Case Information
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA No. 2:24-cv-00287-WBS-CKD UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff, ORDER ON PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO v. COMPEL AND FOR SANCTIONS
MATTHEW H. PETERS, et al., (ECF Nos. 80, 81, 82) Defendant.
Plaintiff United States of America moves to compel defendants Matthew Peters and his affiliates [1] to respond to plaintiff’s requests for production. [2] (ECF Nos. 80, 81, 82.) Pursuant to Local Rule 251(d), plaintiff’s motion was excepted from the requirement for Joint Statements re Discovery Disagreement and was set for hearing on May 19, 2025. See E.D. Cal. L.R. 251(d); ECF Nos. 80, 81, 82. Defendants filed an opposition on May 14, 2025. (ECF No. 83.) Plaintiff filed a reply on May 19, 2025. (ECF No. 85.) On May 21, 2025, the Court held a hearing via Zoom. Attorneys Steven Tennyson and David Thiess appeared for plaintiff. Attorney Connor Nash appeared for defendants Matthew Peters, and the following entities: JMSP, LLC; Paragon Partners, LLC; Innovative Specialty Services, LLC; Cardea Consulting, LLC; Coastline Specialty Services, LLC; Portland Professional Pharmacy, LLC; Sunrise Pharmacy, LLC; Professional 205 Pharmacy, LLC; Lake Forest Pharmacy, LLC; Bayview Specialty Services, LLC; Praxis Marketing Services, LLC; Prestige Professional Pharmacy, LLC; Optimum Core Pharmacy, Inc.; Glendale Pharmacy, LLC. [3] For the reasons that follow and as discussed at the hearing, the Court GRANTS IN PART plaintiff’s motion to compel.
I. BACKGROUND
Plaintiff initiated this action by filing a complaint on January 22, 2024. (ECF No. 1.) On July 30, 2024, plaintiff filed its second amended complaint against Peters, multiple pharmacies, management service organizations, and corporate entities. (ECF No. 50.) Plaintiff brings the following claims: presentation of false claims under the False Claims Act against defendant Peters and the defendant pharmacies; causing to be presented false claims under the False Claims Act against all defendants; conspiracy under the False Claims Act against defendant Peters and the defendant pharmacies; unjust enrichment against defendant Peters; and payment by mistake against defendant Peters and the defendant pharmacies. ( )
A pretrial scheduling order issued on September 18, 2024. (ECF No. 57.) Initial disclosures were due by November 1, 2024. Expert disclosures and reports in accordance with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(a)(2) are due by September 5, 2025. Disclosure of rebuttal experts and reports is due by October 3, 2025. All discovery is to be completed by October 31, 2025.
On December 10 and 11, 2025, plaintiff served its first set of requests for production 1 (“RFP”) on defendant Peters. (ECF No. 81-1 ¶ 2.) On November 19, 2024, Plaintiff served its 2 first set of RFPs on defendant Bayview Specialty Services, LLC. ( Id. ¶ 3.) On February 5, 2025, 3 the parties met and conferred regarding discovery and agreed that defendants’ search for 4 documents responsive to plaintiff’s first set of RFPs would fit four parameters: 5 First, the responses would be “based on a diligent search of materials within defendants’ custody and control, using a defensible method to 6 identify responsive information.” (ECF No. 66-2 at 1). Second, Defendants agreed that custody and control “includes searching 7
information held by the entities’ employees, financial institutions, 8 former/current accountants, and former/current attorneys.” ( Id .). Third, Defendants agreed the “responses will identify the custodians
9 and organizations identified as having responsive documents, after an appropriate review you will conduct.” ( Id. ). Fourth, Defendants 10 agreed to provide those responses by February 21, 2025. ( Id. ).
