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Former Huntsville doctor and wife sentenced for drug crimes, healthcare fraud

The two women operated a multi-clinic practice in Huntsville, Athens, and Killen.
Credit: TEGNA

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. — A former Huntsville family practice doctor and her wife, who ran a multi-clinic practice across North Alabama, will each spend years behind bars for drug crimes, health care fraud, and COVID-19 disaster relief fraud.

Francene Aretha Gayle, 50, was sentenced to 87 months in prison on four opioid prescribing charges, one count of health care fraud, and one count of wire fraud. Her wife, Schara Monique Davis, 48, will spend 42 months in prison for one count of health care fraud and one count of wire fraud. Each woman was also ordered to pay $2.2 million in restitution, forfeit $226,815, and pay a fine.

According to an announcement from the USDOJ, and the women's plea agreements:

Between about 2014 and early 2020, Gayle was a doctor who operated a multi-clinic practice in Huntsville, Athens, and Killen. Davis owned the practice and served as business manager. In 2019, the Killen clinic shut down. In March 2020, the Alabama Medical Licensure Commission revoked Gayle’s license, and the other two clinics closed shortly after that.

Gayle and Davis both admitted to having conspired to commit health care fraud for several years by billing insurers for office visits under Gayle’s name even when she did not see the patients, was not in the same building, and sometimes was not in the same town. The defendants knew that the billing scheme was fraudulent. In 2015, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Alabama audited the practice and discovered that Gayle was absent, other staff were seeing patients, and yet all office visits were being billed under Gayle’s name. Blue Cross flagged the issue, and Gayle promised it would stop. Instead, the practice continued fraudulently billing insurers for office visits for the next four years. In total, between 2015 and 2020, Medicare, Medicaid, and Blue Cross paid more than $2.3 million for office visits billed under Gayle’s name.

Gayle and Davis both also admitted to having conspired to commit wire fraud. In March 2020, based on concerns about her prescribing and billing practices, Gayle’s Alabama medical license was revoked.  Months later, Gayle and Davis applied for and obtained more than $450,000 in COVID-19 disaster relief funds through the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) and Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) program. Those funds were designed to stabilize businesses struggling because of the pandemic. In their funding applications, Gayle and Davis certified that their medical practice needed the money because of economic uncertainty or injury caused by the pandemic. In reality, Gayle and Davis’s practice had closed, and they used COVID-19 funds they received on other things.

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