciary 

responsibility, or other financial 

misconduct .... 

The key phrase in this provision is “relating to,” the 

“ordinary meaning of [which] is a broad one — ‘to stand in 

some relation; to have bearing or concern; to pertain; refer; to 

bring into association with or connection with.’” Morales,

504 U.S. at 383 (quoting BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1158 

(5th ed. 1979)); see also Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Mass., 

471 U.S. 724, 739 (1985) (“The phrase ‘relate to’ [has a] 

broad common-sense meaning” and a statutory provision 

containing the phrase therefore has “broad scope”). 

Accordingly, just as the Secretary contends, a misdemeanor 

“relat[es] to” fraud “in the normal sense of the phrase, if it has 

a connection with, or reference to” fraud, Ingersoll-Rand Co. 

v. McClendon, 498 U.S. 133, 139 (1990). The established 

meaning of these “deliberately expansive” words, Pilot Life 

 * The full text of the relevant sections of the permissive exclusion 

statute, 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7(b)(1)–(3), is set out in the Appendix.

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Ins. Co. v. Dedeaux, 481 U.S. 41, 46 (1987), is therefore at 

odds with the Appellants’ crabbed and formalistic 

interpretation. Rather than referring only to generic 

misdemeanor offenses that share all the “core elements” of 

fraud, the capacious phrase includes any criminal conduct that 

has a factual “connection with” fraud. Cf. Morales, 504 U.S. 

at 388–89 (“compelling or restricting ‘[p]rice advertising 

surely ‘relates to’ price’” because “it is clear as an economic 

matter that state restrictions on fare advertising have the 

forbidden significant effect upon fares” (citation omitted)). 

The rest of section 1320a-7(b)(1)(A) confirms its broad 

scope. It authorizes the Secretary to exclude not only a 

person convicted of “a criminal offense consisting of a 

misdemeanor relating to fraud” but also one convicted of “a 

criminal offense consisting of a misdemeanor relating to ... 

theft, embezzlement, breach of fiduciary duty, or other 

financial misconduct.” The residual clause “other financial 

misconduct” expressly refers to a type of “conduct,” not to a 

genus of criminal offense. The relationship of a 

“misdemeanor” to “other financial misconduct” must 

therefore be a factual one. The term “misdemeanor” 

accordingly refers to the particular circumstances of an 

individual’s conviction, and “relating to” must denote a 

factual relationship between the conduct underlying the 

misdemeanor and the conduct underlying a “fraud.” 

The heading of section 1320a-7(b)(1) (“Conviction 

relating to fraud”) further supports this reading of the 

provision. “Although the title of a statute and the heading of 

a section cannot limit the plain meaning of the text, they 

remain tools available for the resolution of a doubt about 

statutory meaning.” Hays v. Sebelius 589 F.3d 1279, 1282 

(D.C. Cir. 2009) (internal quotation marks and citation 

omitted); see also INS v. Nat’l Ctr. for Immigrants’ Rights, 

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Inc., 502 U.S. 183, 189 (1991) (“[T]he title of a statute or 

section can aid in resolving an ambiguity in the legislation’s 

text” (citations omitted)). In the heading to section 1320a7(b)(1) as enacted, “relating to fraud” modifies 

“[c]onviction.” See Medicare and Medicaid Patient Program 

Protection Act of 1987, Pub. L. No. 100-93, 101 Stat. 680 

(1987) (codified at 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7). In the provision 

itself, of course, “relating to fraud” modifies “misdemeanor.” 

Thus, we see the Congress used “conviction” and 

“misdemeanor” interchangeably, and a “conviction,” is, of 

course, a particular event on a particular occasion and so 

refers to a set of facts, and not to a generic crime. Hence, the 

parallel between the heading of section 1320a-7(b)(1) and the 

text of section 1320a-7(b)(1)(A) implies the word 

“misdemeanor” also refers to the facts underlying a particular 

conviction.

The text and structure of the provisions adjoining section 

1320a-7(b)(1)(A) further confirm this interpretation. In both 

section (b)(1)(B) and section (b)(2), the phrase “relating to” 

denotes a factual relationship. The former provision 

authorizes the Secretary to exclude a person convicted of “a 

criminal offense relating to fraud ... with respect to any act or 

omission in a program (other than a health care program) 

operated by or financed in whole or in part by any Federal, 

State, or local government agency.” The phrase “fraud ... 

with respect to any act or omission in a program” does not 

refer to a generic offense but rather to criminal conduct that, 

as a matter of fact, relates to a program financed by a 

government agency. Addressing an analogous phrase in an 

immigration statute providing for deportation, the Supreme 

Court explained:

[The phrase] “falsely making, forging, counterfeiting, 

mutilating, or altering a passport ... except in the case 

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of a first offense for which the alien ... committed the 

offense for the purpose of assisting ... the alien’s 

spouse, child, or parent” ... cannot possibly refer to a 

generic crime. That is because there is no such 

generic crime; there is no criminal statute that contains 

any such exception. Thus if the provision is to have 

any meaning at all, the exception must refer to the 

particular circumstances in which an offender 

committed the crime on a particular occasion. 

Nijhawan, 557 U.S. at 37–38 (quoting 8 U.S.C. § 

1101(a)(43)(P)). 