11 (ECF No. 82-1 at 2.) [4]
On February 18, 2025, plaintiff filed its first motion to compel discovery responses from defendant Peters because Peters did not respond to any of the discovery requests. ( See ECF No. 66.) The Court granted this motion in part, ordering that Plaintiff’s first set of Requests for Admission be deemed admitted and that defendant Peters serve his complete and full responses to all RFPs without objection and produce responsive documents. (ECF No. 71 at 6-8.) Defendant Peters was warned that if he failed to comply with court orders or participate in discovery, he could face serious sanctions. ( Id. at 6.) On April 3, 2025, defendant Peters served responses to the RFPs. (ECF 82-1 at 3; see ECF No. 71.) On April 25, 2025, the parties met and conferred regarding perceived deficiencies in defendant’s responses. (ECF No. 82-1 at 3-4.) Defense counsel made clear that they were relying on defendant Peters to conduct the searches for information. ( at 4.) Plaintiff insisted that the defense perform a reasonable search consistent with the February agreement. ( ) Defense counsel requested to continue the discussion until April 28, 2025. ( Id. ) On April 28, 2025, defense counsel did not appear at the agreed upon time. [5] ( )
Plaintiff filed a motion to compel discovery responses and for sanctions from defendant Peters and the affiliate defendants under Local Rule 251(a). (ECF Nos. 80, 81, 82.) Plaintiff attempted to work with defense counsel to file joint statement as required under this Court’s Local Rules. (ECF No. 81-3 at ¶ 11.) Defense counsel provided general comments on the joint statement, but did not provide edits or identify specific statements counsel believed inaccurate, or provide his clients’ portion of the joint statement. ( ) Plaintiff filed its statement in support of its motion on May 7, 2025, pursuant to Local Rule 251(d). Defendants filed an opposition on May 14, 2025. (ECF No. 83.) Plaintiff filed a reply on May 19, 2025. (ECF No. 85.)
II. LEGAL STANDARDS
“Parties may obtain discovery regarding any nonprivileged matter that is relevant to any
party’s claim or defense and proportional to the needs of the case[.]” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1).
“[B]road discretion is vested in the trial court to permit or deny discovery.”
Hallett v. Morgan
,
A party may serve requests to produce documents in the responding party’s possession, custody, or control, including designated documents, electronically stored information, or other writings. Fed. R. Civ. P. 34(a)(1). A requesting party is entitled to production of documents within a responding party's possession, custody, or control, regardless of whether the requesting party possesses the same documents. Fed. R. Civ. P. 34(a). The responding party must respond in writing within thirty (30) days, unless otherwise agreed upon or ordered, after being served. Fed. R. Civ. P. 34(b)(2). If a responding party objects, the objection “must state whether any responsive materials are being withheld on the basis of that objection[, and] an objection to part of a request must specify the part and permit inspection of the rest.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 34(b)(2)(C).
A party may move to compel discovery if the movant has in good faith conferred with the
party opposing discovery to obtain the requested discovery without the court’s intervention.
See
Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(a)(1). The moving party bears the burden to “inform the Court which discovery
requests are the subject of the motion to compel, and, for each disputed response, why the
information sought is relevant and why the responding party’s objections are not meritorious.”
Adams v. Yates
,
III. DISCUSSION
“The discovery process in theory should be cooperative and largely unsupervised by the
district court. But when required disclosures aren’t made or cooperation breaks down, Federal
Rule of Civil Procedure 37 allows a party to move for an order compelling disclosures or
discovery.”
Sali v. Corona Reg’l Med. Ctr.
,
A. Joint Statement re Discovery Disagreement Local Rule 251 requires that prior to filing a motion related to discovery, the parties meet and confer to discuss the dispute and requires the parties to file a joint statement re discovery dispute. E.D. Cal. L.R. 251. On April 16, 2025, plaintiff filed its notice of this motion and indicated that it would be submitting a joint statement before the hearing. (ECF No. 80.) On May 7, 2025, plaintiff filed a statement and memorandum on discovery disagreement (ECF Nos. 81, 82) informing the Court that it was unable to secure the cooperation of defense counsel in preparing and executing a joint statement. (ECF No. 82-1 at 1-2.) On May 5, 2025, plaintiff sent defense counsel a draft joint statement. (ECF No. 81-1 ¶ 11.) Defense counsel provided general comments on the joint statement via emails on May 5, 2025, and May 7, 2025, but did not provide edits or provide his clients’ portion of the joint statement. ( Id. ; see ECF No. 81-7.)
