In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
____________________
No. 21-3270
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
ANGELITA NEWTON,
Defendant-Appellant.
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the
Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
No. 1:17-cr-00455-3 — Virginia M. Kendall, Judge.
____________________
ARGUED SEPTEMBER 12, 2022 — DECIDED AUGUST 7, 2023
____________________
Before EASTERBROOK, KIRSCH, and JACKSON-AKIWUMI,
Circuit Judges.
JACKSON-AKIWUMI, Circuit Judge. Angelita Newton chal-
lenges the conviction and sentence she received for her in-
volvement in a scheme to defraud Medicare. First, she argues
that she was denied a fair trial because she could not question
a witness who invoked the Fifth Amendment’s protections
against self-incrimination. But we reject the argument and af-
firm Newton’s conviction because the district court rightly
2 No. 21-3270
concluded that the witness’s invocation of the Fifth Amend-
ment was proper and the government’s refusal to issue im-
munity to that witness did not distort the fact-finding process.
Second, Newton argues that her sentence is procedurally
flawed and substantively unreasonable. Because we agree
that the district court’s calculation of Medicare’s loss attribut-
able to Newton was unreasonable, we vacate Newton’s sen-
tence and remand for resentencing.
I
From 2011 to 2017, Care Specialists, Inc., owned by hus-
band-and-wife team Ferdinand and Ma Luisa Echavia, oper-
ated as a provider of health care to homebound beneficiaries
of Medicare. 1 At least part of its operation, however, was a
ruse to collect Medicare reimbursements fraudulently. Care
Specialists would submit Medicare claims for health services,
including skilled nursing services, provided to patients that
the company represented as confined to their homes. But
many of these patients did not qualify for Medicare reim-
bursement because they were not actually homebound or in
need of skilled care. The company doctored service notes to
either overcharge for services or bill for services not provided.
The company also, by altering dates, resubmitted claims that
had been rejected by Medicare because the patient was al-
ready admitted to an in-patient facility on the date Care Spe-
cialists purportedly provided care.
Ferdinand, in addition to being the owner, provided nurs-
ing services to some of Care Specialists’ patients. But in 2014,
1 Ferdinand Echavia owned the company from its inception until he
was excluded from participating in Medicare in 2014, at which point he
transferred ownership to Ma Luisa.
No. 21-3270 3
he was excluded from participating in Medicare due to a prior
conviction for providing kickbacks to patients at another
home health agency. Ferdinand brought this practice with
him to Care Specialists as a way to recruit and retain patients.
And, despite his exclusion, Ferdinand continued to provide
patients with nursing services for which the company sought
reimbursement. He concealed his involvement in patient care
from Medicare by accompanying one of the other nurses, Re-
ginald Onate, as Onate visited patients.
Newton got caught up in the scheme. She was hired as a
quality assurance specialist and Ferdinand’s personal secre-
tary. In her role as a quality assurance specialist, Newton
should have been limited to reviewing nurses’ treatment
notes for completeness before the company submitted a Med-
icare claim for billing. If notes were incomplete, quality assur-
ance specialists like Newton were supposed to inform the
treating nurse who would fix the omission. But employees
testified that Newton instead would personally draft Ferdi-
nand’s notes submitted in support of claims. Ferdinand
would leave scrap paper noting each patient’s vital signs.
Newton would then fill in the proverbial blanks by writing a
“full head-to-toe assessment” including descriptions of
skilled nursing interventions. Newton would also fudge the
dates on treatment notes to ensure that Medicare would ac-
cept the associated reimbursement claim. Despite playing this
role in the fraud, Newton earned an average annual salary of
$54,080, which did not additionally compensate her for her
involvement in the conspiracy.
The conspiracy came crumbling down when a former em-
ployee of Care Specialists, Norma Bolender, filed a whistle-
blower letter describing the scheme that Care Specialists had
4 No. 21-3270
concocted. Bolender met with federal investigators multiple
times. At those meetings, Bolender directly implicated New-
ton as a key figure in the conspiracy. A grand jury issued in-
dictments charging the Echavias, Newton, and Onate for their
roles in the Medicare fraud. The Echavias and Onate agreed
to plead guilty to their involvement. Newton was the only
charged defendant to proceed to trial.