Like the exception in the immigration statute analyzed in 

Nijhawan, the limiting clause in section (b)(1)(B) does not 

pick out a generic class of offenses because there is no 

generic crime of defrauding a program other than a health 

care program financed in whole or in part by a government 

agency. Again like the exception in the immigration statute, 

the limiting clause in section (b)(1)(B), therefore, restricts the 

scope of the named offense – fraud – to frauds committed in 

certain factual circumstances. It follows that the “criminal 

offense” listed in section (b)(1)(B) must “relat[e] to fraud” 

because it has a factual relationship to conduct committed on 

a particular occasion.

Section 1320a-7(b)(2)(ii) similarly authorizes the 

Secretary to exclude from participation in Federal health care 

programs any individual “convicted ... in connection with the 

interference with or obstruction of any investigation or audit 

related to ... the use of funds received ... from any Federal 

health care program.” The phrase “the use of funds” does not 

refer to a generic offense and therefore must refer to specific 

facts on a particular occasion. As a result, “related to” in this 

provision denotes a factual connection between an 

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“investigation or audit” and “the use of funds.” It is simply 

implausible that the Congress used “relating to” in section

1320a-7(b)(1)(B) and the functionally identical phrase 

“related to” in section 1320a-7(b)(2) to denote a relationship 

between factual situations but used the same phrase in section 

1320a-7(b)(1) to denote a relationship between generic 

offenses. The only reasonable interpretation is that in all 

three provisions the phrases refer to a factual relationship. 

See Mohamad v. Rajoub, 634 F.3d 604, 608 (D.C. Cir. 2011) 

(“the same word[s] appearing in different portions of a single 

provision or act [are] taken to have the same meaning in each 

appearance” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)).

The Appellants offer several arguments for a contrary 

reading. First, they argue applying the circumstance-specific 

approach gives no separate meaning to the phrase “relating 

to” in section (b)(1)(A) and the phrase “in connection with” in 

sections (b)(1)(A)(i) and (b)(2). According to the Appellants, 

because “in connection with” denotes a factual relationship 

between the conviction and “the delivery of a health care item 

or service” in section (b)(1)(A)(i) and between the conviction 

and “the interference with or obstruction of any investigation 

or audit” in section (b)(2), “relating to” in section (b)(1)(A) 

must denote a generic, not a factual relationship. The 

Appellant’s interpretation of section (b)(1)(A)(i) 

(“misdemeanor relating to fraud ... in connection with the 

delivery of a health care service or item”) is implausible. 

Under that interpretation, “fraud” would refer in section 

(b)(1)(A) to a generic criminal offense, to which the 

“misdemeanor” must “relat[e]” generically, but the same 

appearance of the same word would refer in section 

(b)(1)(A)(i) to the facts underlying the defendant’s conviction, 

to which the delivery of a health care item or service must be 

“connect[ed]” factually. An interpretation that requires a 

single instance of a single word to carry two different 

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meanings in two consecutive clauses of a single sentence 

simply cannot stand. Far more plausible is the Secretary’s 

reading that the Congress used “relating to” and “in 

connection with” each to denote a factual relationship –

respectively, the relationship between the facts underlying a 

person’s conviction and conduct that would qualify as 

“fraud”; and the relationship between that conduct and the 

delivery of health care. The use of the phrases “relating to” 

and “in connection with,” therefore does not imply “relating 

to” must denote a non-factual, generic relationship.*

Next, the Appellants analogize the text of section 

(b)(1)(A) to a provision of the Immigration and Naturalization 

Act which authorized the deportation of an alien “convicted 

of a violation of ... any law or regulation relating to the 

possession of or traffic in narcotic drugs.” 8 U.S.C. § 

1227(a)(b)(i) (1976). The Appellants, citing Castaneda de 

Esper v. INS, 557 F.2d 79 (6th Cir. 1977), contend the 

Congress “used a verbal formulation – ‘relating to [specified 

offenses]’ – that had long been used in the INA, and already 

had a settled meaning” denoting a generic, non-factual 

relationship. The Secretary effectively counters that “relating 

to” in the INA has no such settled meaning, contrasting 

Castaneda, which held a conviction for misprision is not a 

violation of a law “relating to the illicit possession of or 

traffic in narcotic drugs” because misprision is “a criminal 

offense separate and distinct from the particular felony 

 * The Appellants also make passing reference to the legislative 

history of the exclusion statute, which they claim “draws a clear 

distinction between the generic relationship that the misdemeanor 

must have to fraud, and the circumstance-specific relationship that 

the conviction must have to a health-care related item, service, or 

program,” but the quoted snippets of that history merely repeat the 

text of the statute and therefore cast no light upon its proper 

interpretation.

USCA Case #11-5028 Document #1386058 Filed: 07/27/2012 Page 16 of 35
17

concealed,” 557 F.2d at 83, with Urena-Ramirez v. Ashcroft, 

341 F.3d 51 (1st Cir. 2003), which held the defendant’s 

violation of the Travel Act was a “violation of ... any law or 

regulation ... relating to a controlled substance” because the 

“conduct underlying the proscribed travel ... was tantamount 

to aiding and abetting the distribution of narcotics,” id. at 54–

55, 57. See also Johnson v. INS, 971 F.2d 340, 342–43 (9th 

Cir. 1992) (holding defendant’s violation of the Travel Act 

was “violation of ... any law or regulation ... relating to a 

controlled substance” because the “criminal conduct involved 

narcotics and controlled substances”). 

