Dr. Randall M. Wilk operates a medical practice in Gretna dedicated to the surgical treatment of diseases in the head and neck. http://www.drrandallwilk.com/#
Approximately 25 percent of his patients are cancer sufferers. Licensed to practice medicine in the state of Louisiana (License No. MD022962), Wilk earned his medical degree from the LSU School of Medicine in New Orleans. He did his general surgery training at the Ochsner Medical Institutions and did his head and neck surgery training in Portland, Oregon.
He also has a Ph.D. in anatomy from LSU and a DDS from the Baylor College of Dentistry and has a certificate in oral surgery.
But even though he does not operate a dental facility, that DDS degree has cost him more than $100,000 in legal fees because of the heavy-handed tactics of the Louisiana State Board of Dentistry which carried its badgering of Wilk all the way to the floors of the Louisiana House and Senate.
“Since graduating from dental school 25 years ago I have never filled a tooth, made a denture, made a crown, cleaned teeth, restored a tooth, or anything that one would consider a dental practice,” Wilk says, adding that he went “from graduating dental school in 1987 to starting graduate school” that same year.
Wilk noted that the dental board, in its 2009 financial statement, reported a loss to the Department of Health and Hospitals (DHH) of more than $60,000 and that the only plan put forth for managing that loss was “higher revenue from the collection of fines.”
Within weeks of that report, Wilk said, “I received a letter from the board sating that they had received a complaint on me from a Camp Morrison.”
Morrison, a private investigator, has worked for the board for numerous years under a series of contracts totaling more than $1 million. Moreover, even though he is an independent contractor, he is given free office space in the board’s suite at the high-rent One Canal Place office building in New Orleans.
Dating back to 1997, Morrison was issued nine consecutive contracts totaling more than $1.8 million. Most of his contracts were for two-year durations. His first, from March 1, 1997 to Feb. 28, 2000, was for $45,000. But from Sept. 1, 2000, through Aug. 31, 2002, his contract more than trebled, to $150,000 and increased again to $200,000 with his next contract which ran from Sept. 1, 2002 through Aug. 31, 2004.
Beginning on Sept. 1, 2004, he was awarded four consecutive two-year contracts of $240,000 each. Those four contracts combined to run through Aug. 31, 2012.
For whatever reason, on Sept. 1, 2012, the board cut his contract back to nine months and $110,000 but when that pact expired on June 30, 2013, he was issued a new contract, this one for three years, from July 1, 2013 through June 30, 2016, for $340,000.
Wilk said he was told that Morrison had reported to the board “that they had no record of me having an anesthesia permit from the dental board in 2007, that they had no record of me having a certificate in oral surgery, and that I was suspended from the Medicaid and Medicare programs.
“All of those are false statements,” he said, but the board refused to produce a copy of Morrison’s report. “I believe that filing a false report is a crime.”
Wilk said a meeting was scheduled and at that meeting two board members said they wanted him to sign a consent decree and to pay the board $5,000.
When Wilk said he had no intention of signing anything without first having his attorney examine the document, they left the room for a short time and returned with an adding machine “and told me that if I did not sign the document right then and there, that they could levy fines of over $100,000.”
He said the two handed him the adding machine tape “and placed the consent decree in front of me. For those familiar with the Godfather movies, the only thing missing was Luca Brassi with a pistol to my head.” He said a board member said it appeared that he (Wilk) felt his medical degree was more important than his dental degree.
“This was a pure and simple shakedown,” Wilk said.
He said it’s not unusual for medical specialists to obtain a dental degree prior to going to medical school and residency. “In the state of Louisiana, dozens of doctors are in this position. At least half-a-dozen are otolaryngologists, several are plastic surgeons, general surgeons, head and neck surgeons, orthopedic surgeons, gastroenterologists, anesthesiologists, even psychiatrists.
“Having a dental degree does not make your medical practice a dental practice,” he said.
Apparently the dental board and its investigator, Camp Morrison, disagree. Here are minutes of a 2011 dental board meeting at which Wilk’s case is discussed. DENTAL BOARD MINUTES MAY 20, 2011 (bottom of page 14)
Moreover, the DENTAL BOARD BULLETIN also mentions disciplinary action against Wilk (Item no. 14 in the left column near the bottom of page 3).
Wilk obtained legal counsel but the barrage from the dental board continued “for almost two years,” he said. “They subpoenaed me five times, requested copies of my patient records for several years and required my staff to go over 12,000 records. The final documents sent to them weighed several hundred pounds.
“Despite my being represented by counsel, Mr. Morrison continued to serve me subpoenas, to appear in my office waiting room, the operating room at Ochsner Hospital and at my home,” all the while passing out his cards to people and saying he was the investigator for the board of dentistry.”
Eventually, the board relented somewhat by notifying Wilk’s attorneys that if he paid the board $10,000 the matter would “go away.” Wilk said he feels that such tactics are tantamount to corruption or shakedowns. Again, he refused to pay.
Louisiana Revised Statute 37:793 (H) (2) says:
- A personal permit is not required when the dentist uses the services of (1) a trained medical doctor, (2) doctor of osteopathy trained in conscious sedation with parenteral drugs, (3) certified registered nurse anesthetist, (4) a dentist who has successfully completed a program consistent with Part II of the American Dental Association Guidelines on Teaching the Comprehensive Control of Pain and Anxiety in Dentistry, or (5) a qualified oral and maxillofacial surgeon provided that the doctor or certified registered nurse anesthetist remains on the premises of the dental facility until any patient given parenteral drugs is sufficiently recovered.
