On April 14, 2025, the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit issued a decision in a case involving the federal Anti-Kickback Statute (“AKS”) and marketing services that the court framed as an appeal “test[ing] some of the outer boundaries of the [AKS]….” In United States vs. Mark Sorensen, the Court of Appeals overturned the judgment of conviction against Mark Sorensen from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. In the district court case, Sorensen, the owner of SyMed Inc., a durable medical equipment (“DME”) distributor, was found guilty of one count of conspiracy and three counts of offering and paying kickbacks in return for the referral of Medicare beneficiaries to his DME company, which the United States claimed resulted in SyMed’s fraudulently billing $87 million and receiving $23.6 million in payments from Medicare. The district court judge denied Sorensen’s post-trial motions for acquittal and for a new trial, finding that the evidence regarding willfulness allowed the jury to find beyond a reasonable doubt that Sorensen “knew from the beginning of the agreement in 2015 that the percentage fee structure and purchase of the [doctors’] orders violated the law.” He was sentenced to 42 months in prison and ordered to forfeit $1.8 million.
Background
On December 10, 2024, the Supreme Court of Ohio issued its decision in Stull v. Summa, a medical negligence case in which the defendants argued that Ohio’s statutory peer-review privilege protected from discovery the file a hospital maintained on a resident physician, which included, among other things, quality reviews and assessments of the resident’s clinical competency and professional conduct. The Supreme Court of Ohio decided one issue: Does the peer-review privilege in R.C. 2305.252 apply to a healthcare entity’s files concerning resident physicians?
This case arose from the medical treatment of head injuries that the patient sustained during a car crash. The patient and his guardians filed a medical negligence lawsuit against the hospital and its employed healthcare professionals, including a resident physician who participated in the patient’s care. The plaintiffs alleged that the resident improperly intubated the patient, causing the patient to sustain a brain injury
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