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'''Dr. Marc J. Blatstein''' is an American physician, author, and [[Prison_Consultants|prison consultant]] who served roughly two years in federal prison after pleading guilty to mail fraud in 2005.<ref name="justia-appeal">United States v. Blatstein, 482 F.3d 725 (4th Cir. 2007), https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/appellate-courts/F3/482/725/497343/.</ref> He ran a podiatry practice in Fredericksburg, Virginia for over 30 years before getting convicted of fraudulently billing insurance companies. The scheme involved a fake entity called the Central Park Ambulatory Surgery Center, which didn't actually exist.<ref name="fls-indictment">The Free Lance-Star, "Doctor faces U.S. fraud charges," May 2005, https://fredericksburg.com/local/doctor-faces-u-s-fraud-charges/article_613c3af4-99db-59a8-9af4-029546b19e38.html.</ref> After his release, Blatstein got his medical license back in 2010 and started Physician Presentence Report Service, LLC in 2011. He's become one of the few prison consultants with both medical training and firsthand experience in the federal [[Index_of_Federal_Prison_Facilities|Bureau of Prisons]].<ref name="pprsus-about">Physician Presentence Report Service, "About Dr. Marc Blatstein," https://pprsus.com/about-dr-marc-blatstein/.</ref>
'''Dr. Marc J. Blatstein''' is an American podiatric physician, author, and [[Prison_Consultants|prison consultant]]. He ran a podiatry practice in Fredericksburg, Virginia, for more than three decades. In 2005 he pleaded guilty to one count of mail fraud and served time in federal prison.<ref name="justia-appeal">United States v. Blatstein, 482 F.3d 725 (4th Cir. 2007), https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/appellate-courts/F3/482/725/497343/.</ref> The charge grew out of a billing scheme. Blatstein had charged insurers surgical-facility fees through an entity called the Central Park Ambulatory Surgery Center. That entity had no physical existence and held no Virginia license.<ref name="fls-indictment">The Free Lance-Star, "Doctor faces U.S. fraud charges," May 2005, https://fredericksburg.com/local/doctor-faces-u-s-fraud-charges/article_613c3af4-99db-59a8-9af4-029546b19e38.html.</ref>


== Summary ==
His sentence was unusual in its path. The trial judge first gave him 12 months and one day. The government appealed. The Fourth Circuit vacated the sentence on procedural grounds and sent the case back. On resentencing, Blatstein drew a 24-month term and returned to prison for a second stretch.<ref name="justia-appeal" /> He recovered his medical license in 2010. A year later he started Physician Presentence Report Service, LLC, a consulting firm for defendants headed into the federal system. The work draws on two things at once: his medical training and his own time inside the [[Index_of_Federal_Prison_Facilities|Bureau of Prisons]].<ref name="pprsus-about">Physician Presentence Report Service, "About Dr. Marc Blatstein," https://pprsus.com/about-dr-marc-blatstein/.</ref>


Marc Blatstein works with white-collar defendants facing federal sentencing. His firm, Physician Presentence Report Service (PPRSUS), prepares clients for presentence interviews and sentencing hearings. The work emphasizes medical documentation and facility placement requests, which matter far more than most defendants realize.<ref name="pprsus-about" />
== Early Life and Education ==


His background speaks for itself: over 30 years of medical practice plus time spent in the federal prison system. Blatstein's consulting focuses on making sure defendants' medical records are properly documented in their presentence reports. These reports are how the BOP decides medical care and facility placement.<ref name="federal-lawyer">Marc Blatstein et al., "Availability of Treatment and Rehabilitation in Federal Prison: The Critical Role of the Presentence Report," The Federal Lawyer, January/February 2021, https://www.pprsus.com/treatment-and-rehabilitation-in-federal-prison-the-critical-role-of-the-presentence-report/.</ref>
Blatstein was born in Philadelphia and went to high school in the city.<ref name="pprsus-bio">Physician Presentence Report Service, "Marc Blatstein," https://pprsus.com/more-about-marc-blatstein/.</ref> He enrolled at George Washington University in Washington, D.C., and worked part-time jobs to cover the cost. During his third year he took an 11-month break to travel with a friend. The trip ran from Washington, D.C., to Lima, Peru, then by train up to Cusco in the Andes, into the Amazon, and on to other parts of South America. He came back, finished his coursework, and graduated in 1977 with a Bachelor of Arts in psychology.<ref name="pprsus-bio" />


He's published work with the American Bar Association on representing people with dementia, and he's written for The Federal Lawyer about treatment availability in federal prison.<ref name="aba-dementia">American Bar Association, "Representing People With Dementia: A Practical Guide for Criminal Defense Lawyers," 2022, https://www.americanbar.org/products/inv/book/426832634/.</ref> The California Business Journal has featured his commentary on high-profile federal cases, including those involving former Congressman George Santos and attorney Thomas Che Goldstein.<ref name="cbj-goldstein">California Business Journal, "Thomas Che Goldstein's Fall from Grace," February 2025, https://calbizjournal.com/thomas-che-goldsteins-fall-from-grace/.</ref>
Podiatry came next. He attended the Ohio College of Podiatric Medicine, now the Kent State University College of Podiatric Medicine, and earned a Doctor of Podiatric Medicine degree in 1983.<ref name="pprsus-bio" /> While in school he ran a side business called Pink Panther Bartenders with his brother and two classmates to help pay tuition. During the same period he was invited to take part in a Cleveland Opera gala.<ref name="pprsus-bio" />


== Background ==
His clinical training moved through several hospitals. He trained at Lutheran Hospital in Baltimore in 1982, then at Atlanta Hospital and Medical Center in Georgia from 1982 to 1983. He completed a surgical residency in podiatric medicine and surgery at Lawndale Community Hospital in 1984.<ref name="pprsus-bio" />


=== Early Life and Education ===
== Medical Career ==


Blatstein was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and went to high school there.<ref name="pprsus-bio">Physician Presentence Report Service, "Marc Blatstein," https://pprsus.com/more-about-marc-blatstein/.</ref> He attended George Washington University in Washington, D.C., working part-time jobs to afford it. During his third year at GWU, he took an 11-month break to travel with a friend. They went from Washington, D.C. to Lima, Peru, then traveled by train to Cusco in the Peruvian Andes, the Amazon, and other South American locations. Back at GWU, he finished his degree and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology in 1977.<ref name="pprsus-bio" />
Blatstein obtained a Virginia medical license in 1984 and opened a solo podiatry practice near Fredericksburg.<ref name="fls-board">The Free Lance-Star, "Board punishes podiatrist," 2001, https://fredericksburg.com/board-punishes-podiatrist/article_616319cc-918b-5fca-bbea-4729025e3b44.html.</ref> His main office sat in a strip mall in the Central Park area. He later opened two more locations in the region. Over the years he widened the practice. He added a medically oriented shoe store, wound-care programs, and physical therapy services.<ref name="pprsus-bio" />


Podiatric medicine came next. He attended the Ohio College of Podiatric Medicine (now Kent State University College of Podiatric Medicine) and earned his Doctor of Podiatric Medicine degree in 1983.<ref name="pprsus-bio" /> While there, he started "Pink Panther Bartenders" with his brother and two classmates, a side business to help pay for school. He was also invited to participate in a Cleveland Opera gala during that time.<ref name="pprsus-bio" />
The Circulator Boot featured heavily in his work. The device was used in lower-extremity wound therapy. It supported bacterial control, blood supply, moisture management, and the removal of dead or damaged tissue.<ref name="pprsus-bio" />


His clinical training took him to several places. Lutheran Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland in 1982. Then Atlanta Hospital & Medical Center in Georgia from 1982 to 1983. He finished his surgical residency in Podiatric Medicine and Surgery at Lawndale Community Hospital in 1984.<ref name="pprsus-bio" />
The Virginia Board of Medicine sanctioned him in 2001. The board fined him $5,000, issued a reprimand, and required additional training in record keeping. The action followed a hearing in Fredericksburg. The underlying issue dated to a 1999 patient he treated for foot pain. He diagnosed a stress fracture. The board found he had not properly treated or documented it, and an orthopedist who examined the patient later determined the fracture was essentially healed. The board also flagged his advertising. Some ads violated regulations. One promoted a "Chinese Treatment" for fungal nails that the board said posed potential health risks. Another used the name of an organization that did not exist, the "Association of American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons."<ref name="fls-board" />
 
