Healthcare RICO · Default Judgment Analysis

When a Healthcare Professional Defaults in a RICO Case

What the law actually says — and does not say — about default judgment in federal healthcare RICO actions. The case law gap is itself the most important finding.

Research finding — the gap that matters
Comprehensive research reveals no Fifth Circuit or SDTX decision entering a healthcare RICO default judgment against an individual licensed healthcare professional — no physician, no nurse practitioner, no pharmacist. The closest authorities are in the Northern District of Texas and involve an anesthesiologist (non-RICO) and a corporate-affiliated individual (RICO, not a licensed professional). This gap is strategically significant: a court entering such a judgment would be doing so without clear binding precedent on how RICO predicate acts apply to licensed professionals operating within regulatory frameworks.
Four questions this module answers
IDoes default admit RICO liability on predicate acts?
IIHow are damages proven in a healthcare RICO default?
IIICan a healthcare RICO default be set aside?
IVWhat if the predicate acts are legally deficient?
VThe case authority map
Question I

Does default admit RICO liability on the predicate acts?

The situation
A healthcare professional — a physician, nurse practitioner, or pharmacist — is named as a defendant in a federal civil RICO action. The complaint alleges mail fraud and wire fraud as the predicate acts, based on the submission of allegedly false insurance claims. The defendant defaults. Does that default mean the court can automatically enter judgment on the RICO claim?

The short answer is: not automatically. Default is not a blank check for plaintiffs in RICO cases. The Fifth Circuit's foundational default judgment doctrine — established in Nishimatsu and refined in Wooten — draws a sharp line between factual admissions and legal sufficiency. Understanding exactly where that line falls in a RICO context is essential.

The controlling rule — Nishimatsu / Wooten
"A default judgment is unassailable on the merits, but only so far as it is supported by well-pleaded allegations. Default does not admit conclusions of law or facts that are not well-pleaded."
Nishimatsu Construction Co. v. Houston National Bank, 515 F.2d 1200 (5th Cir. 1975) · Wooten v. McDonald Transit Associates, 788 F.3d 490 (5th Cir. 2015)
What default does and does not admit
What default admits: well-pleaded factual allegations. If the complaint specifically alleges that the defendant submitted claim #X on date Y for procedure Z knowing it was false, default admits that allegation as true.

What default does not admit: legal conclusions. If the complaint alleges "defendant conducted the affairs of an enterprise through a pattern of racketeering activity," that is a legal conclusion. Default does not admit it. The court must independently determine whether the pleaded facts satisfy the legal elements of the RICO claim — including the enterprise requirement, the pattern requirement, and most critically, the specific intent requirement for mail and wire fraud predicates.

For a RICO claim based on mail fraud and wire fraud predicates, the complaint must plead facts sufficient to establish all of the following. Default admits the facts — it does not substitute for them:

RICO element 1
Conduct of an enterprise
The defendant must have conducted or participated in the conduct of an enterprise's affairs. The defendant must be distinct from the enterprise — a sole practitioner who is the enterprise cannot also be the person conducting it in the legally required sense.
Default admits the allegation; legal sufficiency is a separate question the court evaluates independently.
RICO element 2
Pattern of racketeering activity
At least two predicate acts within ten years that are related and continuous. Each alleged act of mail or wire fraud must independently satisfy the elements of that predicate. A single fraudulent scheme, even with multiple uses of mail or wire, may not constitute a "pattern."
The pattern requirement has been a basis for dismissing healthcare RICO claims where all acts are part of a single continuous scheme.
RICO element 3
Specific intent to defraud
Mail fraud and wire fraud both require specific intent to defraud. This is the most important element for a licensed healthcare professional defendant. A billing error, a regulatory dispute about coding, or a good-faith disagreement about medical necessity is not fraud. The complaint must plead facts establishing conscious knowledge and intent to deceive.
Intent is a factual allegation that default admits — but only if the complaint pleads specific facts supporting it, not just conclusory labels.
RICO element 4
Causation and injury to business or property
The plaintiff must plead injury to its business or property directly caused by the RICO violation. In healthcare insurer cases, this is typically the overpayment amount. Default does not establish the amount of damages. That requires separate proof regardless of whether default is entered.
Even after default on liability, the plaintiff must prove the amount of the RICO injury at a damages hearing or through affidavits if sum-certain.
"Default admits well-pleaded factual allegations, but not conclusions of law or facts that are not well pleaded. The court must independently assess whether the complaint provides a sufficient legal basis for the judgment sought."
United Healthcare Services v. Rossel/Narosov, N.D. Tex. May 2025 — applying Nishimatsu/Wooten to healthcare RICO default liability
The predicate act trap for plaintiffs
In healthcare RICO cases, plaintiffs frequently allege mail fraud and wire fraud based on the submission of insurance claims. The question is not whether claims were submitted — it is whether the specific defendant had the legal authority and specific intent required by the statute cited as the predicate. If the plaintiff cites a statute that regulates pharmacists or surgical assistants but the defendant is a nurse practitioner regulated under a different licensing framework, the legal basis for the predicate act may be absent regardless of what the complaint alleges factually. Default does not cure that legal gap.
Question II

How are damages proven in a healthcare RICO default?