The jury found Newton guilty of conspiracy to commit
both health care fraud and wire fraud after hearing testimony
from multiple Care Specialists employees. This did not in-
clude Bolender who avoided testifying by invoking her rights
against self-incrimination under the Fifth Amendment. After
the guilty verdict, Newton filed a motion for a new trial under
Rule 33 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, challeng-
ing for the first time Bolender’s invocation of the Fifth
Amendment. Newton argued that the court wrongly accepted
the invocation and the government’s refusal to grant Bolender
immunity violated her due process rights.
The court denied the motion, explaining that prosecutors
hold significant discretion over granting or withholding im-
munity, and they abuse that discretion only if they withhold
immunity intending to “distort the judicial fact-finding pro-
cess.” United States v. Chapman, 765 F.3d 720, 731 (7th Cir.
2014) (cleaned). The court concluded that the government did
not distort the fact-finding process at Newton’s trial because
Bolender’s testimony was just as likely, if not more likely, to
inculpate Newton as it was to exculpate her. The court further
concluded that Bolender’s invocation of her rights under the
Fifth Amendment had been proper because she potentially
would have opened herself up to prosecution if she had testi-
fied.
No. 21-3270 5
At sentencing, the judge concluded that Newton’s offense
level should be enhanced 18 levels for a loss amount to Med-
icare of $6.3 million, which represented a 10% reduction from
the roughly $7 million paid to Care Specialists by Medicare
during the period of the fraud. Based on this, and other ad-
justments, the judge found Newton’s guidelines range to be
70 to 87 months in prison. The judge then sentenced Newton
to a below-guidelines term of 56 months in prison and or-
dered her jointly and severally liable for $6.3 million in resti-
tution.
Newton now appeals, raising constitutional challenges to
her conviction, which we turn to first, and procedural and
substantive challenges to her sentence.
II
Newton argues that her conviction violated her right to a
fair trial because Bolender was permitted to invoke the Fifth
Amendment, depriving Newton of exculpatory testimony.
Her argument proceeds in two parts. First, Newton claims
that her Fifth Amendment right to due process was violated
when the government refused to immunize Bolender from
prosecution. Second, Newton contends that the district court
should have required Bolender to testify in any event because
she was protected from prosecution by the applicable statute
of limitations. Though not framed as such, we read this sec-
ond challenge as an argument that the district court deprived
Newton of her right to compulsory process under the Sixth
Amendment. See Chapman, 765 F.3d at 730 (noting a witness’s
invocation of the Fifth Amendment creates a conflict between
his right against self-incrimination and the defendant’s Sixth
Amendment right to compulsory process).
6 No. 21-3270
To set the stage, we begin by detailing Bolender’s involve-
ment at Newton’s trial. The government initially planned to
call Bolender to testify, but it backtracked and decided not to
do so. On the eve of trial, the government informed the court
and Newton that it would not call Bolender as a witness be-
cause of potential Fifth Amendment concerns. The govern-
ment agreed to keep Bolender under subpoena at Newton’s
request.
Newton attempted to call Bolender as a witness at trial;
she believed Bolender would provide exculpatory testimony.
But Bolender seemed implicated in the conspiracy, so the
court appointed an attorney to advise Bolender on her Fifth
Amendment rights before Newton proceeded with question-
ing. The attorney identified a statute of limitations defense
that might shield Bolender from prosecution, paving the way
for Bolender to testify without fear of opening herself up to
prosecution. The relevant statute of limitations was five years,
and Bolender left Care Specialists in January 2015, more than
five years before Newton’s trial in February 2020. But, it was
not until October 2015 that Bolender sent the whistle blower
letter to authorities, a date that would place Bolender’s con-
duct within the five-year statute of limitations. Bolender’s at-
torney advised her and the court that he was not sure when,
between January and October 2015, the limitations period had
begun to run.