=== Medical Career ===
 
Blatstein got his Virginia medical license in 1984 and started a solo podiatry practice in the Fredericksburg area.<ref name="fls-board">The Free Lance-Star, "Board punishes podiatrist," 2001, https://fredericksburg.com/board-punishes-podiatrist/article_616319cc-918b-5fca-bbea-4729025e3b44.html.</ref> He ran his main practice from a strip mall location in Central Park and eventually opened two more locations in the Fredericksburg area. Over time he added a medically oriented shoe store, wound care programs, and physical therapy services to his practice.<ref name="pprsus-bio" />
 
The Circulator Boot was a major part of his work. This treatment device helped with lower extremity wound therapy, bacterial control, blood supply, moisture management, and removal of dead or damaged tissues.<ref name="pprsus-bio" />
 
In 2001, things changed. The Virginia Board of Medicine fined him $5,000, reprimanded him, and ordered additional training in record keeping following a hearing in Fredericksburg. The issue involved his 1999 treatment of a patient for foot pain. He'd diagnosed a stress fracture but allegedly didn't properly treat or document it. An orthopedist who later examined the patient determined the fracture was essentially healed. The board also found problems with his advertisements. Some violated regulations. Others for treatments like a "Chinese Treatment" for fungal nails posed potential health risks. He'd also used a non-existent organization name, "Association of American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons," in his ads.<ref name="fls-board" />


== Federal Investigation and Prosecution ==
== Federal Investigation and Prosecution ==
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=== Investigation ===
=== Investigation ===


A patient complaint filed with Virginia State Police in 2001 about her bill became the spark.<ref name="fls-indictment" /> In May 2004, federal investigators got involved. FBI agents from the Fredericksburg office worked with officials from the Department of Health and Human Services, the Office of Personnel Management, and Virginia State Police. They suspected fraudulent billing of health insurers.<ref name="justia-appeal" />
The matter began with a patient. In 2001 she filed a complaint about her bill with the Virginia State Police.<ref name="fls-indictment" /> Federal investigators picked it up in May 2004. FBI agents out of the Fredericksburg office worked alongside the Department of Health and Human Services, the Office of Personnel Management, and the Virginia State Police. Their suspicion was fraudulent billing of health insurers.<ref name="justia-appeal" />


On July 14, 2004, FBI Agent Jeffrey Howard requested search warrants. He submitted an affidavit to a magistrate judge claiming probable cause that Blatstein had violated federal statutes on healthcare fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1347) and mail fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1341).<ref name="justia-appeal" />
On July 14, 2004, FBI Agent Jeffrey Howard sought search warrants. His affidavit to a magistrate judge asserted probable cause that Blatstein had violated federal statutes covering healthcare fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1347) and mail fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1341).<ref name="justia-appeal" />


July 27, 2004 brought the raid. Federal authorities executed the search warrants at his office and residence, finding evidence of his billing scheme. Blatstein himself recalled the experience: a 6 a.m. knock at his front door where "a litany of Alphabet Law enforcement agencies greeted" him, followed by an 8 a.m. visit to his office where agents seized computers and were accompanied by local board of medicine representatives.<ref name="pprsus-about" />
Agents executed the warrants on July 27, 2004, at his office and his home. They found evidence of the billing scheme. Blatstein has described the day in his own words. A 6 a.m. knock came at his front door, where, he wrote, "a litany of Alphabet Law enforcement agencies greeted" him. Agents arrived at his office around 8 a.m., seized computers, and were accompanied by local board of medicine representatives.<ref name="pprsus-about" />


=== The Billing Scheme ===
=== The Billing Scheme ===


The investigation revealed a straightforward fraud. Blatstein had billed patients' insurers for outpatient surgical facilities provided by the Central Park Ambulatory Surgical Center (CPASC). The problem? CPASC had no physical existence and wasn't licensed by Virginia.<ref name="justia-appeal" />
The structure of the fraud was simple. Blatstein billed patients' insurers for outpatient surgical facilities supposedly provided by the Central Park Ambulatory Surgical Center, or CPASC. CPASC had no physical existence. It held no Virginia license.<ref name="justia-appeal" />


How it worked:<ref name="fls-indictment" /><ref name="justia-appeal" />
The mechanics played out over several years:<ref name="fls-indictment" /><ref name="justia-appeal" />


* In 1997, Blatstein opened his Central Park office, expanding it in 1998 to add a room for podiatric surgical procedures.
* In 1997 Blatstein opened his Central Park office. In 1998 he expanded it and added a room for podiatric surgical procedures.
* In 1999, he incorporated the Central Park Ambulatory Surgery Center at the same address as his podiatry office.
* In 1999 he incorporated the Central Park Ambulatory Surgery Center at the same address as his podiatry office.
* In 2000, he obtained a separate tax ID for the surgery center, a separate telephone line, and a post office box at a Parcel Plus store with a different address (1285 Carl D. Silver Parkway).
* In 2000 he obtained a separate tax ID for the surgery center, a separate telephone line, and a post office box at a Parcel Plus store carrying a different address (1285 Carl D. Silver Parkway).
* He told employees to falsely tell the Government Employees Hospital Association (GEHA) insurance company that the surgery center was a separate facility, not part of his office.
* He directed employees to tell the Government Employees Hospital Association (GEHA) that the surgery center was a separate facility rather than part of his office.
* Patients signed preprinted forms stating they'd be responsible for both a facility fee and a surgeon's fee.
* Patients signed preprinted forms stating they would owe both a facility fee and a surgeon's fee.
* Blatstein personally completed all paperwork for surgical facility billing, while employees handled other procedure billing.
* Blatstein handled all paperwork for surgical-facility billing himself. Employees managed billing for other procedures.
* He submitted bills for surgery center fees to at least six insurance companies: Mail Handlers Benefit Plan, GEHA, Blue Cross/Blue Shield, Aetna, Humana, and Cigna.
* He submitted surgery-center bills to at least six insurers: Mail Handlers Benefit Plan, GEHA, Blue Cross/Blue Shield, Aetna, Humana, and Cigna.


Two former employees provided information to the FBI. They're called Cooperating Witnesses 1 and 2 in the affidavit. CW-1 told investigators that Blatstein billed surgical facility fees for procedures at his podiatry office despite repeated warnings. He couldn't legitimately charge such fees for procedures not done at a physically separate facility. CW-1 first learned about CPASC when someone called a telephone line reserved for Blatstein's exclusive use asking for the Central Park Ambulatory Surgery Center.<ref name="justia-appeal" />
Two former employees gave information to the FBI. The affidavit identifies them as Cooperating Witnesses 1 and 2. CW-1 told investigators that Blatstein billed surgical-facility fees for procedures done at his podiatry office. CW-1 said he had warned Blatstein repeatedly that such fees were not legitimate for procedures performed outside a physically separate facility. CW-1 first learned of CPASC after someone called a telephone line reserved for Blatstein's exclusive use and asked for the Central Park Ambulatory Surgery Center.<ref name="justia-appeal" />


One incident stood out. Patient Lyndon Friend came in for an ingrown toenail removal. His wife, Katrina Friend, noticed a yellow carbon sheet behind paperwork her husband was signing. She lifted the top sheet to see what was under it, and a Blatstein employee demanded the papers back. She refused. When Blatstein himself tried to physically wrestle the documents away from her, she ripped them into pieces and left. Later she pieced together the torn documents. The top sheet bore the heading "Dr. Marc Blatstein, LPM, PC." The carbon underneath was headed "Central Park Ambulatory Surgery Center, Inc."<ref name="justia-appeal" />
One episode stood out in the record. A patient named Lyndon Friend came in to have an ingrown toenail removed. His wife, Katrina Friend, noticed a yellow carbon sheet tucked behind the paperwork her husband was signing. She lifted the top sheet to read what lay underneath. An employee demanded the papers back. She refused. Blatstein then tried to wrestle the documents away from her. She tore them up and left. Later she pieced the fragments together. The top sheet was headed "Dr. Marc Blatstein, LPM, PC." The carbon copy beneath it read "Central Park Ambulatory Surgery Center, Inc."<ref name="justia-appeal" />


=== Indictment and Guilty Plea ===
=== Indictment and Guilty Plea ===


On June 20, 2005, a federal grand jury in Virginia's Eastern District handed down an indictment. One count of healthcare fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1347) and seven counts of mail fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1341).<ref name="justia-appeal" /> He faced a maximum of 10 years per count and a $250,000 fine per count.<ref name="fls-indictment" />
A federal grand jury in the Eastern District of Virginia returned an indictment on June 20, 2005. It charged one count of healthcare fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1347) and seven counts of mail fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1341).<ref name="justia-appeal" /> Each count carried a maximum of 10 years and a $250,000 fine.<ref name="fls-indictment" />