The situation
Default has been entered and the court has found liability is established. Now the plaintiff wants a damages award. In a healthcare RICO case, the plaintiff typically wants treble damages — three times the actual damages — plus attorneys' fees. How does the court determine the base amount, and what evidence is required when the defendant has not appeared?

The damages stage in a healthcare RICO default is where the real work happens for the plaintiff — and where the most significant protection remains available for the defendant. Default does not establish damages. Period. The plaintiff must prove them. And in multi-defendant RICO cases, courts add a further complication: they may defer damages entirely until the remaining defendants are resolved, to avoid logically inconsistent judgments.

The RICO treble damages multiplier
Civil RICO under 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c) provides for treble damages — three times the actual injury — plus attorneys' fees for the prevailing plaintiff. In a healthcare billing case, the actual injury is typically the amount of insurance claims paid that the plaintiff alleges were fraudulent. If that base number is $1 million, the RICO judgment before attorneys' fees could be $3 million. This is why the damages proof stage matters so much even after default on liability.
Damages question What the law requires Evidence needed
Base injury amount (overpayment) Must be proven — not admitted by default Claims data, payment records, explanation of benefits, expert or affidavit showing which specific claims are attributed to this defendant
Attribution to this specific defendant Critical in multi-defendant cases Evidence linking this defendant's prescriptions, referrals, or services to the specific claims submitted — not just participation in the scheme generally
RICO treble multiplier Automatic if RICO liability established Statutory — no additional evidence required beyond base injury
Attorneys' fees Must be proven by affidavit Billing records, time entries, hourly rate evidence — cannot be assumed
Damages in multi-defendant case May be deferred entirely Court may decline to enter damages against a defaulting defendant while other defendants remain active, to avoid inconsistent judgments on the same scheme
The multi-defendant deferral rule — a critical protection
In United Healthcare Services v. Rossel/Narosov, the court entered default judgment as to liability but refused to enter a damages award because other defendants remained active in the litigation. The court cited the risk of "inconsistent judgments" — meaning a damages award against the defaulting defendant might be logically incompatible with a later judgment in favor of or against the remaining defendants. In any healthcare RICO case with multiple defendants, argue that damages against the defaulting defendant should be deferred until all liability questions are resolved.
Strategic note on attribution
Healthcare RICO cases frequently name multiple professionals and entities. The total damages figure in the complaint may represent the entire alleged fraud scheme. Courts are required to attribute damages to the specific defendant before whom they are proceeding, not the entire scheme. A nurse practitioner whose role was limited to signing certain referral documents cannot be held liable for the full damages of a scheme involving a pharmacy network, a laboratory, a billing company, and multiple physicians. Demand that the plaintiff prove what this specific defendant caused — not what the scheme as a whole caused.
Question III

Can a healthcare RICO default be set aside?

The situation
A licensed healthcare professional — a nurse practitioner, physician, or pharmacist — was named in a federal RICO complaint filed by an insurer. For whatever reason, they did not respond. Default was entered. Is there a path to setting it aside? The answer depends heavily on where in the process the case sits and whether the default was willful.

The same three-factor framework applies in a healthcare RICO case as in any other federal default case. But the healthcare and RICO context adds specific considerations that bear on each factor — particularly the meritorious defense analysis, where the legal deficiency of the predicate acts may be the strongest argument available.

1
Willfulness — the threshold question
Context-dependent
A licensed professional served with a civil RICO complaint who consults counsel, decides the case is without merit, and stops engaging has a very difficult willfulness problem. A licensed professional who was not properly served, who misunderstood the nature of the civil RICO action as different from a regulatory proceeding, or who was told by their malpractice carrier or employer that they were being represented — and then were not — has a much better case for non-willfulness.

In United Healthcare v. Narosov, the court previously set aside a default against the individual defendant (on the First Amended Complaint), then entered default again when he failed to respond to the Second Amended Complaint. This shows that a prior successful set-aside does not automatically mean the next default will be set aside — the analysis is fresh each time.
United Healthcare Services v. Rossel/Narosov, No. 3:21-cv-1547 (N.D. Tex. 2025)
2
Prejudice to the plaintiff — often minimal in insurer cases
Often favorable for defendant
Insurance companies bringing healthcare fraud claims typically have extensive document preservation, electronic claims data, and institutional memory that does not degrade meaningfully with time. The argument that evidence has been lost or witnesses have become unavailable is harder to make for an insurer with a full electronic claims database than it is for an individual plaintiff.