With the trial on pause, and before Bolender decided
whether to invoke the Fifth Amendment, Newton’s counsel
complained to the court that the defense only learned for the
first time at the final pretrial conference, two weeks before
trial, that Bolender “may have potential Fifth Amendment is-
sues.” The court asked: “Well, did you know about [the Fifth
No. 21-3270 7
Amendment issues] based upon the [interview] reports?”
Newton’s counsel responded:
I don’t think she has Fifth Amendment issues,
your Honor. I just wanted to clarify the timeline.
She was subpoenaed by the government origi-
nally, but she is our witness. So that’s how that
whole thing went down.
Bolender ultimately invoked her rights under the Fifth
Amendment and did not testify. At no point did Newton clar-
ify that the court should reject the invocation because of
Bolender’s potential statute-of-limitations defense, or that the
government should be required to offer Bolender immunity.
Before addressing Newton’s arguments, we must settle
the issue of our standard of review. The government says
Newton raised her objections to Bolender’s Fifth Amendment
invocation for the first time in a post-trial motion, which was
too late to avoid forfeiture. If Newton forfeited her argu-
ments, as the government claims, we must apply plain-error
review. Newton insists that she objected to Bolender’s invo-
cation during trial, even if she did not use the word “objec-
tion.” She says this argument and her argument that the gov-
ernment should have offered Bolender immunity were
properly preserved, so we should review the matter for an
abuse of discretion.
The government is correct that Newton did not object to
the court’s acceptance of Bolender’s invocation during trial.
When Newton’s counsel said, “I don’t think [Bolender] has
Fifth Amendment issues,” Bolender had not yet invoked her
rights, and Newton did not suggest that the court should re-
ject Bolender’s invocation if she made one. After Bolender
8 No. 21-3270
invoked the Fifth Amendment, Newton’s counsel responded
simply by saying, “Well, that creates difficulties.” Indeed,
Newton accepted Bolender’s invocation and attempted to
work with the government on stipulating to the admission of
information in Bolender’s interview reports.
As for Newton’s claim that she preserved her argument
that the government should have granted Bolender immun-
ity, the record shows Newton did not remotely hint that she
wanted to assert a due process argument. Nor did she suggest
that the government should grant Bolender immunity. The
district court had no reason at the time to think that Newton
wanted to make an objection on that basis.
Newton raised these two arguments for the first time in
her motion for a new trial. But issues that should have been
brought at trial and are raised for the first time in a post-trial
motion are forfeited. See United States v. Reese, 666 F.3d 1007,
1020 (7th Cir. 2012); United States v. Wing, 104 F.3d 986, 988–89
(7th Cir. 1997). Consequently, Newton’s arguments are sub-
ject to plain-error review. United States v. Galvan, 44 F.4th
1008, 1011 (7th Cir. 2022). To establish plain error, Newton
must show that the error is “clear or obvious,” affected her
“substantial rights,” and “seriously affects the fairness, integ-
rity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.” Id.
(cleaned).
We begin with Newton’s argument that her due process
rights were violated when the government selectively with-
held immunity from Bolender while granting immunity to
other witnesses. Prosecutors have “significant discretion” to
grant immunity and compel testimony when a witness in-
vokes the Fifth Amendment’s protections against self-incrim-
ination. 18 U.S.C. § 6002, 6003(b); United States v. Davis,
No. 21-3270 9
845 F.3d 282, 291–92 (7th Cir. 2016). This discretion is subject
only to the requirement that the government not selectively
“immunize witnesses with the intention of distorting the fact-
finding process.” Davis, 845 F.3d at 292 (cleaned). While
courts may not direct the government to grant immunity, if
the government abuses its discretion to provide it, courts may
vacate a conviction based on a violation of due process. See id.
The parties also disagree about which side of a circuit split
we have come down on in regard to whether, in addition to
distorting the fact-finding process, the prosecutor must have
subjectively intended to cause such manipulation. We need
not concern ourselves with this question, however, because
Newton cannot clear the initial threshold. The district court,
in denying Newton’s post-trial motion, reasonably concluded
that she could not show that the fact-finding process was dis-
torted.
