BY JAY WEAVER
JWEAVER@MIAMIHERALD.COM
Miami Beach’s “Rock Doc” won’t be getting out of jail anytime soon.
Christopher Gregory Wayne, an osteopathic physician charged with ripping off Medicare, will have to stay in a Miami federal detention center until his trial, a magistrate judge ruled Thursday.
Wayne, 53, arrested Monday, pleaded not guilty to a dozen charges of submitting bogus bills for physical therapy treatments, such as massages and electrical stimulations, at his former Miami clinic.
But at his bail hearing, federal prosecutor Eric Morales argued that Wayne filed almost $5 million in false claims for those treatments in 2007-09 and was paid $1.7 million by the taxpayer-funded Medicare program. He said Wayne, whose patients dubbed him the “Rock Doc” because of his punk-style hairdo, submitted bills for 500 daily physical therapy sessions on average in 2008 — a mathematical impossibility.
Some patients told the federal grand jury that his therapy services were a “joke,” the prosecutor said, adding that the treatments were sometimes provided by Wayne’s unlicensed “office girls.”
Morales told Magistrate Judge Barry Garber that Wayne faced between 6 1/2 and 8 years in prison, making him a likely risk of flight. He also pointed out that the physician filed for bankruptcy, his Miami Beach home was mortgaged to the hilt and that he traveled out of the country in recent years.
Wayne’s criminal defense attorney Michael Grieco countered his client was only charged with $230 in actual Medicare fraud — not millions. He also noted that Wayne has lived in Miami Beach for more than 20 years and has family in Arkansas and Illinois. And, he pointed out, the federal probation office recommended that Wayne get a personal surety bond before trial.
“He’s not going anywhere,” Grieco said.
But Garber, the magistrate, sided with the prosecutor, saying “he might well flee this jurisdiction.”
Wayne, who has sported punkish hair along with chains, bangles and leather bracelets in the past, has been in the public eye before as a focus of a Wall Street Journal profile in December 2010.
According to the profile, he had used his Pine Tree Island home as a production studio for Playboy photo spreads and had posed with celebrities such as Paris Hilton and Aerosmith’s Steven Tyler.
The Miami indictment charges him with 12 counts of Medicare fraud by submitting “false claims” for therapeutic treatments, such as a 15-minute massages ($25), electrical stimulations ($20) and ultrasounds ($15).
The indictment accuses him of “falsely and fraudulently representing that these treatments and services were medically necessary and had been provided to Medicare beneficiaries” between December 2007 and August 2009.
The indictment further alleges that he disbursed the Medicare payments to himself and others.
Wayne once operated a lucrative medical practice in Miami’s Design District.
But Medicare administrators grew suspicious of Wayne’s voluminous billing activity for physical therapy services and began heavily scrutinizing his bills in 2009. That increased oversight forced him to sell his business.
Wayne, who obtained his osteopathic license in 1990, worked for a pain clinic, Park Place Medical Group, in Fort Lauderdale in 2010-11, according to state records.
But he got into trouble dispensing pain killers and other prescription drugs. In September 2012, the state Department of Health banned him from owning, operating or working in a pain management clinic and from dispensing prescription drugs, such as Oxycodone, Xanax and Flexeril.
His Facebook page says Wayne, who received his osteopathic degree from Nova Southeastern University, is now working in the emergency room at Larkin Community Hospital in South Miami. He was arrested there Monday by agents with the FBI and Department of Health and Human Services-Office of Inspector General.
Wayne also says he worked at Regional General Hospital in Williston, and as a family physician in Hialeah Gardens.
http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/10/03/3667271/miami-beachs-rock-doc-held-before.html
http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/10/03/3667271/miami-beachs-rock-doc-held-before.html