Moreover, we note the wording of the INA supports the 

application of the categorical approach much more readily 

than does the text of section (b)(1)(A). The Appellants err by 

focusing narrowly upon the phrase “relating to” in the INA, 

paying no heed to the words connected by that phrase — “law 

or regulation” and “the possession of or traffic in narcotic 

drugs.” A “law or regulation,” unlike a “misdemeanor,” 

cannot refer to the facts of a particular incident.

The Appellants also argue the circumstance-specific

approach leads to an “absurd result,” to wit: “Individuals who 

negligently submit false or fraudulent claims ... are not subject 

to exclusion under [42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7a(a)]” whereas, under 

the Secretary’s approach to section 1320a-7(b), one “who 

pleads guilty of a strict liability misdemeanor offense that 

requires no proof of conscious wrongdoing, fraud, or 

falsehoods is excludable based on misconduct by others that 

he had no knowledge of.” Viewed in context, however, there 

is no absurdity. Section 1320a-7a(a) gives the Secretary 

discretion whether to exclude the individual from 

participation in Federal health care programs but makes a fine 

mandatory. The statute at issue here similarly authorizes 

exclusion but neither requires nor authorizes a fine; for a 

USCA Case #11-5028 Document #1386058 Filed: 07/27/2012 Page 17 of 35
18

lesser penalty, a lesser mens rea requirement, or indeed no 

mens rea requirement at all, is not illogical.

Finally, the Appellants and their amici argue, because the 

Secretary’s interpretation permits her to impose “careerending disabilities” upon someone whose criminal conviction 

required no mens rea, it raises a serious question of validity 

under the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the 

Constitution of the United States. Quoting Morrisette v. 

United States, 342 U.S. 246, 256 (1952), they note the 

Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of strict liability 

crimes “in part, because their associated penalties ‘commonly 

are relatively small, and conviction does no grave damage to 

an offender’s reputation.’” Section 1320a-7(b)(1), however, 

is not a criminal statute and, although exclusion may indeed 

have serious consequences, we do not think excluding an 

individual under 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7(b) on the basis of his 

conviction for a strict liability offense raises any significant 

concern with due process. Exclusion effectively prohibits one 

from working for a government contractor or supplier. Surely 

the Government constitutionally may refuse to deal further 

with senior corporate officers who could have but failed to 

prevent a fraud against the Government on their watch.

For the foregoing reasons, we hold section 1320a7(b)(1)(A) authorizes the Secretary to exclude from 

participation in Federal health care programs an individual 

convicted of a misdemeanor if the conduct underlying that 

conviction is factually related to fraud. The Appellants do not 

dispute they are excludable under this circumstance-specific 

approach: Their convictions for misdemeanor misbranding 

were predicated upon the company they led having pleaded

guilty to fraudulently misbranding a drug and they admitted 

having “responsibility and authority either to prevent in the 

first instance or to promptly correct” that fraud; they did 

USCA Case #11-5028 Document #1386058 Filed: 07/27/2012 Page 18 of 35
19

neither.*

 Accordingly, section 1320a-7(b)(1)(A) authorized 

the Secretary to exclude them for a time from participation in 

Federal health care programs.

 * JUDGE WILLIAMS objects (at pages 4–5 of his opinion) that the 

interpretation of section 1320a-7(b) proposed by the Secretary and 

adopted by the Court does not “articulate” the type or limit of the 

factual relationships sufficient to support an individual’s exclusion. 

This objection is misplaced for two reasons. First, as explained 

above, the Appellants do not dispute they are subject to exclusion 

under the circumstance-specific approach; they argue only that the 

categorical approach applies. They never raised, either before the 

district court or before this court, an argument of the sort advanced 

by Judge Williams; any such argument is therefore not properly 

before the Court. See Benoit v. Dep’t of Agric., 608 F.3d 17, 21 

(D.C. Cir. 2010) (arguments not raised in district court are forfeit). 

Second, there is nothing unusual or improper in a court adopting an 

interpretation of a statute that does not settle every case that might 

arise in the future. See, e.g., Morales, 504 U.S. at 390 (declining to 

decide whether “nonprice aspects of fare advertising ... ‘relat[e] to’

rates,” regarding which “the connection would obviously be far 

more tenuous. ... ‘[T]he present litigation plainly does not present a 

borderline question, and we express no views about where it would 

be appropriate to draw the line.’” (quoting Shaw v. Delta Air Lines, 

Inc., 463 U.S. 85, 100 n.21 (1983))). If there is ever a case of the 

sort that concerns Judge Williams — one in which the Secretary 

excludes a person based upon the view that “virtually any overlap 

between the facts required for fraud and those involved in (or 

required for) the offense of conviction is enough,” (Opinion of 

Williams, J., at 3) — then the court shall at that time have the 

occasion and the duty to resolve that issue. The Appellants’

convictions under the responsible corporate officer doctrine, 

however, were manifestly “related to” a fraud. So too would be a 

conviction for other respondeat superior criminal offenses,

attempted fraud, conspiracy to commit fraud, and the like — no one 

of which need share all the “core elements” of fraud. 