When Bolender initially alerted the authorities to the fraud
at Care Specialists, she specifically highlighted Newton’s role
in the conspiracy, explaining that Newton drafted fraudulent
records for Ferdinand. The district court rightly acknowl-
edged that Bolender repeatedly implicated Newton during
subsequent interviews:
For example, [Bolender] told investigators that
she “witnessed Newton completing blank
forms ‘all the time’ for [Ferdinand’s] patients,
and she also changed dates on visit notes” pur-
suant to orders from the Echavias. [Doc. 244-4 at
2; Doc. 244-7 at 3] (Bolender on record stating
“[t]he visit notes were controlled by [Newton]
and [Mrs. Echavia].”); [Doc. 244-10 at 5–6]
(Bolender explaining to investigators that
10 No. 21-3270
Newton completed blank patient visit forms
“all the time” under the direction of the Ec-
havias).
United States v. Newton, No. 17 CR 455-3, 2021 WL 5564876, at
*9 (N.D. Ill. Nov. 29, 2021). Further, the court emphasized
that, in a February 2017 interview, Bolender explained that,
although Newton misrepresented dates and times under the
Echavias’ direction at first, she later demonstrated an aptitude
for the work, understanding the marching orders “based on
years of experience working in the home health field.”
Newton pushes back, painting Bolender’s interviews in a
different light. Newton points out that during her last inter-
view with authorities, Bolender repeatedly stated that New-
ton was merely a secretary and she was not aware of New-
ton’s education or experience. Bolender also suggested that
she herself did not realize Care Specialists was engaged in
fraud until years after she started working there. According
to Newton, if Bolender did not initially recognize that fraud
was occurring, a jury could find that the relatively less expe-
rienced Newton could not have known about it either. But it
was not unreasonable for the district court to reject this notion
because even if Bolender testified that she was not subjectively
aware of Care Specialists’ fraud, that testimony would have
no bearing on Newton’s knowledge. Further, even if Newton
was only ever a secretary, that fact does not mean that she
could not have understood the fraud that was occurring and
of which she was a part. She worked directly under the own-
ers that concocted the fraud, presumably making Newton
privy to insider information that Bolender may have lacked.
Newton maintains that the jury could have found for her
because Bolender, in response to an interview question about
No. 21-3270 11
whether she believed Newton had intentionally acted ille-
gally or improperly, said that “people were just trying to fol-
low orders from their boss.” But to the extent that Bolender
had a personal opinion about Newton’s subjective
knowledge, that opinion would have been beside the point.
See United States v. Wantuch, 525 F.3d 505, 514 (7th Cir. 2008)
(holding that lay witness’s opinion about whether defendant
knew his actions were illegal was inadmissible under Rule
701 of the Federal Rules of Evidence).
Further, Bolender’s final interview is only exonerating if
we view it in isolation. Although Bolender said that Newton
worked off of Ferdinand’s “scratch” notes, Bolender had pre-
viously explained that these scratch notes contained very little
information about patient visits. Nothing contradicted other
evidence showing that Newton filled in the gaps by making
up additional information. Bolender also did not walk back
her previous assertion that Newton would frequently alter or
fabricate the dates and times on treatment notes. And even
during the final interview, Bolender said that she personally
witnessed Newton writing notes that Newton was not sup-
posed to write. Nothing about all of this is clearly exonerating.
The district court therefore did not plainly err when it con-
cluded that the absence of Bolender’s testimony at trial did
not distort the fact-finding process.
We now turn to Newton’s related argument that the dis-
trict court erred by accepting Bolender’s invocation of her
Fifth Amendment rights. According to Newton, the court
should have inquired more about Bolender’s statute of limi-
tations defense after her counsel identified it as a possibility.
