FelicityLemon
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Bringing this over from the live trial forum, I don't know how to do the copy format thing so it shows who I'm responding to.
REGARDING ALLEGATIONS OF MEDICATE FRAUD committed by Mark Sievers not being brought up during the trial to go toward motive.
Kaen replied to me:
"The fraud case has not been litigated. He is not guilty or innocent, so, what can they bring in? Only allegations. If it had been litigated and he was found guilty, it would definitely go to his character."
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When we first heard this, I thought it odd that MS would confess to defrauding Medicare when speaking to Dr.P unless he was sure he was being investigated and it would become public at some point and maybe looking to enlist the help of Dr.P's attorney-wife. I had forgotten about Roy Heilbron (friend/business partner of sorts) in New Mexico being convicted of Medicare Fraud. He's currently in prison and ordered to pay back over $623,000 in restitution.
IMO, while investigating RH, it's probable that TS' practice and MS as office manager were looked at, too. After TS death, RH came out to the Sievers' home with a trailer and left with some things after hanging out with MS.
After MS, while he was in jail, an email (allegedly from MS) was sent out to TS' patients recommending that they continue to buy supplements from RH with an address in Boca Raton, but he lived and was licensed (before it was pulled) in New Mexico. Looks like TS' husband was hooking her up professionally with an unsavory medical "professional". How did RH get access to TS' business computers and email account to do this? We can guess.
So many shenanigans - legal, medical, ethical, moral.
Could any of this be used in trial? If so, it's too late for this trial unless MS decides to grace the court with his testimony.
Patients of slain Dr. Teresa Sievers receive odd email purportedly by Mark Sievers
Santa Fe Cardiologist Sentenced to 51 Months in Federal Prison for Health Care Fraud and Obstruction of Justice Convictions
REGARDING ALLEGATIONS OF MEDICATE FRAUD committed by Mark Sievers not being brought up during the trial to go toward motive.
Kaen replied to me:
"The fraud case has not been litigated. He is not guilty or innocent, so, what can they bring in? Only allegations. If it had been litigated and he was found guilty, it would definitely go to his character."
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
When we first heard this, I thought it odd that MS would confess to defrauding Medicare when speaking to Dr.P unless he was sure he was being investigated and it would become public at some point and maybe looking to enlist the help of Dr.P's attorney-wife. I had forgotten about Roy Heilbron (friend/business partner of sorts) in New Mexico being convicted of Medicare Fraud. He's currently in prison and ordered to pay back over $623,000 in restitution.
IMO, while investigating RH, it's probable that TS' practice and MS as office manager were looked at, too. After TS death, RH came out to the Sievers' home with a trailer and left with some things after hanging out with MS.
After MS, while he was in jail, an email (allegedly from MS) was sent out to TS' patients recommending that they continue to buy supplements from RH with an address in Boca Raton, but he lived and was licensed (before it was pulled) in New Mexico. Looks like TS' husband was hooking her up professionally with an unsavory medical "professional". How did RH get access to TS' business computers and email account to do this? We can guess.
So many shenanigans - legal, medical, ethical, moral.
Could any of this be used in trial? If so, it's too late for this trial unless MS decides to grace the court with his testimony.
Patients of slain Dr. Teresa Sievers receive odd email purportedly by Mark Sievers
Santa Fe Cardiologist Sentenced to 51 Months in Federal Prison for Health Care Fraud and Obstruction of Justice Convictions