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United States v. Mashali
Katherine H. Ferguson, Maxim Grinberg, Abraham R. George, United States Attorney for the District of Massachusetts, Kimberly P. West, Attorney General's Office, Boston, MA, for United States of America.
Jeffrey A. Denner, Jeffrey Denner Associates, PC, Wakefield, MA, Joseph G. Keller, Jr., Da Silva Law Group, Boston, MA, for Fathalla Mashali.
ZOBEL, S.D.J.
This is the court's second competency determination of defendant Fathalla Mashali. Formerly a licensed physician who operated several pain clinics in New England, defendant has pleaded guilty to charges of healthcare fraud, conspiracy to commit mail fraud, and money laundering. (Docket # 131 (Second Superseding Indictment), Docket # 329 (Plea Hearing).)
In late 2015, defendant's counsel moved for a competency hearing pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 4241. The court allowed that motion, and on September 9, 2016, after several evaluations and an evidentiary hearing, found defendant competent to stand trial. Trial was scheduled to commence on March 20, 2017, but on March 1, 2017, defendant moved for a Rule 11 hearing. At the March 2 plea hearing, defendant denied knowledge of the fraud charged, although he acknowledged his responsibility for the clinic's activities. As a result, the court did not accept his plea and continued the hearing. At a second plea hearing two weeks later, defendant explained in some detail his regimen of outpatient mental health and medical treatment, acknowledged his guilt, and stated that he fully understood the proceedings. Defendant explicitly admitted knowledge of the healthcare fraud scheme and of the scheme's illegality. He acknowledged that he had instructed his employees to bill incorrectly and submit claims for work not performed. The court accepted his plea.
A sentencing hearing was scheduled on July 26, 2017. On July 20, 2017, defendant's counsel moved for a competency determination. At the hearing on that motion, the government joined the request for a competency ruling, but requested that defendant be committed to the Bureau of Prisons ("BOP") for such mental evaluation. The court allowed both motions. The BOP issued its report on January 8, 2018 (Docket # 355), and an evidentiary hearing to determine competency for sentencing followed on January 23, 2018. At the hearing, defendant moved orally and without counsel's support to withdraw his guilty plea, which was denied. Below are my findings of fact and conclusions of law with respect to defendant's competency for sentencing.
The sole witness at the hearing was Dr. Shawn Channell, a forensic psychologist and the author of the January 2018 BOP report evaluating defendant's competency. In addition to Dr. Channell's testimony and report, the parties agree that the record before me consists of several earlier reports and findings as follows:
I analyze each expert's findings separately.
As the government's expert, Dr. Kelly found defendant competent to stand trial as of February 2017. Before reaching that conclusion, Dr. Kelly conducted four and a half hours of psychiatric interviews of defendant in January 2017 and reviewed defendant's medical and legal records. Throughout the course of these interviews, defendant "repeatedly stressed his innocence and that he was unaware of any problem with his practice until authorities became involved and that it was never his intention to defraud the government nor did he engage in any fraudulent activity." (Docket # 310, at 4.) I credit Kelly's characterization of defendant as a person with "superior intellectual abilities" who "clearly understands his legal jeopardy and has been active throughout the legal process in pursuing his self-interest." (Id. at 8.)
Defendant's expert, Dr. Gray, reached the opposite conclusion after evaluating defendant in December 2016 and July 2017. (Docket # 341–1, at 9, 14.) He conducted nearly five hours of psychiatric interviews of defendant, reviewed his medical and legal records, and diagnosed defendant with "disabling dementia and psychotic depression." (Id. at 5.) Addressing the issue of malingering raised by other evaluators and physicians, Dr. Gray concurred that defendant was "motivated by self-interest and exaggerates some of his problems in the hopes of ameliorating the consequences of his actions; however, even his malingering behavior is inept and symptomatic of the underlying neurologic and psychiatric deterioration." (Id. at 7.) Dr. Gray did not, however, administer objective testing to evaluate malingering. Because his reports emphasized defendant's mental state at the time of his offense conduct and failed meaningfully to assess his understanding of the charges against him and ability to assist his counsel, they are of limited utility to the court's present determination.