The next day, June 21, 2005, Blatstein's attorney David G. Barger of Williams Mullen filed a motion to suppress all seized evidence and requested a Franks hearing. Barger argued that his client was falsely accused and never intended to defraud anyone. Virginia state law, he noted, included an exemption for doctors who perform occasional surgeries in their offices.<ref name="fls-indictment" />
The next day, June 21, 2005, Blatstein's attorney, David G. Barger of Williams Mullen, moved to suppress all seized evidence and requested a Franks hearing. Barger argued that his client never intended to defraud anyone and had been falsely accused. He pointed to a provision of Virginia law that exempted doctors performing occasional surgeries in their own offices.<ref name="fls-indictment" />


The district court denied the motion on August 25, 2005.<ref name="justia-appeal" />
The district court denied the motion on August 25, 2005.<ref name="justia-appeal" />


On October 5, 2005, Blatstein entered a conditional guilty plea to one count of mail fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1341), preserving his right to appeal the court's denial of his suppression motion. The plea agreement said prosecution and defense would jointly recommend a sentence at the low end of his 24-30 month guidelines range.<ref name="justia-appeal" />
Blatstein entered a conditional guilty plea on October 5, 2005. He pleaded to a single count of mail fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1341) and preserved his right to appeal the denial of his suppression motion. Under the plea agreement, both sides agreed to recommend a sentence at the low end of his 24-to-30-month guidelines range.<ref name="justia-appeal" />


Total bills allegedly submitted came to $501,736. Blatstein received reimbursements of $272,704. The indictment acknowledged he was entitled to professional fees for treating patients but not to facility fees since his surgical room wasn't a state-licensed, free-standing surgery center.<ref name="fls-indictment" />
The billing figures were laid out in the indictment. Total bills submitted came to $501,736. Blatstein received $272,704 in reimbursements. The indictment acknowledged that he was entitled to professional fees for treating patients. He was not entitled to facility fees, because his surgical room was not a state-licensed, free-standing surgery center.<ref name="fls-indictment" />


== Sentencing and Appeal ==
== Sentencing and Appeal ==
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=== Initial Sentencing ===
=== Initial Sentencing ===


On January 6, 2006, the probation officer submitted a [[The_Presentence_Report_(PSR)|presentence report]] saying no factors warranted a sentence outside the advisory guidelines range. On February 3, 2006, Blatstein filed a sentencing memorandum describing his efforts toward restitution and the harm to his livelihood and health. Attached were letters from friends and family members, including his mother and brother, expressing concern. Notably, the memorandum didn't suggest circumstances calling for a sentence outside his advisory guidelines range.<ref name="justia-appeal" />
The probation officer filed a [[The_Presentence_Report_(PSR)|presentence report]] on January 6, 2006. It found no factors that called for a sentence outside the advisory guidelines range. On February 3, 2006, Blatstein filed a sentencing memorandum. He described his restitution efforts and the harm the case had done to his livelihood and his health. He attached letters from friends and family, including his mother and brother. The memorandum did not argue for a sentence below the guidelines range.<ref name="justia-appeal" />


On February 8, 2006, U.S. District Court Judge Richard L. Williams held the sentencing hearing. Both parties recommended 24 months' imprisonment, the bottom of his guidelines range. But Judge Williams went lower. He sentenced Blatstein to 12 months and one day. This happened without notifying the parties of a possible downward variance as Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 32(h) required.<ref name="justia-appeal" />
U.S. District Judge Richard L. Williams held the sentencing hearing on February 8, 2006. Both sides asked for 24 months, the bottom of the range. Judge Williams went lower. He imposed 12 months and one day. He did so without first telling the parties that he was considering a downward variance, a step Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 32(h) requires.<ref name="justia-appeal" />


Several reasons, the court said, made the longer term "counter productive": Blatstein's "early efforts to make amends for his wrong doing." The effect on his health and profession. "His family." A shorter prison term would also "save the United States... [money] that would be wasted by warehousing him for that period of time."<ref name="justia-appeal" />
The court listed reasons it considered a longer term "counter productive." It cited Blatstein's "early efforts to make amends for his wrong doing." It cited the effect on his health and his profession. It cited "his family." A shorter term, the court added, would "save the United States ... [money] that would be wasted by warehousing him for that period of time."<ref name="justia-appeal" />


Judge Williams ordered restitution of $272,704 to Humana, Aetna, Cigna, and the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program.<ref name="hhs-exclusion">Department of Health and Human Services, Departmental Appeals Board, Civil Remedies Division, Decision No. CR1638, Docket No. C-07-245, August 23, 2007, https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/static/dab/decisions/alj-decisions/2007/cr1638.pdf.</ref> Blatstein was ordered to report to a federal penitentiary in Florida by March 14, 2006.<ref name="podiatry-sentencing">Podiatry Management Online, "Fredericksburg Podiatrist Sentenced in Billing Scam," 2006, https://www.podiatrym.com/search3.cfm?id=8886.</ref>
Judge Williams ordered $272,704 in restitution to Humana, Aetna, Cigna, and the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program.<ref name="hhs-exclusion">Department of Health and Human Services, Departmental Appeals Board, Civil Remedies Division, Decision No. CR1638, Docket No. C-07-245, August 23, 2007, https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/static/dab/decisions/alj-decisions/2007/cr1638.pdf.</ref> Blatstein was directed to report to a federal facility in Florida by March 14, 2006.<ref name="podiatry-sentencing">Podiatry Management Online, "Fredericksburg Podiatrist Sentenced in Billing Scam," 2006, https://www.podiatrym.com/search3.cfm?id=8886.</ref>


=== Fourth Circuit Appeal ===
=== Fourth Circuit Appeal ===


The government didn't accept the sentence. They cross-appealed, saying the sentencing court erred in imposing a variance without providing reasonable notice. The Fourth Circuit affirmed the denial of Blatstein's suppression motion but vacated his sentence and sent it back for resentencing consistent with Rule 32.<ref name="justia-appeal" />
The government cross-appealed. Its argument was procedural. The sentencing court had imposed a variance without giving reasonable notice. The Fourth Circuit affirmed the denial of the suppression motion. It vacated the sentence and remanded for resentencing consistent with Rule 32.<ref name="justia-appeal" />


The court found that the government, given fair opportunity, could have raised meritorious objections to the grounds for variance. The government presented strong challenges to several factors the court had relied on: Blatstein's "early efforts to make amends," the impact on his profession and family, and the possible savings to the federal government.<ref name="justia-appeal" />
The appeals court reasoned that the government, given a fair opportunity, could have raised meritorious objections to the grounds for the variance. It noted the government had strong challenges to several of the factors the trial court relied on, among them Blatstein's "early efforts to make amends," the impact on his profession and family, and the projected savings to the federal government.<ref name="justia-appeal" />


Judge King wrote the Fourth Circuit opinion in 2007. Judge Michael and Senior Judge Hamilton concurred. It's reported as United States v. Blatstein, 482 F.3d 725 (4th Cir. 2007).<ref name="justia-appeal" />
Judge King wrote the opinion in 2007. Judge Michael and Senior Judge Hamilton concurred. The decision is reported as United States v. Blatstein, 482 F.3d 725 (4th Cir. 2007).<ref name="justia-appeal" />


=== Resentencing ===
=== Resentencing ===


Blatstein was released in March 2007 after serving his original sentence of one year and one day. But the Fourth Circuit's decision changed things. Judge Williams resentenced him and ordered him to surrender by July 24, 2007, for another year in prison.<ref name="podiatry-resentencing">Podiatry Management Online, "VA Podiatrist Ordered to Serve an Additional Year in Prison," 2007, https://www.podiatrym.com/search3.cfm?id=14677.</ref>
Blatstein had already served the original 12-month-and-one-day term. He was released in March 2007. The Fourth Circuit's ruling reopened the matter. Judge Williams resentenced him and ordered him to surrender by July 24, 2007, for another year behind bars.<ref name="podiatry-resentencing">Podiatry Management Online, "VA Podiatrist Ordered to Serve an Additional Year in Prison," 2007, https://www.podiatrym.com/search3.cfm?id=14677.</ref>


His attorney David G. Barger expressed disappointment with the resentencing.<ref name="podiatry-resentencing" />
His attorney, David G. Barger, said of the resentencing, "Obviously, we're disappointed."<ref name="podiatry-resentencing" />


