When F. Lee Bailey, a celebrity lawyer with a penchant for high-stakes cases, crossed paths with Hank Asher, a former drug smuggler turned “data fusion king,” they laid the groundwork for a new era in healthcare law enforcement. Theirs was an unexpected but potent collaboration, one that paired Bailey’s persuasive prowess with Asher’s predictive data-mining innovations to create a legacy that echoes across U.S. healthcare law enforcement to this day. But behind this technological “innovation” lies a complex web of ethical issues, flawed implementations, and troubling implications for personal privacy, healthcare and due process.
F. Lee Bailey, remembered as one of America’s most famous defense attorneys, became a household name through high-profile cases like that of Sam Sheppard, O.J. Simpson, and Patty Hearst. His career, however, was marked not only by courtroom success but by controversy. Bailey was disbarred in Massachusetts and Florida in the early 2000s, his reputation tarnished by allegations of misconduct and drug-related criminal defense work gone wrong. In many ways, Bailey’s career laid the psychological groundwork for a system that pushes legal and ethical boundaries in the name of justice. Enter his client Hank Asher.
Hank Asher’s contributions to law enforcement were no less controversial. Before his involvement in data mining, Asher’s past included a stint in the Bahamas, where he was implicated in a major cocaine smuggling operation. Although he was never charged, this dark episode continued to follow him throughout his career. Despite previously working for insurance companies, or perhaps because of, this history, Asher went on to found several data-mining companies, including Database Technologies (DBT) and Seisint, which pioneered technology that would later be widely adopted by law enforcement agencies to combat controlled substance prescriptions and healthcare fraud.
Asher’s data fusion technology empowered law enforcement agencies with unprecedented access to personal healthcare data. His brainchild, TLO (The Last One), became a powerful tool for law enforcement, eventually acquired by TransUnion for $154 million following TLO’s bankruptcy in 2014. The legacy of these technologies is now woven into systems like the DEA’s DARTS and DICE, which employ predictive analytics and data mining to monitor individuals in real-time, using algorithms that blur the lines between public health and public safety.
The irony of Asher’s and Bailey’s influence on modern healthcare law enforcement is difficult to ignore. Here were two men, both tainted by connections to the criminal world, whose tools and techniques are now instrumental in a system designed to combat crime. The AI-powered tools developed from Asher’s vision feed vast amounts of de-identified data into opaque, algorithm-driven platforms where oversight is minimal and error rates are often undisclosed. In this system, legitimate healthcare providers, patients in genuine need, and potential criminals alike are subjected to an automated process where context and compassion are easily lost.
One of the most concerning aspects of this sordid legacy is the impact on healthcare. In merging data from public health and law enforcement sources, AI-driven systems like NBI MEDIC and CMS’s Predictive Learning Analytics Tracking Outcomes (PLATO) are not just used to identify criminals; they are also used to scrutinize doctors and patients. With algorithms that prioritize detection over nuance, healthcare providers are often caught in a web of suspicion, with AI deciding whether a prescription is legitimate or fraudulent. In a system like this, patients who genuinely need pain management face the threat of being treated like criminals, with critical medical decisions influenced by machines rather than human judgment.
The result is a system where human rights and ethical considerations take a back seat to efficiency and control. In a society increasingly dependent on data and algorithms, the influence of Bailey and Asher raises an unsettling question, how much of our personal freedom are we willing to sacrifice at the altar of security? Their legacy, now cemented in the very systems that govern American healthcare law enforcement, is a cautionary tale, a reminder that the line between justice and surveillance is thin and all too easily crossed.
F. Lee Bailey and Hank Asher left behind more than just a blueprint for modern technology-driven law enforcement. They left a reminder of the dangers of power unchecked by ethics, and the risks posed by technologies that promise security but deliver control. The future they envisioned has arrived, and it is one where the law’s reach has extended into every aspect of our lives including our health, guided by algorithms and powered by data, a future that Bailey and Asher helped to create but never had to answer to.
The Author received an honorable discharge from the U.S. Navy where he utilized regional anesthesia and pain management to treat soldiers injured in combat at Walter Reed Hospital. The Author is passionate about medical research and biotechnological innovation in the fields of 3D printing, tissue engineering and regenerative medicine.
Predictive algorithms are designed to identify patterns, but those patterns are often based on biased data. In the case of the DEA, the data used to train these algorithms reflects decades of policing that has disproportionately focused on poor and minority communities.
When they first came with PDMP the government assured us they would use that against doctors and information would remain private. We see how that turned out. The DEA now uses PDMP information to monitor how many opioids I prescribed every day. This limits my ability to care for someone. This should be illegal.
The answer is available here on DoC. Doctors and patients just don’t want to learn it and pass it on. Maybe someday they will. I just have to be patient while the suffering continues.
The PDMP and invasion into patients’ privacy will end when we get the CSA repealed. How about joining us in that endeavor?