Dr. Vogel, another defense expert, opined in July 2017 that defendant was not competent. (Docket # 341–1, at 16.) Dr. Vogel interviewed defendant and his wife over the course of five to six hours and reviewed the relevant legal and medical records. In her view, defendant's sarcoidosis"triggered a gradual, insidious, multi-domain disintegration in judgment, insight, memory, and physical capacity." (Id. at 17.) She administered no objective testing to evaluate malingering, and shared Dr. Gray's assessment of that behavior, which she characterized as (Id. at 19.) Dr. Vogel further concluded that "suspicions of his ‘faking his symptoms’ were directly countered by medical testing, confirming gastroparesis and orthostatic hypotension." (Id.)
As the court's expert, Dr. Channell concluded in January 2018 that defendant is competent. (Docket # 355, at 25.) His report is based on the most comprehensive evaluation of defendant to date based on five months of observation and inpatient treatment at FMC–Devens. During that time, Dr. Channell consulted with defendant's treating psychiatrist and nurses, oversaw administration of three psychological tests, interviewed defendant for between seven and eight hours, and reviewed his medical and legal records. Dr. Channell adopted as his testimony the contents of his report, entered as Exhibit 1 at the hearing, and was examined by both counsel. I find him a credible witness uniquely positioned to assess defendant longitudinally. Because his report is also the most recent, and the only one prepared by a neutral expert, I give it controlling weight.
Dr. Channell testified that defendant does not have dementia, because dementia is chronic and progressive with an overall downward trajectory. Defendant's memory problems, conversely, have been selectively inconsistent in a manner more characteristic of malingering. Brain imaging in November 2014 revealed none of the abnormalities—structural lesions, hippocampal atrophy, or reduced brain volume—associated with dementia or Alzheimer's disease. (Docket # 355, at 18.) Around the same time, Brigham and Women's Hospital noted no neurologic findings of neurosarcoidosis. (Id. at 9, 18.)
Similarly, Dr. Channell testified that defendant does not suffer from bipolar disorder. Its onset typically occurs in a patient's adolescence or early adulthood, whereas defendant's medical record contains no evidence of symptoms or mental health treatment prior to 2013, when defendant lost his medical license at age 59. (Id. at 12.) His first documented mental health treatment, beginning weeks after the suspension of his Rhode Island medical license and days after his agreement to cease medical practice in Massachusetts, lasted only three months and yielded a diagnosis of Adjustment Disorder, "characterized by the onset of emotional or behavioral symptoms in response to an identifiable stressor." (Id. at 17.)
Dr. Channell summarized defendant's performance on three psychological tests. On the first, the Wechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence—Second Edition ("WASI–II"), defendant scored in the extremely low range of functioning, associated with mild intellectual disability. (Id.; Docket # 361.) Dr. Channell explained that although depression might lower a WASI score, it would not do so dramatically, and he opined that defendant's score of 69 reflects neither his demonstrated intelligence nor true ability.
Dr. Channell also administered the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory–2 ("MMPI–2") and the Test of Malingered Memory ("TOMM"), and explained that he uses these instruments only when indicators suggest the possibility of malingering. Defendant's MMPI–2 validity profile showed "gross exaggeration of mental health symptoms, including significant endorsement of psychotic symptoms which are atypical of a genuine clinical sample." (Docket # 355, at 16.) The TOMM is sensitive to feigned impairment but insensitive to neurological impairment, such that even people with severe dementia, traumatic brain injuries, and cognitive deficits achieve an average score of 45 out of a possible 50 points. Defendant's scores of 19, 23, and 23, in Dr. Channell's view, furnish "unequivocal" evidence...
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