USCA Case #11-5028 Document #1386058 Filed: 07/27/2012 Page 19 of 35
20

B. Length of the Appellants’ Exclusion

The Appellants also challenge the Secretary’s decision to 

exclude them for fully 12 years, four times as long as the 

presumptive baseline in the statute: “the period of exclusion 

shall be 3 years” unless the Secretary adjusts the length of 

exclusion on the basis of aggravating or mitigating factors “in 

accordance with published regulations.” 42 U.S.C. § 1320a7(c)(3)(D). The Appellants argue the Secretary took into 

account two aggravating factors for which there was not 

substantial evidence, failed to take into account one 

mitigating factor without substantial evidence for so doing, 

and gave them too little credit with respect to a second 

mitigating factor. They also argue the Secretary erred by 

failing to reconcile the length of their exclusion with the 

agency’s prior decisions.

1. Aggravating and mitigating factors

First the Appellants claim the Secretary improperly 

applied the aggravating factor of their being responsible for a 

financial loss in excess of $5,000 because, they allege, there is 

no evidence in the record of any actual financial loss. The 

pertinent regulation establishes an aggravating factor when 

“[t]he acts resulting in the conviction ... caused ... a financial 

loss of $5,000 or more to a Government program or to one or 

more other entities, or had a significant financial impact on 

program beneficiaries or other individuals.” 42 C.F.R. § 

1001.201(b)(2)(i). The Appellants’ argument is frivolous. 

They admitted responsibility for a crime, misdemeanor 

misbranding, that caused, at least in part, financial losses for 

which Purdue paid $160 million in “restitution.” Specifically, 

Purdue falsely portrayed OxyContin to be less addictive, less 

subject to abuse and diversion, and less likely to cause 

tolerance and withdrawal than other painkillers on the market, 

USCA Case #11-5028 Document #1386058 Filed: 07/27/2012 Page 20 of 35
21

which misrepresentation certainly led some doctors to 

prescribe it when they would otherwise have prescribed a 

different painkiller or none at all. Purdue had almost $3 

billion in revenues from OxyContin during the time it 

misbranded the drug, much of it from Federal and state health 

care programs which paid for prescriptions for OxyContin, 

some of which would not have been written but for the 

misbranding. Even if the amount of restitution to which 

Purdue agreed was the product of a negotiation unbounded by 

forensic accounting, as the Appellants claim, their suggestion 

the losses they caused did not exceed a mere $5,000 is 

preposterous. Accordingly, the Secretary’s application of this 

aggravating factor was supported by substantial evidence.

Second, the Appellants argue the same regulation, and 

another which establishes an aggravating factor based upon 

the duration of the excluded person’s criminal conduct, refer 

only to “acts” whereas the Appellants’ violations consisted 

solely of omissions. See 42 C.F.R. § 1001.201(b)(2)(i) (“The 

acts resulting in the conviction ... caused ... a financial loss”); 

id. at § 1001.201(b)(2)(ii) (“The acts that resulted in the 

conviction ... were committed over a period of one year or 

more”). The Secretary replies the “regulatory phrase ‘acts that 

resulted in the conviction’ is used to describe the wrongful 

conduct considered when setting an appropriate exclusion 

period.” As the Appellants point out, however, the 

regulations elsewhere distinguish between “acts” and 

“omissions,” see 42 C.F.R. § 1001.201(a)(1)(ii) (“With 

respect to any act or omission in a health care program ....”). 

Still, nothing turns upon the distinction where it is made, and 

in light of the deference due the Secretary’s interpretation of 

her own regulation, see Auer v. Robbins, 519 U.S. 452, 461 

(1997), we conclude her interpretation equating the two terms 

when only “acts” are proscribed is a permissible one.

USCA Case #11-5028 Document #1386058 Filed: 07/27/2012 Page 21 of 35
22

Third, the Appellants argue the Secretary erred in failing 

to take into account their lack of “conscious wrongdoing.” 

The pertinent regulation establishes as a mitigating factor 

“that the individual has a mental, physical, or emotional

condition ... that reduced the individual’s culpability.” 42 

C.F.R. § 1001.201(b)(3)(ii). The Appellants argue their “lack 

of any awareness of wrongdoing” is one such “mental 

condition,” and the Secretary therefore erred in failing to give 

them credit for this mitigating factor. The regulation plainly 

refers to mental, physical, or emotional illness or disability, 

and the Appellants have not alleged they are afflicted by any 

such condition. Accordingly, the Secretary’s decision not to 

apply this mitigating factor is supported by substantial 

evidence. 

Fourth, the Appellants argue the Secretary gave 

insufficient weight to their cooperation with law enforcement 

agencies, notwithstanding that she reduced the period of their 

exclusion by five years for this reason. Determining the 

precise weight to be given an aggravating or mitigating factor 

in setting the period of an exclusion is within the Secretary’s 

discretion, which the Appellants have not shown she abused.

2. Departure from precedent: Review under the arbitrary 

and capricious standard? 

We turn finally to the Appellants’ only substantial 

objection: That the Secretary failed to justify the length of 

their exclusion in light of the agency’s prior decisions, as 

required by the Administrative Procedure Act. See 

Ramaprakash v. FAA, 346 F.3d 1121, 1125 (D.C. Cir. 2003) 

(“An agency’s failure to come to grips with [its] conflicting 

precedent constitutes an inexcusable departure from the 

essential requirement of reasoned decision making” (internal 

quotation marks and citation omitted)). 