When a subpoenaed witness invokes the Fifth Amend-
ment, the privilege against self-incrimination generally
12 No. 21-3270
trumps a defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to compulsory
process. Chapman, 765 F.3d at 730. A district court should re-
ject a witness’s Fifth Amendment invocation only if “the wit-
ness cannot possibly incriminate [herself].” Id. (quoting
United States v. Mabrook, 301 F.3d 503, 506 (7th Cir. 2002)). Oth-
erwise, the Fifth Amendment may be invoked so long as the
witness has “reasonable cause” to fear prosecution if she gives
a direct answer to the questions that may be posed during ex-
amination. Id.
It is neither clear nor obvious that Bolender lacked a rea-
sonable fear of prosecution. See United States v. Harper,
662 F.3d 958, 961 (7th Cir. 2011) (error is plain if “clear” or
“obvious” to the district court). Bolender’s lawyer informed
the court that she might be safe from prosecution, but he
could not be sure as the risk would depend on the date
Bolender withdrew from the conspiracy. Although Bolender
left Care Specialists in January 2015, leaving a company en-
gaged in criminal conspiracy is not necessarily enough on its
own to constitute withdrawal from the conspiracy. United
States v. Nagelvoort, 856 F.3d 1117, 1128–29 (7th Cir. 2017). Ra-
ther, Bolender needed to take some affirmative act to disavow
the criminal objective. Id. at 1129 (citing United States v. Mo-
rales, 655 F.3d 608, 640 (7th Cir. 2011)). Bolender’s whistle-
blower letter in October 2015 would be sufficient—but that
was still within the five-year statute of limitations at the time
of Newton’s trial. In her appellate brief, Newton even
acknowledges that the issue is “complicated.” Given all the
uncertainty, we cannot conclude that it was clear or obvious
that Bolender was protected from prosecution and therefore
the district court was required to reject her invocation of the
Fifth Amendment as improper. The court was not required to
do so under these circumstances.
No. 21-3270 13
III
We now consider Newton’s challenges to her sentence.
She challenges both the procedure used in calculating the sen-
tence and its substantive reasonableness. Newton’s proce-
dural challenge involves two parts: First, she argues that the
district court erred when it rejected her request for a down-
ward adjustment under U.S.S.G. § 3B1.2 as a minimal partici-
pant. Second, Newton believes that the court erred when cal-
culating Medicare’s loss attributable to her under U.S.S.G.
§ 2B1.1(b)(1). We review Newton’s procedural challenges,
which concern the district court’s assessment of the facts, for
clear error, United States v. Sanchez, 989 F.3d 523, 543 (7th Cir.
2021), and her challenges to the sentence’s reasonableness for
abuse of discretion, United States v. Morgan, 987 F.3d 627, 632
(7th Cir. 2021).
The Guidelines advise courts to decrease the offense level
if a defendant played either a minimal (four-level decrease) or
minor (two-level decrease) role in the criminal activity.
U.S.S.G. § 3B1.2. The “minimal participant” provision applies
to those who are “plainly among the least culpable of those
involved in the conduct of a group.” Id. § 3B1.2 cmt. n.4.
Meanwhile, the “minor participant” provision applies to
those “who [are] less culpable than most other partici-
pants … but whose role could not be described as minimal.”
Id. § 3B1.2 cmt. n.5.
The district court gave Newton a two-level reduction as a
“minor participant” in the conspiracy. Newton argues that
she qualifies as a “minimal participant” because she was a
low-level employee with no discretion over her work tasks,
lacked knowledge of some aspects of the scheme, had no de-
cision-making authority, and gained little from her
14 No. 21-3270
participation. But a defendant does not automatically qualify
as a minimal, or even minor, participant in a conspiracy just
because she did not reap substantial pecuniary gains. United
States v. Panaigua-Verdugo, 537 F.3d 722, 725 (7th Cir. 2008); see
U.S.S.G. § 3B1.2 cmt. n.3(A) (“A defendant who is accounta-
ble … for a loss amount … that greatly exceeds the defend-
ant’s personal gain … may receive an adjustment.” (emphasis
added)). Nor does a lack of decision-making authority or
knowledge of the entire plan require a downward adjust-
ment. See § 3B1.2 cmt. n.3(A) (“[A] defendant … who had lim-
ited knowledge of the scope of the scheme may receive an ad-
justment.” (emphasis added)). Rather, an important consider-
ation is whether the defendant played an essential role in the
conspiracy. United States v. Garcia, 580 F.3d 528, 538–39
(7th Cir. 2009) (“A defendant who was an essential part of a
conspiracy does not merit a role reduction simply because
other members of the conspiracy were more involved.”).