Under Local Rule 251(d), refusal without good cause to execute the required joint statement is grounds, in the Court’s discretion, for entry of an order adverse to the party represented by counsel refusing to participate or adverse to counsel. When asked about his lack of participation in drafting the joint statement at the May 21, 2025, hearing, defense counsel explained that defendants’ position was drastically different from plaintiff’s position on the issues and that he did not think a joint statement was appropriate. Defense counsel was reminded that all parties must comply with the Court’s Local Rules and that he must do so in the future.
B. Requests for Production Plaintiff brings this motion in response to alleged deficient responses to the First Set of RFPs issued to defendant Peters and the entity defendants. (ECF No. 82-1 at 4-5.) The Court previously ordered defendant Peters to serve his complete and full responses to all RFPs without objection and produce responsive documents. (ECF No. 71 at 7.) Plaintiff alleges that defendant Peters has not complied with the Court’s order by “conducting a search so superficial as to be meaningless.” (ECF No. 82-1 at 5.) Plaintiff also alleges that the “search and production for the affiliates has been similarly scant and self-selected.” ( Id. ) Limits of Production
First, plaintiff argues that defendants’ search was unreasonably selective and there was no basis to limit discovery production to Peters as the sole custodian. (ECF No. 82-1 at 7.) According to plaintiff, defendants have stated that “the only person that undertook business dealings (save the pharmacy employees) related to the entities was Mr. Peters.” ( ) However, plaintiff also argues that this does not mean that registered officers of the other entities are irrelevant to discovery in this case. Plaintiff states that the documents defendant Peters has produced indicate that several of the entities had paid employees. Plaintiff also argues that it is indefensible to limit the search to Peters’ files when he asserts those files have been lost or destroyed and when Peters previously pleaded guilty to healthcare fraud, and unjustifiable for defense counsel to rely on Peters to conduct his own searches, especially when the searches involve electronic searches. ( at 7-8.) In response, defendants state that an order against defendant Peters individually cannot be used against the entity defendants. (ECF No. 83 at 3-4.) Defendants also argue that Peters and the entity defendants have produced responsive documents that are in their possession, custody, and control. (ECF No. 83 at 4-5.)
The Court is not persuaded by defendants’ argument that the Court’s March 20, 2025, order was limited to defendant Peters in his individual capacity. Plaintiffs have alleged that Peters “founded, controlled and/or operated” the entity defendants. (ECF No. 50 at 5.) Further, in the May 21, 2025, hearing, defense counsel agreed that Peters operated the defendant entities. It is reasonable to believe that defendant Peters would have possession, custody, and control over documents related to the entity defendants.
Further, the Court previously ordered Peters to respond without objection to the RFPs and serve his complete and full responses and produce responsive documents. Many of the RFPs request information about the other defendants. For example, RFP 9 requests “Any financial statements of a DEFENDANT, including but not limited to balance sheets, income statements, statements of cash flows, statements of owners’ equity, retained earnings reports, quarterly reports, annual reports, journals, and ledgers prepared by or for that DEFENDANT.” (ECF No. 81-2 at 7.) Defendant Peters was required to produce any documents he has related to the other defendants in the case. Defendant Peters has not adequately shown that he conducted a diligent search for these documents. Peters has not provided a declaration outlining his search efforts, but merely states that the documents no longer exist, or the entities are no longer operating. Further, relying on defendant Peters to search his own files is improper. D.M. V. Cty. of Merced , 2021 WL 3269245, at *6 (E.D. Cal. July 30, 2021). As plaintiff notes, defendant Peters is likely not familiar with e-discovery and defense counsel has an obligation to facilitate discovery.