== Administrative Actions ==
== Administrative Actions ==
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=== Medical License ===
=== Medical License ===


On or about February 24, 2006, Blatstein surrendered his medical license to the Virginia Board of Medicine due to his felony conviction.<ref name="hhs-exclusion" />
Blatstein surrendered his Virginia medical license to the state Board of Medicine on or about February 24, 2006, a consequence of his felony conviction.<ref name="hhs-exclusion" />


By 2010, he'd gotten it back. Colleagues supported him when he appeared before the local board of medicine, and others encouraged him to pursue reinstatement. He said: "that was something my soul needed, and I will be forever grateful."<ref name="pprsus-about" /> His Virginia license for Foot and Ankle Medicine and Surgery was active from 1985 to 2023, with records indicating licensure through 2026.<ref name="pprsus-bio" />
He recovered it by 2010. Colleagues backed him when he went before the local board of medicine, and others urged him to seek reinstatement. He later described the moment in personal terms: "that was something my soul needed, and I will be forever grateful."<ref name="pprsus-about" /> According to his firm, his Virginia license for foot and ankle medicine and surgery was active from 1985 to 2023, with records indicating licensure through 2026.<ref name="pprsus-bio" />


=== Medicare and Medicaid Exclusion ===
=== Medicare and Medicaid Exclusion ===


On November 30, 2006, the Inspector General of the Department of Health and Human Services notified Blatstein that he was excluded from Medicare and other federally funded health care programs. This came under section 1128(a)(3) of the Social Security Act. The reason? A felony conviction related to healthcare fraud. The I.G. imposed a 13-year exclusion based on aggravating factors.<ref name="hhs-exclusion" />
The HHS Inspector General notified Blatstein on November 30, 2006, that he was excluded from Medicare and other federally funded health care programs. The exclusion came under section 1128(a)(3) of the Social Security Act. The basis was a felony conviction tied to healthcare fraud. The Inspector General set the term at 13 years, citing aggravating factors.<ref name="hhs-exclusion" />


Blatstein requested a hearing before Administrative Law Judge Alfonso J. Montano. In an August 23, 2007 decision, Judge Montano upheld the 13-year exclusion. The ALJ identified four aggravating factors:<ref name="hhs-exclusion" />
Blatstein requested a hearing before Administrative Law Judge Alfonso J. Montano. In a decision dated August 23, 2007, Judge Montano sustained the 13-year exclusion. The ALJ identified four aggravating factors:<ref name="hhs-exclusion" />


* Financial loss to Medicare and state health care programs exceeded $5,000 (total restitution was $272,704.05)
* The financial loss to Medicare and state health care programs topped $5,000. Total restitution was $272,704.05.
* The acts continued over more than one year (January 1999 to approximately December 2003)
* The conduct ran for more than a year, from January 1999 to roughly December 2003.
* The sentence included incarceration (originally 12 months and one day, increased to 24 months on resentencing)
* The sentence included incarceration, originally 12 months and one day and later increased to 24 months on resentencing.
* Blatstein faced adverse action by other government agencies on the same circumstances (license surrender and a five-year OPM debarment)
* Other government agencies had taken adverse action on the same facts, including the license surrender and a five-year OPM debarment.


Blatstein argued the 13-year exclusion was excessive. He wanted it reduced to the statutory minimum of five years. The Office of Personnel Management had reduced his suspension from seven years to five years after an in-person hearing on the same facts. But the ALJ said he wasn't bound by OPM's actions and couldn't consider them as mitigating factors.<ref name="hhs-exclusion" />
Blatstein called the 13-year exclusion excessive. He wanted it cut to the five-year statutory minimum. He pointed out that the Office of Personnel Management had reduced his suspension from seven years to five after an in-person hearing on the same facts. The ALJ held that he was not bound by OPM's actions and could not treat them as mitigating.<ref name="hhs-exclusion" />


He offered several mitigating factors: cooperation with government officials, substantial restitution payments that left him "virtually penniless and homeless," time served, voluntary license surrender, and the evolution of his conduct from legitimate efforts to set up an ambulatory surgery center. The ALJ found none of these qualified under the regulatory definition of mitigating factors at 42 C.F.R. § 1001.102(c).<ref name="hhs-exclusion" />
He offered several mitigating points. He cited his cooperation with government officials. He cited substantial restitution payments that, he said, had left him "virtually penniless and homeless." He cited time served, his voluntary license surrender, and what he framed as a good-faith effort to set up an ambulatory surgery center that drifted into criminal conduct. The ALJ found that none of these met the regulatory definition of mitigating factors at 42 C.F.R. § 1001.102(c).<ref name="hhs-exclusion" />


=== OPM Debarment ===
=== OPM Debarment ===


On July 18, 2006, the Office of Personnel Management debarred Blatstein for five years based on his felony conviction.<ref name="hhs-exclusion" />
The Office of Personnel Management debarred Blatstein for five years on July 18, 2006, based on his felony conviction.<ref name="hhs-exclusion" />


== Post-Release Career ==
== Post-Release Career ==
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=== Physician Presentence Report Service ===
=== Physician Presentence Report Service ===


Blatstein founded Physician Presentence Report Service, LLC (PPRSUS) in 2011, a prison consulting firm based in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area.<ref name="pprsus-about" /><ref name="zoominfo">ZoomInfo, "Physician Presentence Report Service," https://www.zoominfo.com/pic/physician-presentence-report-service-llc/404444973.</ref>
Blatstein founded Physician Presentence Report Service, LLC (PPRSUS) in 2011. The firm is a prison consulting practice in the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area.<ref name="pprsus-about" /><ref name="zoominfo">ZoomInfo, "Physician Presentence Report Service," https://www.zoominfo.com/pic/physician-presentence-report-service-llc/404444973.</ref>


The firm helps defendants prepare for presentence interviews and sentencing hearings. Services include assistance with personal narratives, character letter guidance, release plan development, allocution preparation, and facility placement requests. Blatstein emphasizes proper documentation of clients' medical records in presentence reports. The [[Index_of_Federal_Prison_Facilities|Bureau of Prisons]] uses these for medical care and facility placement decisions.<ref name="pprsus-about" />
The firm prepares defendants for presentence interviews and sentencing hearings. Its services cover personal narratives, character-letter guidance, release-plan development, allocution preparation, and facility-placement requests. Blatstein stresses one point in particular: getting a client's medical records documented properly in the presentence report. The [[Index_of_Federal_Prison_Facilities|Bureau of Prisons]] leans on those records when it decides medical care and facility placement.<ref name="pprsus-about" />


His medical background shapes the firm's focus on BOP healthcare. Medication availability matters. So do Care Level designations and facility selection based on medical needs.<ref name="pprsus-about" />
His medical background shapes the firm's emphasis on BOP healthcare. Medication availability matters. So do Care Level designations and facility selection driven by medical need.<ref name="pprsus-about" />


=== Publications ===
=== Publications ===


Blatstein has authored or co-authored several publications on federal criminal defense and prison conditions:
Blatstein has written or co-written several pieces on federal criminal defense and prison conditions:


* '''The Federal Lawyer (January/February 2021):''' He co-authored "Availability of Treatment and Rehabilitation in Federal Prison: The Critical Role of the Presentence Report" with Fay F. Spence, J.D., E.J. Hurst II, J.D., and Maureen Baird. The article covers medical, mental health, and substance abuse programs in the federal Bureau of Prisons and discusses how the presentence report affects treatment availability for defendants.<ref name="federal-lawyer" />
* '''The Federal Lawyer (January/February 2021):''' He co-authored "Availability of Treatment and Rehabilitation in Federal Prison: The Critical Role of the Presentence Report" with Fay F. Spence, J.D., E.J. Hurst II, J.D., and Maureen Baird. The article surveys medical, mental health, and substance-abuse programs in the federal Bureau of Prisons. It examines how the presentence report shapes treatment availability for defendants.<ref name="federal-lawyer">Marc Blatstein et al., "Availability of Treatment and Rehabilitation in Federal Prison: The Critical Role of the Presentence Report," The Federal Lawyer, January/February 2021, https://www.pprsus.com/treatment-and-rehabilitation-in-federal-prison-the-critical-role-of-the-presentence-report/.</ref>
* '''American Bar Association (2022):''' Co-authored two chapters in "Representing People With Dementia: A Practical Guide for Criminal Defense Lawyers" with Faye Spence, Esq. Chapter 1 addresses "What Is Dementia?" and Chapter 13 covers "Jail and Prison Conditions."<ref name="aba-dementia" />
* '''American Bar Association (2022):''' He co-authored two chapters of "Representing People With Dementia: A Practical Guide for Criminal Defense Lawyers" with Faye Spence, Esq. Chapter 1 addresses "What Is Dementia?" Chapter 13 covers "Jail and Prison Conditions."<ref name="aba-dementia">American Bar Association, "Representing People With Dementia: A Practical Guide for Criminal Defense Lawyers," 2022, https://www.americanbar.org/products/inv/book/426832634/.</ref>
* '''California Business Journal (2025):''' Contributed commentary on high-profile federal cases, analyzing Thomas Che Goldstein's tax fraud indictment and George Santos's sentencing.<ref name="cbj-goldstein" />
* '''California Business Journal (2025):''' He contributed commentary on high-profile federal cases, including an analysis of the tax-fraud indictment of attorney Thomas Che Goldstein and of former Congressman George Santos's sentencing.<ref name="cbj-goldstein">California Business Journal, "Thomas Che Goldstein's Fall from Grace," February 2025, https://calbizjournal.com/thomas-che-goldsteins-fall-from-grace/.</ref>
* '''Substack:''' Maintains a newsletter called "White Collar Investigations" covering federal sentencing issues, BOP conditions, and case analysis.<ref name="substack">White Collar Investigations Substack, https://whitecollarinvestigations.substack.com/.</ref>
* '''Substack:''' He maintains a newsletter, "White Collar Investigations," covering federal sentencing, BOP conditions, and case analysis.<ref name="substack">White Collar Investigations Substack, https://whitecollarinvestigations.substack.com/.</ref>


=== Commentary on High-Profile Cases ===
=== Commentary on High-Profile Cases ===


He's analyzed several federal cases:
Blatstein has analyzed several federal cases through his firm's site:


* '''George Santos:''' Blatstein examined the former Congressman's case, including commentary on sentencing considerations and acceptance of responsibility issues.<ref name="santos">Physician Presentence Report Service, "George Santos Eventually Chose to Plead Guilty," https://pprsus.com/george-santos-plea-is-he-capable-of-accepting-responsibility/.</ref>
* '''George Santos:''' He examined the former congressman's case, including sentencing considerations and questions about acceptance of responsibility.<ref name="santos">Physician Presentence Report Service, "George Santos Eventually Chose to Plead Guilty," https://pprsus.com/george-santos-plea-is-he-capable-of-accepting-responsibility/.</ref>
* '''Thomas Che Goldstein:''' He analyzed the case of the Supreme Court attorney and SCOTUSblog co-founder who faced tax fraud charges.<ref name="cbj-goldstein" />
* '''Thomas Che Goldstein:''' He analyzed the case of the Supreme Court attorney and SCOTUSblog co-founder who faced tax-fraud charges.<ref name="cbj-goldstein" />


== Terminology ==
== Terminology ==


* '''[[The_Presentence_Report_(PSR)|Presentence Report (PSR)]]''': A U.S. Probation Officer prepares this document following an interview with a defendant. It provides the sentencing judge with information about the defendant's background, criminal history, and offense conduct. The PSR serves as the primary referral document for BOP placement and medical care decisions.<ref name="federal-lawyer" />
* '''[[The_Presentence_Report_(PSR)|Presentence Report (PSR)]]''': A document a U.S. Probation Officer prepares after interviewing a defendant. It gives the sentencing judge background on the defendant's history, criminal record, and offense conduct. It also serves as the primary referral document for BOP placement and medical-care decisions.<ref name="federal-lawyer" />


* '''Allocution''': A defendant's statement to the sentencing judge, typically expressing remorse and acceptance of responsibility. Blatstein says allocution should begin with a "well-written narrative" and that failing to allocute is a "huge mistake."<ref name="pprsus-about" />
* '''Allocution''': A defendant's statement to the sentencing judge, usually expressing remorse and acceptance of responsibility. Blatstein advises that allocution should open with a "well-written narrative" and calls a failure to allocute a "huge mistake."<ref name="pprsus-about" />


* '''Care Level''': The [[Index_of_Federal_Prison_Facilities|Bureau of Prisons]] classification system for inmate medical needs. Care Level I means minimal care, generally healthy inmates under 70. Care Level IV means 24-hour hospital-type care. Inmates are placed in facilities based on their designated care level.<ref name="pprsus-about" />
* '''Care Level''': The [[Index_of_Federal_Prison_Facilities|Bureau of Prisons]] classification for inmate medical needs. Care Level I covers generally healthy inmates under 70 who need minimal care. Care Level IV covers inmates needing 24-hour hospital-type care. Placement follows the assigned care level.<ref name="pprsus-about" />


* '''Federal Medical Center (FMC)''': One of seven BOP facilities providing specialized medical care. FMC Butner is a cancer center. [[FMC_Carswell_(medical_facility)|FMC Carswell]] is for women only. [[FMC_Devens_(medical_facility)|FMC Devens]] provides dialysis. [[FMC_Lexington_(medical_facility)|FMC Lexington]] is lower security. [[FMC_Rochester_(medical_facility)|FMC Rochester]] partners with Mayo Clinic. FMC Springfield is higher security.<ref name="pprsus-about" />
* '''Federal Medical Center (FMC)''': One of seven BOP facilities providing specialized medical care. FMC Butner functions as a cancer center. [[FMC_Carswell_(medical_facility)|FMC Carswell]] serves women only. [[FMC_Devens_(medical_facility)|FMC Devens]] provides dialysis. [[FMC_Lexington_(medical_facility)|FMC Lexington]] runs at lower security. [[FMC_Rochester_(medical_facility)|FMC Rochester]] partners with the Mayo Clinic. FMC Springfield runs at higher security.<ref name="pprsus-about" />


* '''Variance''': A sentence that deviates from the advisory [[Federal_Sentencing_Guidelines_and_Offense_Enhancements|federal sentencing guidelines]] range. In Blatstein's original case, Judge Williams imposed a downward variance from 24 months to 12 months and one day, which was later vacated by the Fourth Circuit for procedural error.<ref name="justia-appeal" />
* '''Variance''': A sentence that departs from the advisory [[Federal_Sentencing_Guidelines_and_Offense_Enhancements|federal sentencing guidelines]] range. In Blatstein's original case, Judge Williams imposed a downward variance from 24 months to 12 months and one day. The Fourth Circuit later vacated it for procedural error.<ref name="justia-appeal" />


* '''[[First_Step_Act:_Overview_and_Implementation|First Step Act]]''': The 2018 federal criminal justice reform law created earned time credits and expanded early release programs. Blatstein writes frequently about FSA implementation issues, including delays in calculating earned time credits and projected release dates.<ref name="pprsus-about" />
* '''[[First_Step_Act:_Overview_and_Implementation|First Step Act]]''': A 2018 federal criminal justice reform law that created earned time credits and expanded early-release programs. Blatstein writes often about its implementation, including delays in calculating earned time credits and projected release dates.<ref name="pprsus-about" />


* '''[[Residential_Drug_Abuse_Program_(RDAP)|RDAP (Residential Drug Abuse Program)]]''': A Bureau of Prisons treatment program that can provide eligible inmates with up to one year off their sentence upon successful completion.<ref name="pprsus-about" />
* '''[[Residential_Drug_Abuse_Program_(RDAP)|RDAP (Residential Drug Abuse Program)]]''': A Bureau of Prisons treatment program that can take up to one year off the sentence of an eligible inmate who completes it.<ref name="pprsus-about" />


* '''[[Compassionate_Release_Policies|Compassionate Release]]''': A mechanism allowing federal inmates to seek early release based on extraordinary and compelling circumstances, including terminal illness or serious medical conditions that the BOP can't adequately treat.<ref name="pprsus-about" />
* '''[[Compassionate_Release_Policies|Compassionate Release]]''': A path for federal inmates to seek early release based on extraordinary and compelling circumstances, including terminal illness or serious medical conditions the BOP cannot adequately treat.<ref name="pprsus-about" />


* '''Section 1128 Exclusion''': The Social Security Act provision under which individuals convicted of healthcare fraud-related felonies are excluded from Medicare and other federally funded health care programs. Mandatory exclusions under section 1128(a)(3) require a minimum five-year period.<ref name="hhs-exclusion" />
* '''Section 1128 Exclusion''': The Social Security Act provision under which people convicted of healthcare-fraud felonies are barred from Medicare and other federally funded health care programs. Mandatory exclusions under section 1128(a)(3) run for at least five years.<ref name="hhs-exclusion" />