USCA Case #11-5028 Document #1386058 Filed: 07/27/2012 Page 22 of 35
23

The Secretary claims she was not required to do so 

because the APA is not applicable to the decision under 

review; as we explained in National Kidney Patients 

Association v. Sullivan, 958 F.2d 1127, 1130 (D.C. Cir. 

1992), “Section 405(h) [of 42 U.S.C.] ... makes [42 U.S.C.] § 

405(g) the exclusive avenue for judicial review of 

administrative decisions,” and review under section 405(g), 

according to the Secretary, precludes application of the APA.

 

The APA provides a “[s]ubsequent statute may not be 

held to supersede or modify [the APA] except to the extent 

that it does so expressly.” 5 U.S.C. § 559. The exclusion 

statute, including section 1320a-7(f)(1), postdates the APA 

but section 405(g) predates it; therefore it is not immediately 

clear whether the limitation in section 559 — and therefore 

the APA — applies here. Regardless whether we look to 

section 1320a-7(f)(1) or to section 405(g), however, we agree 

with the Appellants that the statute authorizes review under 

the arbitrary and capricious standard.

Section 1320a-7(f)(1) does not expressly purport to 

supersede the APA and therefore does not preclude review 

under the arbitrary and capricious standard of the APA. The 

Secretary would instead have us focus upon section 405(g), 

which section 1320a-7(f)(1) incorporates by reference and 

which, because it predates the APA, need not “expressly” 

purport to supersede the APA in order to provide the 

exclusive standard for our review. Looking to section 405(g), 

however, we see the pertinent provision is virtually identical 

to the corresponding provision in the National Labor 

Relations Act. Compare 42 U.S.C. § 405(g) (“The findings of 

the Commissioner of Social Security as to any fact, if

supported by substantial evidence, shall be conclusive”), with

29 U.S.C. § 160(e) (“The findings of the [National Labor 

USCA Case #11-5028 Document #1386058 Filed: 07/27/2012 Page 23 of 35
24

Relations Board] with respect to questions of fact if supported 

by substantial evidence on the record considered as a whole 

shall be conclusive”). Neither statute expressly calls for any 

review other than review of findings of fact for substantial 

evidence. The Supreme Court has nonetheless construed the 

NLRA to incorporate review under the arbitrary and 

capricious standard of the APA. Universal Camera Corp. v. 

NLRB, 340 U.S. 474, 487 (1951); Linden Lumber Div., 

Summer & Co. v. NLRB, 419 U.S. 301, 309–10 (1974); see 

also Diamond Walnut Growers, Inc. v. NLRB, 113 F.3d 1259, 

1266 (D.C. Cir. 1997) (en banc). Considering that section 

405(g), like section 160(e) of the NLRA, is silent regarding 

the standard of review except with regard to questions of fact, 

we see no reason to depart from the path indicated by the 

Supreme Court. We therefore review the Secretary’s decision 

to exclude the Appellants according to the arbitrary and 

capricious standard, which requires that the Secretary provide 

a reasoned explanation for departing from agency precedent.

3. Applying the arbitrary and capricious standard of 

review

The Appellants may overstate their case by claiming their 

12-year exclusion is “unprecedented”; the DAB cited a 

number of prior decisions in which it had excluded 

individuals for more than 10 years. The DAB’s mere citation 

of these cases, however, does not stand as a reasoned 

explanation if, as the Appellants argue, those cases are 

materially different. And so it seems they are: As the 

Appellants point out, every one of the cases cited by the DAB 

involved a mandatory exclusion with a presumptive baseline 

of five years, not a discretionary exclusion with a presumptive 

baseline of three years; in addition, every cited case involved 

either a felony conviction or a conviction for Medicare fraud 

for which the defendant was incarcerated, none of which 

USCA Case #11-5028 Document #1386058 Filed: 07/27/2012 Page 24 of 35
25

factors is present in this case.*

 * See Marcia C. Smith a/k/a Marcia Ellison Smith, DAB No. 2046 

(2006) (12-year exclusion: mandatory five-year exclusion for a 

conviction resulting in incarceration, plus three aggravating factors 

and no mitigating factors); Russell Mark Posner, DAB No. 2033 

(2006) (14-year exclusion: mandatory five-year exclusion for three 

felony convictions resulting in incarceration, plus three aggravating 

factors and no mitigating factors); Stacy R. Gale, DAB No. 1941 

(2004) (15-year exclusion: mandatory five-year exclusion for 

conviction resulting in incarceration, plus three aggravating factors 

and no mitigating factors); Jeremy Robinson, DAB No. 1905 

(2004) (15-year exclusion: mandatory five-year exclusion for 

felony conviction resulting in incarceration, plus three aggravating 

factors and no mitigating factors); Thomas D. Harris, DAB No. 

1881 (2003) (15-year exclusion: mandatory five-year exclusion for 

felony conviction resulting in deferred incarceration, plus two 

aggravating factors and no mitigating factors); Stacy Ann Battle, 

D.D.S., DAB No. 1843 (2002) (10-year exclusion: mandatory fiveyear exclusion for conviction for Medicare fraud resulting in 

incarceration, plus three aggravating factors and no mitigating 

factors); Joann Fletcher Cash, DAB No. 1725 (2000) (15-year 

exclusion: mandatory five-year for conviction for Medicare fraud 

resulting in incarceration, plus three aggravating factors and no 

mitigating factors); see also (cases not cited by the DAB) John D. 