In an April 7, 2025, letter to plaintiff’s counsel, defense counsel states that Peters erased
emails before being indicted on criminal charges, did not preserve a DropBox account that
contained business dealings, but that Peters has attempted to recover the data. (ECF No. 81-5 at
1.) Further, defense counsel has stated that “there likely is no data sources for responsive
electronically stored information.” ( at 2.) While a party cannot produce what it does not have,
Howard v. Hedgpeth
,
Also, in the April 7, 2025, letter, defense counsel admitted that defendant Peters has approximately 20,000 pages of “investor documents from previous counsel” that he is scanning into electronic form. (ECF No. 81-5 at 2.) At the May 21 hearing, defense counsel admitted that Peters still has these documents in his garage and has not produced them, asserting that Peters was in the process of copying them for production. The Court is unsatisfied with this explanation for Peters’ failure to comply with his obligations and produce the materials already ordered by this Court. Parties’ Agreement
Second, plaintiff argues that defendants breached the parties’ discovery agreement, which was memorialized in an email from plaintiff to defendant dated February 6, 2025. (ECF No. 66- 1.) Plaintiff argues that defendants breached the agreement by agreeing to conduct a diligent search of materials within their custody and control, but either not producing any information or producing very few documents. (ECF No. 82-1 at 8-9.) Defendants also promised to search information held by defendant Peters’ entities’ employees, financial institutions, accountants, and attorneys, but later restricted the search to Peters. ( ) Defendants argue that they have not violated an agreement between the parties but rather engaged in meet and confer efforts. (ECF No. 83 at 5-6.) Defendants argue they performed a search using the only custodian reasonably known to possess relevant information—Peters. ( at 5.) Defendants also stated at the May 21, 2025 hearing that they did not agree to certain items listed in the February 6, 2025, email.
When parties agree to specific discovery protocols, courts enforce these commitments as
binding.
See, e.g
.,
Greene v. Cal. Dep't of Corr. & Rehab
., 2025
Third, plaintiff avers that defendant Peters improperly withheld documents that have been produced in other contexts but were not produced in this case. (ECF No. 82-1 at 10-13.) As an example, plaintiff states that defendants failed to produce any executed physician investment contracts in response to plaintiff’s RFPs but referenced these contracts in prior correspondence. (ECF No. 82 at 10.) Plaintiff also states defendant Peters produced certain documents in the criminal case against him but has not produced the same documents here. ( at 10-12 (citing an email from November 1, 2019 and a text message conversation)). Further, plaintiff states that Peters previously produced financial documents to criminal investigators that are responsive to numerous RFPs in this litigation but has not produced the documents in this case. ( at 12.) Plaintiff also alleges that Peters has not produced any of his own financial documents. Although Peters has stated that many of the relevant documents were destroyed before he was indicted in the criminal case on December 19, 2019, ( See ECF No. 81-5), his assertion is not supported by the fact that the November 1, 2019 email was produced in the criminal case in July 2020. (ECF No. 82 at 11.)
C. Sanctions
As defendant Peters has already been warned, if a defendant fails to comply with court
orders, or participate in discovery, that defendant may face serious sanctions.
See Connecticut
Gen. Life Ins. Co. v. New Images of Beverly Hills
,
If a party fails to obey a discovery order, the court “may issue further just orders,” including:
(i) directing that the matters embraced in the order or other designated facts be taken as established for purposes of the action, as the prevailing party claims; (ii) prohibiting the disobedient party from supporting or opposing designated claims or defenses, or from introducing designated matters in evidence;
(iii) striking pleadings in whole or in part;
(iv) staying further proceedings until the order is obeyed; (v) dismissing the action or proceeding in whole or in part; (vi) rendering a default judgment against the disobedient party; or (vii) treating as contempt of court the failure to obey any order except an order to submit to a physical or mental examination.
Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2)(A);
see Leon v. IDX Sys. Corp
.,
At this time, the Court orders defendants to produce documents in response to the First Set of RFPs and fully comply with the Court’s March 20, 2025, order. Defendant Peters is ordered to submit a declaration signed under the penalty of perjury describing the steps he took to search for responsive documents. To the extent Peters alleges no responsive documents exist, Peters is required to state that in a declaration too. The Court also orders defendants to comply with the parties’ discovery agreement.
To more fully address Peters’ apparent disregard of his discovery obligations and this Court’s orders, an in-person order to show cause hearing is scheduled for June 30, 2025, for Court to consider whether defendant Peters should be held in civil contempt.
Plaintiff also requests that the Court designate the follow facts as established in this case pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(b)(2)(A)(i):
1. Peters created Coastline Specialty Services, LLC and Bayview Specialty Services, 24 LLC for no purpose other than to pay physician investors to increase the volume of 25 their prescriptions to the pharmacies operated or controlled by Peters, including 26 prescriptions billed to federal health care programs.
27 Absent investment return payments, the physician investors would not have sent 28
prescriptions to these pharmacies. (ECF No. 82-1 at 15.) Before considering this request, plaintiff is ordered to provide further briefing on this issue and explain how, precisely, these facts are tied to the failure to respond to the RFPs.
ORDER
As discussed above, the Court GRANTS IN PART plaintiff’s motion to compel and for sanctions (ECF No. 80, 81, 82), and ORDERS:
1. Within fourteen (14) days, defendants shall fully comply with the parties’ discovery agreement memorialized at ECF No. 66-2;
2. Within fourteen (14) days, defendants shall produce any documents improperly withheld;
3. Within fourteen (14) days, defendant Peters shall file a declaration outlining what he has done to participate in discovery and explain the steps he has taken to search for responsive documents; and
4. Defendants shall fully comply with the Court’s March 20, 2025, order (ECF No. 71). 5. Within fourteen (14) days, plaintiff shall provide supplemental briefing on how the two facts cited above are related to the failure to respond to the RFPs; defendants may file an opposition within seven (7) days thereafter; plaintiff may file a reply within seven (7) days thereafter. An in-person hearing on the forthcoming Order to Show Cause is scheduled for June
30, 2025, at 10:00 am before the undersigned. Defendant Peters is ordered to appear.
Dated: May 22, 2025
_____________________________________ CAROLYN K. DELANEY UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE 5, pete.0287.24
Notes
[1] These entities are Bayview Specialty Services LLC, Coastline Specialty Services LLC, Strand View Enterprises LLC, Innovative Specialty Services LLC, Paragon Partners LLC, Cardea Consulting LLC, Praxis Marketing Services LLC, Portland Professional Pharmacy LLC, Sunrise Pharmacy LLC, Professional 205 Pharmacy LLC, Prestige Professional Pharmacy, JMSP LLC, Optimum Care Pharmacy Inc., Glendale Pharmacy LLC, and Lake Forest Pharmacy LLC.
[2] This matter proceeds before the undersigned pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636, Fed. R. Civ. P. 72, 28 and Local Rule 302(c)(1).
[3] The list of entity defendants is taken from the docket and defendant James Bell’s notice of appearance. (ECF No. 9.) However, Attorney Nash stated his appearance for Professional Rx Pharmacy, LLC and Strand View Corporation on the record. Based on the Docket and the Notice of Appearance filed on 4/25/2024 it does not appear that any attorney has previously entered an appearance on behalf of these entities. Pursuant to Local Rule 182(a)(2), Attorney Nash must sign and file a confirmation of appearance within seven (7) days.
[4] On May 7, 2025, plaintiff filed its statement and memorandum on discovery disagreement 26 (ECF No. 81), but informed the Court on May 8, 2025, that this filing did not include a signature block for counsel for the United States at the conclusion of the document. (ECF No. 82 at 1.) 27 Plaintiff filed a notice of erratum and the amended statement that included the signature block. 28 (ECF No. 82-1.) The Court will cite to the document filed on May 8, 2025, at ECF No. 82.
[5] At the May 21 hearing Attorney Nash explained he had been in a settlement conference for a 28 different matter.