* '''[[Federal_Good_Time_Credit_Policies|Good Time Credit (GTC)]]''': Time off a federal sentence earned by inmates who maintain good behavior, calculated at approximately 54 days per year of the sentence imposed (not time served).<ref name="santos" />
* '''[[Federal_Good_Time_Credit_Policies|Good Time Credit (GTC)]]''': Time taken off a federal sentence for good behavior, calculated at roughly 54 days per year of the sentence imposed rather than time served.<ref name="santos" />


== See also ==
== See also ==
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* [[Prison_Consultants|Prison Consultants]]
* [[Prison_Consultants|Prison Consultants]]
* [[The_Presentence_Report_(PSR)|The Presentence Report (PSR)]]
* [[The_Presentence_Report_(PSR)|The Presentence Report (PSR)]]
* [[Category:White_Collar_Crime|White Collar Crime]]
* [[Insurance_Fraud|Insurance Fraud]]
* [[Insurance_Fraud|Insurance Fraud]]
* [[Federal_Sentencing_Guidelines_and_Offense_Enhancements|Federal Sentencing Guidelines and Offense Enhancements]]
* [[Federal_Sentencing_Guidelines_and_Offense_Enhancements|Federal Sentencing Guidelines and Offense Enhancements]]
Line 187: Line 178:
== Frequently Asked Questions ==
== Frequently Asked Questions ==
{{FAQSection/Start}}
{{FAQSection/Start}}
{{FAQ|question=Who is Marc Blatstein?|answer=Marc J. Blatstein is an American physician, author, and [[Prison_Consultants|prison consultant]] who served approximately two years in federal prison after pleading guilty to mail fraud in 2005. He now runs Physician Presentence Report Service, LLC, helping defendants prepare for federal sentencing.}}
{{FAQ|question=Who is Marc Blatstein?|answer=Marc J. Blatstein is an American podiatric physician, author, and [[Prison_Consultants|prison consultant]]. He pleaded guilty to mail fraud in 2005 and served time in federal prison. He now runs Physician Presentence Report Service, LLC, which prepares defendants for federal sentencing.}}
{{FAQ|question=What did Marc Blatstein do?|answer=Blatstein was convicted of mail fraud for fraudulently billing insurance companies for surgical facility fees through a fictitious entity called the Central Park Ambulatory Surgery Center. The scheme involved billing for facilities that had no physical existence.<ref name="justia-appeal" />}}
{{FAQ|question=What did Marc Blatstein do?|answer=Blatstein pleaded guilty to mail fraud. He had billed insurers for surgical-facility fees through a fictitious entity, the Central Park Ambulatory Surgery Center, which had no physical existence and no Virginia license.<ref name="justia-appeal" />}}
{{FAQ|question=How long was Marc Blatstein's prison sentence?|answer=Blatstein was initially sentenced to 12 months and one day, but after the government's successful appeal, he was resentenced and served approximately two years total in federal prison.<ref name="justia-appeal" />}}
{{FAQ|question=How long was Marc Blatstein's prison sentence?|answer=The trial judge first imposed 12 months and one day. After the government's successful appeal, Blatstein was resentenced to 24 months and returned to prison for a second term.<ref name="justia-appeal" />}}
{{FAQ|question=What does Marc Blatstein do now?|answer=Blatstein founded Physician Presentence Report Service, LLC (PPRSUS) in 2011, a prison consulting firm that helps defendants prepare for presentence interviews and sentencing hearings, with particular emphasis on medical documentation and facility placement requests.<ref name="pprsus-about" />}}
{{FAQ|question=Is Marc Blatstein the same person as Bart Blatstein?|answer=No. Marc J. Blatstein is a podiatric physician and prison consultant who practiced in Fredericksburg, Virginia. He is a separate individual from Bart Blatstein, the Philadelphia real estate developer.<ref name="justia-appeal" />}}
{{FAQ|question=Was Marc Blatstein's medical license restored?|answer=Yes. Blatstein surrendered his medical license in 2006 following his conviction, but successfully had it reinstated in 2010 after appearing before the Virginia Board of Medicine with colleagues who supported him.<ref name="pprsus-about" />}}
{{FAQ|question=What does Marc Blatstein do now?|answer=Blatstein founded Physician Presentence Report Service, LLC (PPRSUS) in 2011. The firm prepares defendants for presentence interviews and sentencing hearings, with a focus on medical documentation and facility-placement requests.<ref name="pprsus-about" />}}
{{FAQ|question=Was Marc Blatstein's medical license restored?|answer=Yes. He surrendered his Virginia medical license in 2006 after his conviction. He had it reinstated in 2010 after appearing before the Virginia Board of Medicine with the support of colleagues.<ref name="pprsus-about" />}}
{{FAQSection/End}}
{{FAQSection/End}}


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<references />
<references />


{{DEFAULTSORT:Blatstein, Marc}}
[[Category:High-Profile_Federal_Offenders]]
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{{MetaDescription|Learn about Marc Blatstein's federal case, conviction, and prison experience on Prisonpedia.}}
{{MetaDescription|Dr. Marc Blatstein, Virginia podiatrist and prison consultant, served federal time for mail fraud. His case, sentencing, appeal, and post-release career on Prisonpedia.}}

Latest revision as of 13:31, 3 June 2026

Marc J. Blatstein
Born:
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Charges: Mail fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1341)
Sentence: 24 months (after resentencing)
Facility:
Status: Released

Dr. Marc J. Blatstein is an American podiatric physician, author, and prison consultant. He ran a podiatry practice in Fredericksburg, Virginia, for more than three decades. In 2005 he pleaded guilty to one count of mail fraud and served time in federal prison.[1] The charge grew out of a billing scheme. Blatstein had charged insurers surgical-facility fees through an entity called the Central Park Ambulatory Surgery Center. That entity had no physical existence and held no Virginia license.[2]

His sentence was unusual in its path. The trial judge first gave him 12 months and one day. The government appealed. The Fourth Circuit vacated the sentence on procedural grounds and sent the case back. On resentencing, Blatstein drew a 24-month term and returned to prison for a second stretch.[1] He recovered his medical license in 2010. A year later he started Physician Presentence Report Service, LLC, a consulting firm for defendants headed into the federal system. The work draws on two things at once: his medical training and his own time inside the Bureau of Prisons.[3]

Early Life and Education

Blatstein was born in Philadelphia and went to high school in the city.[4] He enrolled at George Washington University in Washington, D.C., and worked part-time jobs to cover the cost. During his third year he took an 11-month break to travel with a friend. The trip ran from Washington, D.C., to Lima, Peru, then by train up to Cusco in the Andes, into the Amazon, and on to other parts of South America. He came back, finished his coursework, and graduated in 1977 with a Bachelor of Arts in psychology.[4]

Podiatry came next. He attended the Ohio College of Podiatric Medicine, now the Kent State University College of Podiatric Medicine, and earned a Doctor of Podiatric Medicine degree in 1983.[4] While in school he ran a side business called Pink Panther Bartenders with his brother and two classmates to help pay tuition. During the same period he was invited to take part in a Cleveland Opera gala.[4]

His clinical training moved through several hospitals. He trained at Lutheran Hospital in Baltimore in 1982, then at Atlanta Hospital and Medical Center in Georgia from 1982 to 1983. He completed a surgical residency in podiatric medicine and surgery at Lawndale Community Hospital in 1984.[4]

Medical Career

Blatstein obtained a Virginia medical license in 1984 and opened a solo podiatry practice near Fredericksburg.[5] His main office sat in a strip mall in the Central Park area. He later opened two more locations in the region. Over the years he widened the practice. He added a medically oriented shoe store, wound-care programs, and physical therapy services.[4]

The Circulator Boot featured heavily in his work. The device was used in lower-extremity wound therapy. It supported bacterial control, blood supply, moisture management, and the removal of dead or damaged tissue.[4]

The Virginia Board of Medicine sanctioned him in 2001. The board fined him $5,000, issued a reprimand, and required additional training in record keeping. The action followed a hearing in Fredericksburg. The underlying issue dated to a 1999 patient he treated for foot pain. He diagnosed a stress fracture. The board found he had not properly treated or documented it, and an orthopedist who examined the patient later determined the fracture was essentially healed. The board also flagged his advertising. Some ads violated regulations. One promoted a "Chinese Treatment" for fungal nails that the board said posed potential health risks. Another used the name of an organization that did not exist, the "Association of American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons."[5]