Strom, DAB No. CR 1056 (2003) (15-year exclusion: mandatory 

five-year exclusion for felony conviction resulting in incarceration, 

plus three aggravating factors and no mitigating factors); 

Natawadee Steinhouse, M.D., DAB No. CR 859 (2002) (15-year 

exclusion: mandatory five-year exclusion for felony convictions 

resulting in incarceration, plus four aggravating factors and one 

mitigating factor); Ruth Ferguson, DAB No. CR 725 (2000) (15-

year exclusion: mandatory five-year exclusion for conviction for 

Medicare fraud resulting in incarceration, plus three aggravating 

factors and no mitigating factors); Gregory D. Wells, M.D., DAB 

No. CR 723 (2000) (15-year exclusion: mandatory five-year 

exclusion for conviction for Medicare fraud by offender with prior 

 In fact, none of the cases cited 

by the DAB even concerned an exclusion under section 

USCA Case #11-5028 Document #1386058 Filed: 07/27/2012 Page 25 of 35
26

1320a-7(b)(1); it appears the Secretary has never excluded 

anyone for more than ten years under that provision of the 

statute. Research reveals the longest period of exclusion the 

DAB had ever approved under section 1320a-7(b)(1) was four 

years. See Paulette White Jackson, DAB No. 1915 (2004); 

Roberto Kutcher-Olivio, DAB No. 1837 (2002). When the 

DAB affirmed the Appellants’ 12-year exclusion the agency 

had never excluded anyone for more than ten years based 

upon a misdemeanor — a departure the agency does not even 

acknowledge, much less explain.

We do not suggest the Appellant’s exclusion for 12 years 

based upon a conviction for misdemeanor misbranding might 

not be justifiable; we express no opinion on that question. 

Our concern here is that the DAB did not justify it in the 

decision under review. Simply pointing to prior cases with 

the same bottom line but arising under a different law and 

involving materially different facts does not provide a 

reasoned explanation for the agency’s apparent departure 

from precedent. Therefore we hold the decision of the DAB 

was arbitrary and capricious with respect to the length of the 

Appellants’ exclusion.

III. Conclusion

For the reasons set out above, we hold section 1320a7(b)(1) authorizes the exclusion of the Appellants on the basis 

of their convictions for misdemeanor misbranding. The 

Secretary’s decision, however, was arbitrary and capricious 

with respect to the length of their exclusion because it failed 

to explain its departure from the agency’s own precedents. 

The judgment of the district court is therefore reversed and 

 

record of criminal and administrative sanctions, plus three 

aggravating factors and no mitigating factors). 

USCA Case #11-5028 Document #1386058 Filed: 07/27/2012 Page 26 of 35
27

the matter shall be remanded to the district court with 

instructions to remand it to the agency for further 

consideration consistent with this opinion.

So ordered.

Appendix

42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7(b)(1)–(3)

(b) Permissive exclusion

The Secretary may exclude the following individuals and 

entities from participation in any Federal health care program 

(as defined in section 1320a-7b(f) of this title):

(1) Conviction relating to fraud 

Any individual or entity that has been convicted for an 

offense which occurred after August 21, 1996, under Federal 

or State law—

(A) of a criminal offense consisting of a misdemeanor 

relating to fraud, theft, embezzlement, breach of 

fiduciary responsibility, or other financial 

misconduct—

(i) in connection with the delivery of a health 

care item or service, or 

(ii) with respect to any act or omission in a 

health care program (other than those 

specifically described in subsection (a)(1) of 

this section) operated by or financed in whole 

or in part by any Federal, State, or local 

government agency; or 

USCA Case #11-5028 Document #1386058 Filed: 07/27/2012 Page 27 of 35
28

(B) of a criminal offense relating to fraud, theft, 

embezzlement, breach of fiduciary responsibility, or 

other financial misconduct with respect to any act or 

omission in a program (other than a health care 

program) operated by or financed in whole or in part 

by any Federal, State, or local government agency.

(2) Conviction relating to obstruction of an investigation or 

audit 

Any individual or entity that has been convicted, under 

Federal or State law, in connection with the interference with 

or obstruction of any investigation or audit related to—

(i) any offense described in paragraph (1) or in 

subsection (a); or 

(ii) the use of funds received, directly or indirectly, 

from any Federal health care program (as defined in 

section 1320a-7b(f) of this title). 

(3) Misdemeanor conviction relating to controlled substance 

Any individual or entity that has been convicted, under 

Federal or State law, of a criminal offense consisting of a 

misdemeanor relating to the unlawful manufacture, 

distribution, prescription, or dispensing of a controlled 

substance.

USCA Case #11-5028 Document #1386058 Filed: 07/27/2012 Page 28 of 35
SENTELLE, Chief Judge, concurring in part and dissenting

part and dissenting in the judgment: At the outset, I have no

quarrel with the majority’s decision that the statute authorized

the Secretary’s exclusion of the three executives, and I will not

re-hash the factual background of the case or the reasoning

leading to that conclusion. I do, however, dissent from the

majority’s reversal of the Secretary’s decision on the length of

the assigned exclusions.

