This is the first case I’ve seen of hospital-owned physicians being charged.
David Neil Ringel, DO, family physician in Connersville, Indiana, entered a guilty plea in Fayette Circuit Court to a single count of conspiracy to commit forgery June 17, 2016. In exchange for his guilty plea, all other charges against him were dropped. He also agreed to testify in any future criminal cases stemming from this investigation by the DEA and the Indiana Attorney General’s Office. Dr. Ringel was sentenced to four years in state prison, four years of probation and 2,080 hours of community service, and he was fined $5,000.
Dr. Ringel was among four former employees of Fayette Regional Health System, the area hospital, arrested in 2013. Former doctor David Palmer and former physician’s assistant David Wulff have previously pleaded guilty to single counts of conspiracy to commit forgery. They each received the same sentence as Ringel. Physician’s assistant Jeff Ferryman also pleaded guilty to a single count of forgery and faces up to eight years in prison and a fine of up to $10,000 when he’s sentenced July 13.
The original charges filed on the group were:
- Dr. Daniel Palmer, 56: seven Class A felony counts and two Class B felony counts of conspiracy to commit dealing in a narcotic drug, two Class A felony counts and one Class B felony count of conspiracy to deal in a controlled substance, and 11 counts of conspiracy to commit forgery as a Class C felony.
- Dr. David Ringel, 54: two Class A felony counts and eight class B felony counts of conspiracy to dealing in a controlled substance and nine Class C felony counts of conspiracy to commit forgery.
- Jerry Ferryman, 50, a physician’s assistant: six Class A felony counts and one Class B felony count of dealing in a narcotic drug, and seven counts of forgery as a Class C felony.
- David Wulff, a physician’s assistant: more than 20 felony drug charges alleging unlawfully prescribing controlled substances, acquiring controlled substances by fraud, and forgery.
Those charges stem from Ringel, Wulff’s supervising physician, allegedly pre-signing prescription pads for Wulff. Those pre-signed prescriptions were then allegedly used by Wulff to prescribe controlled substances which were outside the scope of what Wulff, as a physician’s assistant, was legally allowed to prescribe. Palmer also is alleged to have pre-signed prescriptions for Ferryman, which Ferryman then allegedly used to prescribe controlled drugs outside of his scope to legally prescribe.
So basically all of them have pleaded guilty to only one of the lesser charges filed against them. Obviously, whether they were guilty or not, this is a case of accepting a plea because the alternative of going to trial is not an option based on the risk involved. Palmer faced 550 years in prison and fines of $200,000, Ringel faced 112 years in prison and fines of $80,000, while Ferryman faced 426 years in prison and fines of $150,000 if found guilty of all charges. Having been to trial myself and convicted on no evidence even though I was innocent, I can understand their making that decision.
In 2013 a search was conducted by the Indiana Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit with help of federal, state and local authorities. So basically they had nothing but the desire to snoop to look for something to charge them with as justification for their raid. When there is no just cause for a search warrant, charges of Medicare/Medicaid fraud will always get them in because every doctor in the country has done something wrong according to the laws for Medicare and Medicaid. That’s why more pain management physicians are no longer accepting insurance—to avoid these “search and find” raids. But with the search, they landed on something that they could then use for charges against the doctors and their subordinates. The search of Wulff’s office in the Fayette Regional Health Primary Care clinic turned up three blank prescription pads with 50 prescription slips each bearing Ringel’s signature and two blank prescription pads with 50 prescription slips each and a partial blank prescription pad, all pre-signed by Palmer. According to the affidavit, FRHS Dr. Bradley Dubois and Primary Care Clinic office manager Deanna Weber informed authorities during the investigation that hospital administration had asked doctors to sign blank prescription pads for use by physician’s assistants. However, Randy White, chief executive officer for FRHS, contradicted that statement saying that doctors and employees adhere to state law.
There is no proof that the signatures on the prescription pads were real. What is surprising is that the government went after hospital-owned physicians at all. Usually hospital-owned physicians are untouchable and the government targets the independent physician. I wonder if the hospital wanted to get rid of these particular doctors for some reason and used the government to do it. Or maybe the hospital isn’t playing the government game as instructed, and the government is wielding their power to teach the hospital a lesson. It will be interesting to see if other hospital-owned clinics come between the crosshairs in the future. I’m also not quite sure, if the signatures are actually those of the doctors, how there can be charges of forgery in the first place.
Indiana Attorney General Gregory Zoeller made the usual comment to the media putting blame on doctors for the current drug abuse problem: “Overprescribing of powerful opiate painkillers across our state has contributed in part to the epidemic of prescription drug abuse in Indiana and fueled addiction at the expense of patients’ safety and health,”
Addendum:
Dr. Ringel entered a guilty plea to a single count of conspiracy to commit forgery June 17, 2016. In exchange for his guilty plea, all other charges against him were dropped. He was sentenced to 4 years in state prison. He should be out now, and should be working to stop these attacks and get exonerated. Anyone in communication with him, please tell him to work on forgiveness and when he is ready, join us in the effort to restore humanity to the nation.