Here, the district court explained that although Newton
did not benefit financially, she was still regularly involved in
the criminal activity. And although she lacked knowledge
about some aspects of the scheme, that was only because she
purposely “[stuck] her head in the sand.” We see no clear er-
ror in this characterization of the facts. The advisory guide-
lines and our caselaw do not entitle Newton to more than a
minor participant reduction when she played an essential role
in the conspiracy’s day-to-day operations.
Newton’s argument that the district court erred in calcu-
lating the loss amount attributable to her has more traction.
Under the Sentencing Guidelines, a defendant’s base level is
increased according to the loss associated with the crime.
U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1(b)(1); United States v. Burns, 843 F.3d 679, 688
No. 21-3270 15
(7th Cir. 2016). “Loss” in § 2B1.1(b)(1) is defined as “the
greater of actual loss or intended loss.” § 2B1.1 cmt. n.3(A). In
this case, the parties and district court focused on only actual
loss, defined as the “reasonably foreseeable pecuniary harm
that resulted from the offense.” Burns, 843 F.3d at 688 (quoting
§ 2B1.1 cmt. n.3(A)(i)). In conspiracy cases, the guidelines al-
low for the offense conduct of other members to be attributa-
ble to the defendant, but that conduct also must have been
“reasonably foreseeable” to the defendant “in connection
with [the] criminal activity.” U.S.S.G. § 1B1.3(a)(1)(B). The
government has the burden to establish loss by a preponder-
ance of the evidence, but “a reasonable estimate will suffice.”
United States v. Gumila, 879 F.3d 831, 834 (7th Cir. 2018). For
Medicare fraud, a district court can reasonably count as loss
any money that Medicare would not have paid if not for the
fraud. See United States v. Dehaan, 896 F.3d 798, 808 (7th Cir.
2018). Together, this means that Newton can be held respon-
sible for all Medicare payments fraudulently obtained as a re-
sult of the fraud so long as the government can show that the
payments, and the conduct generating them, were reasonably
foreseeable to Newton.
The district court determined that Newton is responsible
for the entire actual loss of $6.3 million that the court found
the conspiracy caused. The district court landed on its esti-
mate by accepting the government’s argument that the en-
tirety of Medicare’s billing during the conspiracy (roughly $7
million) should be counted less a 10% deduction to account
for the possibility that some of Care Specialists’ charges to
Medicare had been legitimate. According to the court, the tes-
timony of five Care Specialists employees in particular—
Onate, Fia Rivera, Melanie Onal, Michelle Santos, and An-
thony Demata—“supported that the overarching purpose of
16 No. 21-3270
[Care Specialists’] operation was Mr. Echavia’s fraudulent
scheme.” But their testimony does not support such a sweep-
ing finding.
While Onate testified extensively about the fraud that he
observed, he only ever implicated Ferdinand and himself, not
any other Care Specialists nurses. He explained that, after pa-
tient visits, he would fill out documentation claiming his pa-
tients were worse off than they really were, requiring addi-
tional care. Onate clarified that about 90% of his patients, in
his estimation, were not homebound and therefore did not
qualify for Medicare reimbursement. Further, he testified to
having been asked by a few patients about being paid, allud-
ing to them possibly receiving kickbacks, also something that
would make the visits ineligible for reimbursement. While he
said that he observed pre-signed blank patient notes in New-
ton’s possession, those notes bore only Ferdinand’s signature.
And after Ferdinand was excluded from participating in
Medicare, he would accompany only Onate on patient visits.