Federal Investigation and Prosecution

Investigation

The matter began with a patient. In 2001 she filed a complaint about her bill with the Virginia State Police.[2] Federal investigators picked it up in May 2004. FBI agents out of the Fredericksburg office worked alongside the Department of Health and Human Services, the Office of Personnel Management, and the Virginia State Police. Their suspicion was fraudulent billing of health insurers.[1]

On July 14, 2004, FBI Agent Jeffrey Howard sought search warrants. His affidavit to a magistrate judge asserted probable cause that Blatstein had violated federal statutes covering healthcare fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1347) and mail fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1341).[1]

Agents executed the warrants on July 27, 2004, at his office and his home. They found evidence of the billing scheme. Blatstein has described the day in his own words. A 6 a.m. knock came at his front door, where, he wrote, "a litany of Alphabet Law enforcement agencies greeted" him. Agents arrived at his office around 8 a.m., seized computers, and were accompanied by local board of medicine representatives.[3]

The Billing Scheme

The structure of the fraud was simple. Blatstein billed patients' insurers for outpatient surgical facilities supposedly provided by the Central Park Ambulatory Surgical Center, or CPASC. CPASC had no physical existence. It held no Virginia license.[1]

The mechanics played out over several years:[2][1]

  • In 1997 Blatstein opened his Central Park office. In 1998 he expanded it and added a room for podiatric surgical procedures.
  • In 1999 he incorporated the Central Park Ambulatory Surgery Center at the same address as his podiatry office.
  • In 2000 he obtained a separate tax ID for the surgery center, a separate telephone line, and a post office box at a Parcel Plus store carrying a different address (1285 Carl D. Silver Parkway).
  • He directed employees to tell the Government Employees Hospital Association (GEHA) that the surgery center was a separate facility rather than part of his office.
  • Patients signed preprinted forms stating they would owe both a facility fee and a surgeon's fee.
  • Blatstein handled all paperwork for surgical-facility billing himself. Employees managed billing for other procedures.
  • He submitted surgery-center bills to at least six insurers: Mail Handlers Benefit Plan, GEHA, Blue Cross/Blue Shield, Aetna, Humana, and Cigna.

Two former employees gave information to the FBI. The affidavit identifies them as Cooperating Witnesses 1 and 2. CW-1 told investigators that Blatstein billed surgical-facility fees for procedures done at his podiatry office. CW-1 said he had warned Blatstein repeatedly that such fees were not legitimate for procedures performed outside a physically separate facility. CW-1 first learned of CPASC after someone called a telephone line reserved for Blatstein's exclusive use and asked for the Central Park Ambulatory Surgery Center.[1]

One episode stood out in the record. A patient named Lyndon Friend came in to have an ingrown toenail removed. His wife, Katrina Friend, noticed a yellow carbon sheet tucked behind the paperwork her husband was signing. She lifted the top sheet to read what lay underneath. An employee demanded the papers back. She refused. Blatstein then tried to wrestle the documents away from her. She tore them up and left. Later she pieced the fragments together. The top sheet was headed "Dr. Marc Blatstein, LPM, PC." The carbon copy beneath it read "Central Park Ambulatory Surgery Center, Inc."[1]

Indictment and Guilty Plea

A federal grand jury in the Eastern District of Virginia returned an indictment on June 20, 2005. It charged one count of healthcare fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1347) and seven counts of mail fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1341).[1] Each count carried a maximum of 10 years and a $250,000 fine.[2]

The next day, June 21, 2005, Blatstein's attorney, David G. Barger of Williams Mullen, moved to suppress all seized evidence and requested a Franks hearing. Barger argued that his client never intended to defraud anyone and had been falsely accused. He pointed to a provision of Virginia law that exempted doctors performing occasional surgeries in their own offices.[2]

The district court denied the motion on August 25, 2005.[1]

Blatstein entered a conditional guilty plea on October 5, 2005. He pleaded to a single count of mail fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1341) and preserved his right to appeal the denial of his suppression motion. Under the plea agreement, both sides agreed to recommend a sentence at the low end of his 24-to-30-month guidelines range.[1]

The billing figures were laid out in the indictment. Total bills submitted came to $501,736. Blatstein received $272,704 in reimbursements. The indictment acknowledged that he was entitled to professional fees for treating patients. He was not entitled to facility fees, because his surgical room was not a state-licensed, free-standing surgery center.[2]

Sentencing and Appeal

Initial Sentencing

The probation officer filed a presentence report on January 6, 2006. It found no factors that called for a sentence outside the advisory guidelines range. On February 3, 2006, Blatstein filed a sentencing memorandum. He described his restitution efforts and the harm the case had done to his livelihood and his health. He attached letters from friends and family, including his mother and brother. The memorandum did not argue for a sentence below the guidelines range.[1]

U.S. District Judge Richard L. Williams held the sentencing hearing on February 8, 2006. Both sides asked for 24 months, the bottom of the range. Judge Williams went lower. He imposed 12 months and one day. He did so without first telling the parties that he was considering a downward variance, a step Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 32(h) requires.[1]

The court listed reasons it considered a longer term "counter productive." It cited Blatstein's "early efforts to make amends for his wrong doing." It cited the effect on his health and his profession. It cited "his family." A shorter term, the court added, would "save the United States ... [money] that would be wasted by warehousing him for that period of time."[1]

Judge Williams ordered $272,704 in restitution to Humana, Aetna, Cigna, and the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program.[6] Blatstein was directed to report to a federal facility in Florida by March 14, 2006.[7]

Fourth Circuit Appeal

The government cross-appealed. Its argument was procedural. The sentencing court had imposed a variance without giving reasonable notice. The Fourth Circuit affirmed the denial of the suppression motion. It vacated the sentence and remanded for resentencing consistent with Rule 32.[1]

The appeals court reasoned that the government, given a fair opportunity, could have raised meritorious objections to the grounds for the variance. It noted the government had strong challenges to several of the factors the trial court relied on, among them Blatstein's "early efforts to make amends," the impact on his profession and family, and the projected savings to the federal government.[1]

Judge King wrote the opinion in 2007. Judge Michael and Senior Judge Hamilton concurred. The decision is reported as United States v. Blatstein, 482 F.3d 725 (4th Cir. 2007).[1]

Resentencing

Blatstein had already served the original 12-month-and-one-day term. He was released in March 2007. The Fourth Circuit's ruling reopened the matter. Judge Williams resentenced him and ordered him to surrender by July 24, 2007, for another year behind bars.[8]

His attorney, David G. Barger, said of the resentencing, "Obviously, we're disappointed."[8]

Administrative Actions

Medical License

Blatstein surrendered his Virginia medical license to the state Board of Medicine on or about February 24, 2006, a consequence of his felony conviction.[6]

He recovered it by 2010. Colleagues backed him when he went before the local board of medicine, and others urged him to seek reinstatement. He later described the moment in personal terms: "that was something my soul needed, and I will be forever grateful."[3] According to his firm, his Virginia license for foot and ankle medicine and surgery was active from 1985 to 2023, with records indicating licensure through 2026.[4]

Medicare and Medicaid Exclusion

The HHS Inspector General notified Blatstein on November 30, 2006, that he was excluded from Medicare and other federally funded health care programs. The exclusion came under section 1128(a)(3) of the Social Security Act. The basis was a felony conviction tied to healthcare fraud. The Inspector General set the term at 13 years, citing aggravating factors.[6]

Blatstein requested a hearing before Administrative Law Judge Alfonso J. Montano. In a decision dated August 23, 2007, Judge Montano sustained the 13-year exclusion. The ALJ identified four aggravating factors:[6]

  • The financial loss to Medicare and state health care programs topped $5,000. Total restitution was $272,704.05.
  • The conduct ran for more than a year, from January 1999 to roughly December 2003.
  • The sentence included incarceration, originally 12 months and one day and later increased to 24 months on resentencing.
  • Other government agencies had taken adverse action on the same facts, including the license surrender and a five-year OPM debarment.