When Wilk’s pointed out that the statute “specifically exempts me from what they are fining me for, their lawyer stated that he will have to ‘get that law changed.’” Wilk said. He said the board, which in 2010 reported an operating loss of $104,000, “held its own trial and fined me and held me for the board’s legal costs, totaling about $100,000.” They are their own judge, jury, and executioners,” he said. DENTISTRY BOARD 2009 FINANCIAL STATEMENT
The board subsequently prevailed on then-State Rep. Herbert Dixon to introduce legislation giving the dental board the necessary leverage to pursue claims against medical practitioners like Wilk who were not practicing dentists.
Wilk was scheduled to testify in committee against Dixon’s bill, HB 172, at 10 a.m. on May 15, 2012 but upon arriving, learned that the bill had been moved up to first on the calendar and had already been discussed and passed by the committee. It subsequently passed unanimously in both the House and Senate, yet more evidence that legislators often pass bills without really knowing what they contain or the implications of the language.
Wilk said that State Sen. David Heitmeier (D-New Orleans) had a discussion with Peyton Burkhalter, who had by then succeeded Barry Ogden as executive director of the board, and that Burkhalter had assured Heitmeier that the board had decided to drop the charges against Wilk. “He said that Mr. Morrison’s Gestapo tactics would end,” Wilk said.
State Sen. Fred Mills (R-Breaux Bridge) told LouisianaVoice on Thursday that he and former House Speaker Jim Tucker (R-Terrytown) had experienced clashes with the board in the past. “They’ve got some problems with that board,” he said, “and I believe the answer in the end will be the establishment of oversight over them,” he said. “We’ve had to threaten them with legislative action, including replacing the entire board, in order to back them down in the past.”
Wilk said he feels there is outright corruption on the board and that its shakedowns of dentists and non-dentists alike constitutes extortion. “Knowing that no violation of any statute occurred but demanding payment under threat of costly litigation is unethical conduct,” he said.
“I believe that their changing the law was intended to persecute me but also puts many other practitioners at risk. The implications…are far-reaching and as such constitute a restraint of trade. The precedent set by this bill (HB 172) (allows) other boards to reach beyond their jurisdiction. This law does nothing to protect the public,” he said.
To make things worse, there is evidence that the board actually found Wilk’s check for his anesthesia permit and destroyed the evidence after-the-fact to cover it up.
Wilk mentions the same exact stalking and harassment techniques by Camp Morrison that Randy Schaffer complained were used against him. Furthermore, Wilk alleges that Morrison filed a false report to the dental board, levying fraudulent accusations against him. To this point, it is my understanding that the board refuses to provide Wilk a copy of this report.
Under fear of unfounded retribution from the “Board,” I have to remain anonymous. I, too, suffered tens of thousands of dollars in fines and had severe restrictions placed on my license based on charges AGAINST WHICH I HAD DIRECT PROOF. I presented my facts to the board and they were found “unconvinced” (their words) as to my innocence. I HAD WRITTEN LETTERS from organizations DIRECTLY exonerating me of what Camp Morrison and the Board accused me of. Of course, they already had the consent decree signed and under duress got their check before I knew I had any legal options.
“This was a pure and simple shakedown,” Wilk said.
Sen. Mills says that the solution will be in the “establishment of oversight” over the board. Well, the Federal Government has succeeded in doing that very thing in a prominent case entailing the North Carolina Board of Dentistry! The case went before the U.S. Supreme Court less than two months ago, and the Supreme Court said that, irrespective of the fact that these entities are state entities, the FTC has jurisdiction over them. Here’s a link for the Supreme Court ruling: http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/14pdf/13-534_19m2.pdf.
Licensees need to ban together and file a complaint with the FTC and let these boards fight the infinite legal resources of the Federal government. When you’re dealing with bullies, you need the ultimate bully on your side.
Tom I hope through this post you will be able to put in contact with one another many if not most of those “wronged” by this unscrupulous board in order that they can file a suit (class action?) seeking exoneration and reimbursement for monetary costs incurred by them. As a bonus, possibly all such
Boards will come under Legislative oversight.
This Dental Board is out of control! What a bunch of selfish, arrogant pigs! How do they even sleep at night knowing their tactics are against the law?!
I would encourage any dentists that have a suffered similar fate at the hands of this board to contact me at boardclassactionsuit@gmail.com
After reading many articles on the subject of the anomalies of the Louisiana Board of Dentistry, I find it difficult to give any plausible credit to the accusations and rantings given by them about individuals who chose to make dentistry in Louisiana their life’s work and in this case, even those who did not. It is a travesty that these unseemingly sorts of people would be given the power to ruin people’s lives and give governing agencies in Louisiana an abhorrent reputation. It is astounding that the Louisiana Board of Dentistry is allowed to impose bogus fines (steal from) professionals who they never should have been given jurisdiction over in the first place. Who’s next?
I have been fighting with dental board last 5 yrs. The LDA does not notice the simple problem as they got in bed with them last year when the bill passed the Senate but was shot down by the House with the help of LDA. Attorney Brain Begue and Morrison and long-standing board member Blackwood are running corruption mafia under the protection of Bobby Jindal. Bobby Jindal has been claiming to be the cleanest Governor. We are sorry to say that his office had ignored many similar complaints in the past. We have planned for class action law suit for the last 3 years. I have seen most of the dentists bend down and turn their back. I think this problem has been created by dentists in the past and now the board has tasted blood. If LDA and all the so-called local associations get together, then the dental board may not stand a chance. But so-called local dental association and dentists have one hand on their back and are high on the nitrous oxide.