Onate’s testimony supports a conclusion that a significant
amount of work that Onate and Ferdinand did was in pursuit
of fraudulent Medicare reimbursements. But there were at
least six other nurses who worked at Care Specialists during
the relevant time and Onate connected none of them to the
fraud.
Other witnesses likewise did not connect the vast majority
of the nurses, or their work, to the fraud. For instance, Rivera,
Onal, Santos, and Demata—all support staff who worked in
the Care Specialists office with Newton—testified that they
saw Newton filling out Ferdinand’s patient notes, but none
said that she did the same thing for other nurses. Indeed, Onal
confirmed that she never saw anyone else ever fill in patient
No. 21-3270 17
notes for nurses. And when Rivera testified about Medicare
rejecting claims because the claims asserted homecare was
provided on a date the patient was actually hospitalized, she
linked “only one nurse” to the issue: Ferdinand. None of these
four witnesses ever implicated any nurses other than Ferdi-
nand as engaging in fraud.
Again, this testimony reasonably supports a finding that
most patient work performed by Onate and Ferdinand was
not eligible for reimbursement by Medicare. But this repre-
sents a minority of the nursing staff, and we have no indica-
tion what portion of Medicare claims Onate’s and Ferdi-
nand’s patients represented. The record, then, does not estab-
lish what proportion of the $7 million reimbursed by Medi-
care was for work performed by Ferdinand and Onate as op-
posed to the unimplicated nurses. 2 For us to conclude that the
entire operation was fraudulent, except for 10%, we would
have to speculate that nearly all nurses at Care Specialists, not
just the handful of individuals identified by the government’s
2 In some cases, these potentially legitimate services might be tainted
by the fraud if they were billed on behalf of a company owned by an indi-
vidual subject to an exclusion that prevented any healthcare company
merely associated with the individual from billing Medicare. See United
States v. Triana, 468 F.3d 308, 320 (6th Cir. 2006). Here, however, Ferdinand
transferred ownership of the company to his wife after his exclusion, and
the exclusion “prohibited [Ferdinand] from submitting and causing
claims to be submitted to [Medicare] for items or services which [he] pro-
vide[d]” or from indirectly doing work for services—such as by providing
administrative, clerical, and other activities—provided to patients that
Medicare would be charged for. Specifically, the government would not
pay “for any items or services furnished, ordered, or prescribed by [Ferdi-
nand] in any capacity.”
18 No. 21-3270
witnesses, were involved in the same fraudulent activities as
Ferdinand and Onate.
The government contends this would not be speculation,
but rather in accordance with Gumila where we accepted as
reasonable the district court’s loss estimate based in part on
an assumption that the entirety of the operation was fraudu-
lent. But in Gumila, the district court considered evidence that
the defendant had an express policy instructing her employ-
ees to only use the highest billing codes for all patients, re-
gardless of the services rendered. 879 F.3d at 835. Similarly,
Gumila instructed her employees to claim patients as home-
bound when they were not. Id. at 833. These universal policies
gave the court a starting point to assume that nearly all pa-
tient visits had been fraudulently coded or did not otherwise
qualify for Medicare reimbursement. Id. at 835–36.
Here, by contrast, there was no evidence of a similarly ex-
plicit, universal policy. The government presented evidence
of significant fraud, but not evidence tainting all Medicare re-
imbursements. It proved that two out of the eight nurses at
the company engaged in fraud. We can reasonably conclude
that a significant amount of Onate’s and Ferdinand’s home-
bound patient care was ineligible for Medicare reimburse-
ment because Ferdinand was ineligible to participate in Med-
icare, the patients were not homebound, Newton billed for
unnecessary or nonexistent care, or the patients were receiv-
ing kickbacks. But this does not equate to, nor does anything
suggest there existed, a universal policy instructing other
nurses to engage in such fraud. Instead, we would have to
speculate on the existence of a policy encouraging fraud be-
cause of Ferdinand’s role at the company.