Blatstein called the 13-year exclusion excessive. He wanted it cut to the five-year statutory minimum. He pointed out that the Office of Personnel Management had reduced his suspension from seven years to five after an in-person hearing on the same facts. The ALJ held that he was not bound by OPM's actions and could not treat them as mitigating.[6]

He offered several mitigating points. He cited his cooperation with government officials. He cited substantial restitution payments that, he said, had left him "virtually penniless and homeless." He cited time served, his voluntary license surrender, and what he framed as a good-faith effort to set up an ambulatory surgery center that drifted into criminal conduct. The ALJ found that none of these met the regulatory definition of mitigating factors at 42 C.F.R. § 1001.102(c).[6]

OPM Debarment

The Office of Personnel Management debarred Blatstein for five years on July 18, 2006, based on his felony conviction.[6]

Post-Release Career

Physician Presentence Report Service

Blatstein founded Physician Presentence Report Service, LLC (PPRSUS) in 2011. The firm is a prison consulting practice in the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area.[3][9]

The firm prepares defendants for presentence interviews and sentencing hearings. Its services cover personal narratives, character-letter guidance, release-plan development, allocution preparation, and facility-placement requests. Blatstein stresses one point in particular: getting a client's medical records documented properly in the presentence report. The Bureau of Prisons leans on those records when it decides medical care and facility placement.[3]

His medical background shapes the firm's emphasis on BOP healthcare. Medication availability matters. So do Care Level designations and facility selection driven by medical need.[3]

Publications

Blatstein has written or co-written several pieces on federal criminal defense and prison conditions:

  • The Federal Lawyer (January/February 2021): He co-authored "Availability of Treatment and Rehabilitation in Federal Prison: The Critical Role of the Presentence Report" with Fay F. Spence, J.D., E.J. Hurst II, J.D., and Maureen Baird. The article surveys medical, mental health, and substance-abuse programs in the federal Bureau of Prisons. It examines how the presentence report shapes treatment availability for defendants.[10]
  • American Bar Association (2022): He co-authored two chapters of "Representing People With Dementia: A Practical Guide for Criminal Defense Lawyers" with Faye Spence, Esq. Chapter 1 addresses "What Is Dementia?" Chapter 13 covers "Jail and Prison Conditions."[11]
  • California Business Journal (2025): He contributed commentary on high-profile federal cases, including an analysis of the tax-fraud indictment of attorney Thomas Che Goldstein and of former Congressman George Santos's sentencing.[12]
  • Substack: He maintains a newsletter, "White Collar Investigations," covering federal sentencing, BOP conditions, and case analysis.[13]

Commentary on High-Profile Cases

Blatstein has analyzed several federal cases through his firm's site:

  • George Santos: He examined the former congressman's case, including sentencing considerations and questions about acceptance of responsibility.[14]
  • Thomas Che Goldstein: He analyzed the case of the Supreme Court attorney and SCOTUSblog co-founder who faced tax-fraud charges.[12]

Terminology

  • Presentence Report (PSR): A document a U.S. Probation Officer prepares after interviewing a defendant. It gives the sentencing judge background on the defendant's history, criminal record, and offense conduct. It also serves as the primary referral document for BOP placement and medical-care decisions.[10]
  • Allocution: A defendant's statement to the sentencing judge, usually expressing remorse and acceptance of responsibility. Blatstein advises that allocution should open with a "well-written narrative" and calls a failure to allocute a "huge mistake."[3]
  • Care Level: The Bureau of Prisons classification for inmate medical needs. Care Level I covers generally healthy inmates under 70 who need minimal care. Care Level IV covers inmates needing 24-hour hospital-type care. Placement follows the assigned care level.[3]
  • Federal Medical Center (FMC): One of seven BOP facilities providing specialized medical care. FMC Butner functions as a cancer center. FMC Carswell serves women only. FMC Devens provides dialysis. FMC Lexington runs at lower security. FMC Rochester partners with the Mayo Clinic. FMC Springfield runs at higher security.[3]
  • Variance: A sentence that departs from the advisory federal sentencing guidelines range. In Blatstein's original case, Judge Williams imposed a downward variance from 24 months to 12 months and one day. The Fourth Circuit later vacated it for procedural error.[1]
  • First Step Act: A 2018 federal criminal justice reform law that created earned time credits and expanded early-release programs. Blatstein writes often about its implementation, including delays in calculating earned time credits and projected release dates.[3]
  • Compassionate Release: A path for federal inmates to seek early release based on extraordinary and compelling circumstances, including terminal illness or serious medical conditions the BOP cannot adequately treat.[3]
  • Section 1128 Exclusion: The Social Security Act provision under which people convicted of healthcare-fraud felonies are barred from Medicare and other federally funded health care programs. Mandatory exclusions under section 1128(a)(3) run for at least five years.[6]
  • Good Time Credit (GTC): Time taken off a federal sentence for good behavior, calculated at roughly 54 days per year of the sentence imposed rather than time served.[14]

See also

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Who is Marc Blatstein?

Marc J. Blatstein is an American podiatric physician, author, and prison consultant. He pleaded guilty to mail fraud in 2005 and served time in federal prison. He now runs Physician Presentence Report Service, LLC, which prepares defendants for federal sentencing.


Q: What did Marc Blatstein do?

Blatstein pleaded guilty to mail fraud. He had billed insurers for surgical-facility fees through a fictitious entity, the Central Park Ambulatory Surgery Center, which had no physical existence and no Virginia license.[1]


Q: How long was Marc Blatstein's prison sentence?

The trial judge first imposed 12 months and one day. After the government's successful appeal, Blatstein was resentenced to 24 months and returned to prison for a second term.[1]


Q: Is Marc Blatstein the same person as Bart Blatstein?

No. Marc J. Blatstein is a podiatric physician and prison consultant who practiced in Fredericksburg, Virginia. He is a separate individual from Bart Blatstein, the Philadelphia real estate developer.[1]


Q: What does Marc Blatstein do now?

Blatstein founded Physician Presentence Report Service, LLC (PPRSUS) in 2011. The firm prepares defendants for presentence interviews and sentencing hearings, with a focus on medical documentation and facility-placement requests.[3]


Q: Was Marc Blatstein's medical license restored?

Yes. He surrendered his Virginia medical license in 2006 after his conviction. He had it reinstated in 2010 after appearing before the Virginia Board of Medicine with the support of colleagues.[3]


References

  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 1.16 1.17 1.18 1.19 1.20 United States v. Blatstein, 482 F.3d 725 (4th Cir. 2007), https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/appellate-courts/F3/482/725/497343/.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 The Free Lance-Star, "Doctor faces U.S. fraud charges," May 2005, https://fredericksburg.com/local/doctor-faces-u-s-fraud-charges/article_613c3af4-99db-59a8-9af4-029546b19e38.html.
  3. 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 Physician Presentence Report Service, "About Dr. Marc Blatstein," https://pprsus.com/about-dr-marc-blatstein/.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 Physician Presentence Report Service, "Marc Blatstein," https://pprsus.com/more-about-marc-blatstein/.
  5. 5.0 5.1 The Free Lance-Star, "Board punishes podiatrist," 2001, https://fredericksburg.com/board-punishes-podiatrist/article_616319cc-918b-5fca-bbea-4729025e3b44.html.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 6.7 Department of Health and Human Services, Departmental Appeals Board, Civil Remedies Division, Decision No. CR1638, Docket No. C-07-245, August 23, 2007, https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/static/dab/decisions/alj-decisions/2007/cr1638.pdf.
  7. Podiatry Management Online, "Fredericksburg Podiatrist Sentenced in Billing Scam," 2006, https://www.podiatrym.com/search3.cfm?id=8886.
  8. 8.0 8.1 Podiatry Management Online, "VA Podiatrist Ordered to Serve an Additional Year in Prison," 2007, https://www.podiatrym.com/search3.cfm?id=14677.
  9. ZoomInfo, "Physician Presentence Report Service," https://www.zoominfo.com/pic/physician-presentence-report-service-llc/404444973.
  10. 10.0 10.1 Marc Blatstein et al., "Availability of Treatment and Rehabilitation in Federal Prison: The Critical Role of the Presentence Report," The Federal Lawyer, January/February 2021, https://www.pprsus.com/treatment-and-rehabilitation-in-federal-prison-the-critical-role-of-the-presentence-report/.
  11. American Bar Association, "Representing People With Dementia: A Practical Guide for Criminal Defense Lawyers," 2022, https://www.americanbar.org/products/inv/book/426832634/.
  12. 12.0 12.1 California Business Journal, "Thomas Che Goldstein's Fall from Grace," February 2025, https://calbizjournal.com/thomas-che-goldsteins-fall-from-grace/.
  13. White Collar Investigations Substack, https://whitecollarinvestigations.substack.com/.
  14. 14.0 14.1 Physician Presentence Report Service, "George Santos Eventually Chose to Plead Guilty," https://pprsus.com/george-santos-plea-is-he-capable-of-accepting-responsibility/.