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J. A. 102214

Summary A registered physician assistant in New York State entered into a consent agreement with the State Board for Professional Medical Conduct following a 2013 criminal conviction for driving while intoxicated. The practitioner agreed not to contest the professional misconduct charge and accepted penalties, including a $1,100 fine, censure and reprimand, and ongoing compliance and …

M. A. 091813

Summary This case involves a physician who voluntarily surrendered their New York medical license following disciplinary action taken by Illinois authorities. The physician had been indefinitely suspended in Illinois in October 2012 for fraudulent Medicaid billing practices, including submitting claims for Tramadol prescriptions without a legitimate medical purpose and for office visits that were not …

L. A. 091313

Summary This case involves a physician who voluntarily surrendered their medical license following charges of violating the terms of a previous disciplinary order. The physician had been subject to a 2011 consent order that imposed a 36-month stayed suspension and probation with restrictions, but failed to comply with key requirements, including maintaining active license registration …

U. A. 082614

Summary This case involves a physician who entered into a consent agreement following a criminal conviction for Operating a Motor Vehicle While Intoxicated (DWI). The physician was convicted in New York City Criminal Court in June 2013 and received a $500 fine, conditional discharge, driver’s license revocation, mandatory participation in a drinking driver referral program, …

D. A. 082313

Summary This case involves a physician who entered into a consent agreement with the New York State Board for Professional Medical Conduct following disciplinary action by the Maryland State Board of Physicians. The physician was found guilty of professional misconduct in Maryland related to inappropriate prescribing practices, inadequate record-keeping, and failure to properly evaluate patients …

A. J. 081413

Summary This case involves a physician who voluntarily surrendered their medical license in New York State rather than contest allegations of professional misconduct. The doctor was charged with failing to maintain adequate patient records over a six-year period from 2004 to 2010, affecting multiple patients. The physician chose to surrender their license through a negotiated …

S. A. 072813

Summary This case involves a psychiatrist who entered into a consent agreement with the New York State Board for Professional Medical Conduct following charges of negligence and failure to maintain proper medical records in the treatment of four patients. The underlying conduct involved substandard care of pediatric and adult psychiatric patients, including improper medication management, …

P. A. 062813

Summary This case involves a physician who voluntarily surrendered his New York medical license following his federal criminal conviction for health care fraud and conspiracy. The physician was convicted in federal court of health care fraud and conspiracy to commit mail fraud, wire fraud, and health care fraud, receiving a substantial prison sentence of 96 …

R. A. 062413

Summary This case involves a physician who was convicted of a federal felony for conspiracy to commit bribery in connection with a scheme to prevent the closure of a hospital he owned. The underlying criminal conduct involved attempting to bribe a New York State Senator in exchange for preventing the closure of Parkway Hospital in …

J. A. 052313

Summary This case involves a physician who voluntarily surrendered his New York medical license following disciplinary action taken against him by the Virginia Board of Medicine. The underlying Virginia case involved serious prescribing violations affecting seven patients over nearly a decade, including prescribing controlled substances without proper medical justification, inadequate patient evaluations, and poor record-keeping. …

Not to be used as legal advice. Not to be used as a source of legal guidance.