Case Information
*2
CHRISTEN, Circuit Judge:
Dr. Julio Diaz appeals his conviction and sentence under 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), contending that the government’s *3 expert witness offered a legal conclusion in violation of Federal Rules of Evidence 702 and 704. We reject his contention and affirm his conviction. [1]
BACKGROUND
From 1995 until 2011, Dr. Julio Diaz operated a clinic in Santa Barbara that catered to geriatric patients. In 2005, the clinic also started offering pain management and treatment. According to the government, this aspect оf Diaz’s practice soon evolved into little more than a facade for the illegal distribution of narcotics. Between 2008 and 2011, Diaz wrote more than 50,000 prescriptions and prescribed more [1] Diaz’s other challenges to his conviction and sentence are addressed in an unpublished memorandum disposition filed concurrently with this opinion.
than 5 million opiate pills, with several patients being prescribed, on average, more than 60 tablets per day. In 2012, Diaz was indicted for 88 counts of distributing controlled prescription drugs in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). The government eventually proceeded to trial on 79 of those counts, each count representing a prescription that Diaz wrote for one of nine patients.
To secure a conviction under 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), the government had to prove:
(1) that the practitioner distributed controlled substances, (2) that the distribution of those controlled substances was outside the usual course of professional practice and without a legitimate medical purpose, and (3) that the practitioner acted with intent to distribute the drugs and with intent to distribute them outside the course of professional practice.
United States v. Feingold , 454 F.3d 1001, 1008 (9th Cir. 2006) (emphasis omittеd). At trial, the government introduced an expert witness, Dr. Rick Chavez, who testified, without objection, that Diaz’s prescriptions were written “outside the usual course of medical practice” and “without a legitimate purpose.” The jury evеntually convicted Diaz of all 79 counts, and the district court imposed a sentence at the maximum of the applicable range under the Sentencing Guidelines—327 months. Diaz timely appeals, arguing that Dr. Chavez impermissibly offered opinion testimony as to a *4 legal conclusion. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we affirm.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Because Diaz did not raise this issue before the district
court, we review for plain error.
United States v. Mendoza-
Paz
,
correct an error not raised at trial only where the appellant demonstrates that (1) there is an error; (2) the error is clear or obvious, rather than subject to reasonable dispute; (3) the error affected the appellant’s substantial rights, which in the ordinary case means it affected thе outcome of the district court proceedings; and (4) the error seriously affects the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.
United States v. Lopez
,
DISCUSSION
Federal Rule of Evidence 702(a) requires that expert
testimony “help the trier of fact to understand the evidence or
to determine a fact in issue.” Federal Rule of Evidence
704(a) clarifies that “[a]n opinion is not objectionable just
because it embraces an ultimate issue.” As the 1972
Advisory Committee notе says, “the so-called ‘ultimate issue’
rule is specifically abolished by the instant rule.” Thus, we
held in
United States v. Davis
,
Diaz argues that Dr. Chavez impermissibly testified about whether Diaz distributed controlled substances outside the course of professional practice. This trial testimony involved a series of questions that followed a cеrtain pattern: the [2] For example, Rule 704(b) provides that “[i]n a criminal case, an expert witness must not state an opinion about whether the defendant did or did not have a mental state or condition that constitutes an element of the crime charged or of a defense.” F ED . R. E VID . 704(b). In a memorandum disposition filed concurrently, we decide that Dr. Chavez did not impermissibly testify regarding Diaz’s mental state or condition. prosecutor drew Dr. Chavez’s attention to prescriptiоns that Diaz wrote for particular patients and asked whether the “prescriptions for [the drugs were] issued outside the usual course of medical practice” and whether “the drugs [were] given to [the patients] for a legitimate mediсal purpose.” Dr. Chavez invariably answered “yes” to the first question and “no” to the second. According to Diaz, because the prosecutor’s questions adopted the language of the elements *6 in § 841(a)(1), Dr. Chavez’s responses “substitute[d] his judgmеnt for the jury’s.”
Both Diaz and the government rely on
United States v.
Moran
,
Diaz reads Moran to say that, when an expert witness opinion encompаsses the entirety of an element of a crime, it reaches “an ultimate issue of law” and is therefore forbidden. The government understands Moran as having established only that an expert witness may not offer an opinion on the defendant’s guilt or innоcence. We find the reasoning of Moran too sparse to illuminate the issue in Diaz’s case.
Other circuits have squarely confronted the rule excluding
testimony that goes to an ultimate issue of law in
circumstances similar to those presented here.
See United
States v. Volkman
, 797 F.3d 377 (6th Cir. 2015);
United
States v. Chube II
, 538 F.3d 693 (7th Cir. 2008);
United
States v. McIver
,
Likewise, the Sixth Circuit held in Volkman that the district court did not abuse its disсretion by overruling a similar objection to expert testimony that a physician defendant’s prescriptions “were not written for any legitimate medical purpose.” 797 F.3d at 388–89. There, the lay understanding of “legitimate medical purpose” bore directly on the relevant legal inquiry, i.e. whether controlled substances “were distributed or dispensed outside of the course of professional practice and not for a legitimate medical purpose.” Id. at 387–90. Because the term “legitimate medical purpose ” does not have a “separate, distinct and specialized meaning” in law than it has in medicine, the Sixth Circuit concluded that the government’s experts did not invade the province of the trier of fact by foisting legal conclusions on the jury. Id. at 387, 389–90.
We find these cases persuasive and adopt their reasoning.
Although the value of expert testimony lies in the specialized
knowledge that an expert brings to bear on an issue in
dispute, F ED R. E VID . 702(a), it is sometimes impossible for
an expert to render his or her opinion on a subject without
resorting to language that recurs in the applicable legal
standard.
[3]
We hold that if the terms used by an expert
witness do not have a specialized meaning in law and do not
[3]
As the Fourth Circuit noted, the “vernacular that is available to
express whether a doctor acted outside the bounds of his professional
practice” is “limited.”
McIver
,
10 U NITED S TATES V . D IAZ represent an attempt to instruct the jury on the law, оr how to apply the law to the facts of the case, the testimony is not an impermissible legal conclusion. See F ED . R. E VID . 702(a), 704(a).
Here, expert testimony was needed to assist the jury. Dr.
Chavez’s testimony was helpful because a lay jury would not
have the requisite knowledge to evaluate whether the dosage,
mix, and course of narcotics prescribed by Diaz were
medically appropriate for the conditions being complained of
by his patients. Dr. Chavez’s opinions werе based on a
review of the prescriptions for individual patients, and while
he employed phrases that also appear in the elements of
§ 841(a)(1), such as “outside the usual course of medical
practice” and “legitimate medical purpose,” these phrases
were used in their ordinary, everyday sense and do not “have
a separate, distinct and specialized” legal significance apart
from common parlance,
McIver
,
In the context of the case, Dr. Chavez’s tеstimony was no doubt persuasive to the jury, but that is because it was uncontradicted and consistent with a great deal of other uncontradicted evidence. Diaz did not proffer a competing expert opinion. Had he presеnted such testimony, it would have been for the jury to weigh the experts’ competing opinions concerning the medically acceptable standard for prescribing controlled substances to the people who sought them from Diaz.
*9 In sum, Dr. Chavez’s expert testimony passed muster under Rules 702 and 704, and the district court did not plainly err by admitting it into evidence.
CONCLUSION
We affirm Diaz’s conviction. For the reasons stated in the concurrently filed memorandum disposition, we vacate his sentence and remand to the district court for resentencing.
Conviction AFFIRMED; Sentence VACATED and REMANDED for resentencing.