Addendum from the author:
I have failed in my mission to end these attacks on doctors and pain patients. Through John Bevere’s book The Bait of Satan, I have figured out why—my lack of forgiveness to those who attacked me. As in Mark 11: 24-26:
“Therefore I say to you, whatever things you ask when you pray, believe that you receive them, and you will have them. And whenever you stand praying, if you have anything against anyone, forgive him, that your Father in heaven may also forgive you your trespasses. But if you do not forgive, neither will your Father in heaven forgive your trespasses.”
And when you do not do the will of the Father, you are estranged from him and he will ignore you. So we all must forgive the agents who attacked us in order for things to be made right through any of our works.
Jesus said
“Greater love has no one than this, than to lay down one’s life for his friends.”
But we cannot lay down our lives for God unless we know Him well enough to trust Him. We must have the assurance that He would never do anything to harm us. He always looks out for what He knows is in our best interest. As a nation, those of us suffering from these attacks must understand that we are serving as God’s messengers of love. We must forgive those who persecute us and love them instead, following God’s will for us. Then and only then will we see fruits from our labor.
So I hope that everyone who has suffered from what happened to the doctor can trust the Lord, forgive those who have hurt you, and help bring this country back to the God-fearing country that our forefathers founded. Then, and only then, can you be a part of the effort to stop these attacks. I look forward to that day.
Linda Cheek is a teacher and disenfranchised medical doctor, turned activist, author, and speaker. A victim of prosecutorial misconduct and outright law-breaking of the government agencies DEA, DHHS, and DOJ, she hopes to be a part of exonerating all doctors illegally attacked through the Controlled Substance Act. She holds the key to success, as she can offset the government propaganda that drugs cause addiction with the truth: The REAL Cause of Drug Abuse.
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I’M sorry but these Dr’s knew that they were committing a crime when they presigned the script pads. The PA’s knew they were in the wrong for not getting the Dr to actually write the scripts for the narcotics. It’s unfortunate that people are paying the price for the bad apples that are skipping protocols due to pt loads and that’s probably what happened. Dr’s are overloaded with pts and Obama scam has made this issue worse than ever. Even before the Healthcare Act Dr’s were trying to find ways to speed through the appts so they wouldn’t be in the office til midnight. I worked several years in a physicians office as a nurse and he shoved quite a bit of work off on me so he could be home with his wife and kids. I don’t give Dr’s a pass for breaking the law because the law doesn’t give nurses a pass. Billing isn’t that damn hard and there are too many Dr’s that get greedy and it’s easy to commit fraud when they see $$$$.
You are jumping to the conclusion that the government wants you to jump to. But there are a lot of legitimate reasons for presigned prescription forms. It doesn’t mean that controlled drugs are being written. For example, a lot of insurances won’t take a PA’s signature for DME orders. Nursing homes are the same. So having presigned prescriptions doesn’t have to be assumed that illegal prescriptions are being written. And I don’t know what billing system you are using, but I found billing to be a nightmare. The rules change continuously. What you did last week is illegal this week. So I guess we just have to agree to disagree.
It actually isn’t illegal to pre sign scripts.
Dr Ringel only worked at this place for a few weeks. He completely walked into this mess unknowingly. I know this because he is my stepdad
I know personally that if Dr.Ringel didn’t sign the prescription pads he was going to be fired. He just moved there and took this job 6weeks earlier. He said no to the office manager but then the CEO called him in and said you sign them we will put them in the safe and only upon your approval will they be written. There were 6 prescriptions written and all were for long term established with correct dosage patients that were on ADD meds for many years. Dr.Ringel also reviewed every chart because he had never been a pressor over a PA before and the hospital said it was temporary but his doctor quit so Dr.Ringel had no choices he felt. The hospital also said the new law is in effect and now it is ok PA’s can write their own scripts now. My husband was lied to and pushed to do something he disagreed with. His nurse heard the conversation when Dr. Ringel said no to signing. Her testimony didn’t mean anything. The hospital said they would stand by him, they didn’t. Dr.Ringel is my husband and he is still fighting Medicare/Medicaid so finding a job even though he got his license back and his DEA no one will touch him. This is a good man a godly man and never had a complaint against him before this. His patients love him. It is awful the government could do this to a man without a spot on his record. They should have gone after the hospital not the doctors. My husband got the same doctors who worded there 30 years. He worked there 6 weeks
You both need to be members of Doctorsofcourage. Why aren’t you? We need communication to Washington, and as a member, you get point/click features to all the legislators. Join. It is also your responsibility so that this doesn’t happen to the next innocent doctor.