Anyone engaged in the practice of appellate law, especially

on the administrative side, knows that the standard of review

may be determinative of an appellate proceeding. Because the

majority today applies the wrong standard of review, it reaches

an incorrect result. As the majority acknowledges, Congress has

provided for review of an exclusion such as those under review

here by specific statutory provision: 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7(f). 

That section provides for “judicial review of the Secretary’s

final decision after such hearing as is provided in section 405(g)

of this title . . . .” Section 405(g), made applicable to the

exclusions by § 1320a-7(f), does not authorize review by

“arbitrary and capricious” or “abuse of discretion” standards. 

See Morris v. Shalala, 207 F.3d 744, 745 (5th Cir. 2000). Under

the limited review afforded by § 405(g), we are to affirm the

decision of the Departmental Appeals Board so long as it was

“based on substantial evidence in the record and correctly

applies the relevant legal standards.” Rossello v. Astrue, 529

F.3d 1181, 1184 (D.C. Cir. 2008). The majority points to no

finding lacking substantial evidentiary support and no departure

from law. Therefore, the statute should compel a result

affirming the Board, as was entered by the district court. That

should leave us no avenue but affirmance of the district court.

I am concerned about the further implications of the

majority’s expansion of § 405(g) review. That section governs

review of the final decisions of the Commissioner of Social

USCA Case #11-5028 Document #1386058 Filed: 07/27/2012 Page 29 of 35
2

Security. While not a part of our daily fare, such decisions,

especially in the case of disability claims, commonly come

before the courts of the United States. The total number of

disability claims, supplemental security income claims,

retirement and survivor benefit claims, and other claims

governed by § 405(g) reached 15,705 in the calendar year 2011. 

Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, Judicial Business of

the U.S. Courts (2012), available at

http://www.uscourts.gov/statistics/JudicialBusiness.aspx (Table

C-10). It is not surprising that Congress would dictate a

confined standard of review for claims so numerous and so

committed to a single agency. By expanding the applicable

standard of review in the present application of § 405(g), we

invite unanticipated consequences in the application of this

erroneous precedent to Social Security claims.

For the reasons set forth above, I respectfully dissent. I

would affirm.

USCA Case #11-5028 Document #1386058 Filed: 07/27/2012 Page 30 of 35
 

WILLIAMS, Senior Circuit Judge, dissenting in part, 

concurring in part, and concurring in the judgment: I cannot 

agree that the Secretary’s interpretation of 42 U.S.C. § 1320a7(b) is valid, and accordingly would remand the case to the 

district court for remand to her for a permissible 

interpretation. If her action is valid on its own terms, 

however, as the court holds, I agree on the remand for the 

purposes stated by Judge Ginsburg—for the Secretary to 

explain the departure from prior precedents in fixing the terms 

of exclusion. 

As the panel correctly notes, the appellants argue that the 

clause requires a “‘generic’ relationship to fraud,” Maj. Op. at 

7-8, or, as a practical matter, that convictions triggering a 

sanction based on the “fraud” element of § 1320a-7(b)(1)

must have been based on findings of all the regular elements 

of the traditional crime of fraud. Most notably, they argue, 

scienter must have been an element of the crime—an element

conspicuously missing from appellants’ convictions, which 

depended on the “responsible corporate officer” doctrine. The 

Secretary argues instead for a “circumstance-specific” 

approach, id. at 8-9, which, as she explains, means that the 

“relation” requirement is satisfied if there is a “nexus or 

common sense connection between . . . the conduct giving rise 

to the offense and the fraud in connection with the delivery of 

the health care item or service.” Goldenheim v. Inspector 

General, Dec. No. CR1883, 2009 WL 1176331 (HHS Dept. 

App. Bd. Jan. 9, 2009), Joint Appendix (“J.A.”) 590; see also 

Appellees’ Br. 22-23. 

The court upholds the Secretary’s view, evidently finding 

it “unambiguously” supported by the statute regardless of 

whether Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council, 467 

U.S. 837 (1984), applies. See Maj. Op. at 10; see also id. at 

USCA Case #11-5028 Document #1386058 Filed: 07/27/2012 Page 31 of 35
2

18-19. The court quite correctly notes that the phrase 

“relating to” is extraordinarily broad, quoting dictionary 

paraphrases such as “to stand in some relation.” Id. at 11. In 

fact a “relationship” can be one of hostility or enmity, or can 

be orthogonal, so that for a literalist the statute is virtually 

meaningless. Taken literally, the provision does not even ask 

for a “substantial relationship” or a “close relationship”; it 

calls only for a “relationship,” however attenuated. Happily, 

the parties in fact appear to agree on narrowing the field a 

little, both assuming that the relationship must be one of 

overlap between the crime of fraud and the facts shown (or 

necessary to be shown1

Appellants state what they view as the required overlap 

fairly clearly: just as common law fraud requires a showing 

of scienter, the crime of conviction must have required proof 

of such an element. The Secretary’s idea of the necessary 

) in appellants’ conviction of 

misdemeanor misbranding. Indeed, the context compels that 

narrowing of the range—and more. 