No. 21-3270 19
The district court seemed to do just that by pointing to Fer-
dinand’s penchant for fraud and the integral role he played in
Care Specialists’ operations throughout the period of fraud,
from 2011 to 2017. But after Ferdinand’s exclusion from Med-
icare in 2014, his role seemed to be diminishing. The evidence
shows he provided care only to Onate’s patients during that
period, not that he was otherwise involved in the care for all
patients. The record does not support an assumption that 90%
of billed care after 2014 was ineligible for Medicare reim-
bursement.
As for the period before Ferdinand’s exclusion, there is lit-
tle evidence to suggest that 90% of all that patient care was
ineligible for reimbursement either. Santos testified that when
she began working for Care Specialists in 2013, Ferdinand
was the only nurse performing admissions. But this in and of
itself does not make reimbursement fraudulent. Before 2014,
Ferdinand was not excluded from Medicare so his involve-
ment in admitting patients would not be a problem. And the
record generally shows that he engaged in fraud with the pa-
tients he directly cared for, not necessarily with all patients he
admitted and subsequently assigned to other nurses. While
Onate testified that 90% of his patients were not homebound,
nobody suggested a similar level of patients seen by other
nurses were ineligible. For instance, another nurse told inves-
tigators that maybe up to 50% of his patients were not home-
bound. 3 The reasonable conclusion is that the Echavias fun-
neled significantly more ineligible patients to the one nurse
3 Nurse Ericson Magno, who did not testify, initially told investigators
that 5%-10% of his patients were not homebound before later estimating
up to 50% were not homebound. He explained the difference depended
on how he interpreted the definition of homebound.
20 No. 21-3270
who had shown willingness to engage in fraud, while other
nurses generally received a higher proportion of patients eli-
gible for Medicare reimbursement.
Based on these facts, only speculation can support the dis-
trict court’s starting presumption that 90% of Medicare reim-
bursements to Care Specialists were fraudulent, regardless of
which nurse performed the care. The calculation of the loss
amount attributable to Newton was, therefore, clearly errone-
ous. See United States v. Nelson, 774 F.3d 1104, 1107 (7th Cir.
2014) (“A defendant is entitled to have sentencing determina-
tions made based on reliable evidence rather than speculation
or unfounded allegations.”).
The government argues that even so, any error was neces-
sarily harmless. But “[a]n error in calculating the sentencing
guideline range is a procedural error that requires remand
unless the government can show that the error is harmless.”
United States v. Black, 815 F.3d 1048, 1056 (7th Cir. 2016). The
government’s burden at this point is “to show that the sen-
tence would have been the same absent the error.” Id. The
government asserts that the error is harmless because Newton
cannot show that the loss amount attributed to her would
have been less than $3.5 million. See U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1(b)(1)(J)
(offense level increase the same for loss amount between $3.5
and $9.5 million). But the government misunderstands who
has the burden to show that the sentence would have been the
same, and it does nothing to attempt to explain what the
proper loss calculation should be. This is a far cry from those
cases where we held harmless an improper loss amount anal-
ysis because the record clearly indicated what the proper
amount should have been. See United States v. Hussein,
No. 21-3270 21
664 F.3d 155, 160–61 (7th Cir. 2011); United States v. Frith,
461 F.3d 914, 918 (7th Cir. 2006).
Because we find that the district court erred procedurally,
we must remand for resentencing. We leave to the district
court’s sound discretion whether revisiting the loss amount
requires reexamining its restitution order. Additionally, be-
cause we are reversing on procedural grounds, we need not
consider the substantive reasonableness of Newton’s sen-
tence. See United States v. Lucas, 670 F.3d 784, 789–90 (7th Cir.
2012) (“Our review of sentencing decisions proceeds through
a two-step inquiry … [and] if we determine there was no pro-
cedural error, we then examine the substantive reasonable-
ness of the sentence itself.” (cleaned)).
IV
For the above reasons, we AFFIRM Newton’s conviction,
but VACATE her sentence and REMAND for the district
court to reconsider the loss amount attributable to her.