 1 This situation is somewhat analogous to the provisions of the 

sentencing guidelines governing “career offenders,” which provide 

for a heightened sentence if a defendant has previously committed a 

“crime of violence”—the definition of which term requires that the 

previous crime have as an element the “use, attempted use, or 

threatened use of physical force against the person of another.” 

U.S. SENTENCING GUIDELINES § 4B1.1; id. § 4B1.2. Compare with 

id. § 4B1.5(b) (sentencing enhancement where “defendant engaged 

in a pattern of activity involving prohibited sexual conduct” even if 

that conduct was not an element of previous convictions or was 

established by previous convictions); United States v. Phillips, 431 

F.3d 86, 90 (2d Cir. 2005). We need not consider whether evidence 

of scienter, even evidence beyond a reasonable doubt, would be 

sufficient in the case of a crime not requiring proof of scienter; the 

government does not remotely suggest scienter could be proven. 

USCA Case #11-5028 Document #1386058 Filed: 07/27/2012 Page 32 of 35
3

overlap is more free-floating—some sort of “nexus” between 

the convictions and fraud (or the other bases for exclusion). 

But even this free-floating overlap (if it is to have any 

boundaries at all) requires some concept of “fraud, theft, 

embezzlement . . . or other financial misconduct.” Suppose, 

for example, that the Secretary was acting under the last and 

vaguest of these terms, and the individuals had been convicted 

of filing false environmental reports. To prevail, the Secretary 

surely would have to offer a concept of financial misconduct 

that embraced such filings. One can talk of “circumstancespecific” relationships till one is blue in the face, but in the 

end deciding whether the necessary overlap exists requires a 

definition (or at least an idea) of the types of conviction 

triggering § 1320a-7(b)(1)(A). The conceptual battle cannot 

be avoided.

The parties’ somewhat synthetic battle between “generic 

fraud” and the “circumstance-specific” approach leads the 

court into an extensive showing that the statute is laced with 

requirements that in the end will require burrowing into facts. 

See Maj. Op. at 11-15. The court argues that a statute rife 

with such intellectual exercises is not very likely to have 

clearly limited the Secretary to “generic fraud” for the fraud 

aspect of § 1320-7(b)(1)(A). But the sense of all those 

“factual relationships” depends on conceptual relationships—

exemplified in the question whether the “financial 

misconduct” criterion would allow exclusion for a conviction 

for false environmental filings. If the Secretary’s view is 

correct, virtually any overlap between the facts required for 

fraud and those involved in (or required for) the offense of 

conviction is enough. 

The meaning of a statute must not be confused with its 

simple linguistic potential. As we’ve seen, the linguistic 

potential of crime or “misdemeanor relating to fraud” is 

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4

almost infinite. The Secretary, though on common ground 

with appellants in understanding that the relation must be one 

of overlap, purports to see no other limit. But this is not the 

way lawyers read a statute. They put it into context. Here the

context suggests a requirement of at least some approximation 

of the moral turpitude associated with “fraud” itself. Thus 

Justice Cardozo, construing § 9(c) of the National Recovery 

Act in Panama Refining Co. v. Ryan, 293 U.S. 388, 433

(1935), acknowledged that § 9(c) alone was inadequate to 

supply an intelligible answer to the question of when the 

President was to exercise the delegated power to interrupt 

interstate oil transportation, but he went on to examine the 

statute as a whole and concluded that the power could be 

exercised only for “hot oil,” i.e., oil produced in excess of 

statutory quotas. Id. at 435-46. Thus the context compelled a 

non-literal, relatively narrow interpretation. For similar 

context-based narrowings, see, e.g., Owens v. Republic of 

Sudan, 531 F.3d 884, 893 (D.C. Cir. 2008); Phelps Dodge 

Corp. v. Federal Mine Safety and Health Review Commission, 

681 F.2d 1189, 1192 (9th Cir. 1982). So too here. Very 

troublingly, without such an effort at seeking the legal 

meaning of the disputed clause, we have a reading by the 

Secretary that offers none of the “precision and guidance 

[that] are necessary so that those enforcing the law do not act 

in an arbitrary or discriminatory way.” FCC v. Fox Television 

Stations, Inc., 132 S. Ct. 2307, 2317 (2012). That failing is 

especially acute for an action that excludes appellants from 

pursuing careers in the pharmaceutical industry—where 

they’ve spent their lifetimes accumulating industry-specific 

human capital. See J.A. 390, 428, 483. Compare Greene v. 

McElroy, 360 U.S. 474, 492 (1959). 

“Misdemeanor” and “fraud” have well-established 

meanings. The Secretary need only prescribe some specific 

meaning for the word “related.” It might require that an 

excluded individual’s conviction rest on findings of all the 

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5

elements of fraud, as the appellants argue; or it might require 

only that it rest on findings of the person’s culpable 

responsibility for a material misrepresentation. It is for the 

Secretary to say, subject of course to judicial review. But an 

invocation of “nexus,” though it fits linguistically, is simply 

not a legal interpretation as that process is normally 

understood. It’s more accurately seen as a refusal to interpret. 

Given the absence of an analytically reasonable 

interpretation by the Secretary, and the Secretary’s leeway 

under Chevron to reject appellants’ proposed interpretation, I 

would remand to the district court to remand to the Secretary 

to articulate a meaning of 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7(b) that is 

consistent with standard principles of legal interpretation. 

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