The prejudice argument from an insurer is more likely to focus on money already spent on litigation and the risk of inconsistent judgments if the case is reopened. Neither of these typically constitutes sufficient prejudice to deny vacatur of a default.
Lacy v. Sitel Corp., 227 F.3d 290 (5th Cir. 2000) — delay alone is never sufficient prejudice
3
Meritorious defense — legal deficiency of predicate acts
Strongest available argument
This is where healthcare RICO cases diverge most sharply from ordinary defaults. The meritorious defense requirement asks whether the defendant has a defense that, if believed, could change the result. In a healthcare RICO case brought against a licensed professional, a legal argument that the statutes cited as RICO predicates do not apply to this category of licensed professional is a meritorious defense — and one that default does not foreclose.

If the plaintiff's mail fraud and wire fraud predicates rest on a statute governing surgical assistants or pharmacist delegation but the defendant is a nurse practitioner regulated under a different licensing scheme, the legal foundation of the predicate acts may be absent. This is not a factual dispute — it is a pure question of law. And pure questions of law are not resolved by default.
United Healthcare v. Rossel, N.D. Tex. Sept. 2024 — intent for wire/mail fraud predicates is an element the court evaluates independently
"A finding of willful default ends the inquiry."
UnitedHealthcare Insurance Co. v. Holley, No. 17-40354 (5th Cir. 2018) — anesthesiologist's motion to vacate healthcare fraud default judgment denied because default was willful
The Holley warning for healthcare professionals
In Holley, an anesthesiologist was sued for healthcare billing fraud, defaulted, and then sought to vacate the $2 million default judgment. The Fifth Circuit affirmed denial. The court found her default was willful and that finding ended the entire analysis. No consideration was given to her asserted meritorious defense. No inquiry was made into the strength of the plaintiff's case. Willfulness shut the door completely. A healthcare professional who receives a civil RICO complaint, understands it, and decides not to respond is in the same position as Holley. Act immediately upon service.
Question IV — The Most Important Question

What if the predicate acts are legally deficient?

The core argument
The insurer's RICO complaint cites specific federal statutes as the basis for its mail fraud and wire fraud predicate acts. But what if those statutes do not actually govern the conduct of the defendant — a nurse practitioner — operating under a different licensing and regulatory framework? This is not a factual dispute. The defendant is not saying "I did not do what the complaint says." The defendant is saying: "Even if I did everything the complaint alleges, those statutes do not make it a federal crime, and therefore there are no RICO predicate acts."

This is the most powerful argument available in a healthcare RICO case where the predicate act theory is legally flawed. It is powerful for three reasons: first, it is a pure question of law that the court must resolve independently regardless of default; second, it attacks the foundation of the entire RICO claim rather than any individual allegation; and third, it is preserved even when the defendant has already defaulted.

The controlling principle
Default does not admit legal conclusions. Whether the statutes cited as RICO predicates actually apply to a nurse practitioner's conduct is a legal question — not a factual one. The court must independently determine whether the complaint's allegations, taken as true, satisfy the legal elements of a civil RICO violation under 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c). If the predicate acts cited are legally inapplicable to the defendant's regulated conduct, there is no valid RICO claim — regardless of whether the defendant appeared and contested the case.
A
Statutory mismatch — the predicate does not reach this defendant
Pure question of law
Civil RICO predicate acts must constitute "racketeering activity" as defined in 18 U.S.C. § 1961(1). Healthcare RICO cases most commonly use mail fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1341) and wire fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1343) as the predicates, channeled through the specific conduct alleged — submitting false insurance claims.

The critical question: does the statute the plaintiff cites as creating the duty that was allegedly violated actually apply to a nurse practitioner? If the insurer argues that the defendant violated a regulation governing surgical assistants, or a delegation protocol applying only to physician assistants, or a pharmacy supervision rule that does not cover NPs — the statutory foundation of the predicate act is absent. The claim must be dismissed even after default, because the court has no legal basis for judgment.
United Healthcare v. Rossel, N.D. Tex. Sept. 2024 — "wire fraud requires specific intent to defraud; whether the alleged acts qualify as mail/wire fraud predicates is a legal question the court evaluates independently"
B
Specific intent — regulatory compliance is not fraud
Fact-dependent but legally significant
Mail fraud and wire fraud both require specific intent to defraud. This element cannot be established by default unless the complaint pleads specific facts — not conclusions — showing the defendant knew the claims were false and acted with intent to deceive.

A licensed healthcare professional who followed their state licensing board's guidelines, obtained the required supervisory arrangements, and documented patient encounters in the manner required by their professional standards has a strong argument that whatever occurred was a regulatory dispute, not a fraud. Good-faith compliance with one's licensing framework, even if the insurer disputes the billing, is not the specific intent required for mail or wire fraud.

In the Rossel summary judgment decision, the court found intent for the RICO defendants based on specific evidence of kickbacks, shell company billing, and claims for tests that were never performed. That is qualitatively different from a licensed professional operating within their scope of practice and billing under codes the insurer later disputes.
United Healthcare v. Rossel, N.D. Tex. Sept. 2024 — specific intent for RICO mail/wire fraud predicates requires more than billing disputes; the court looks for evidence of intentional deception
C
No preclusive effect — this defendant stands alone
Favorable for licensed professional defendants
In the Rossel September 2024 decision, the court held that a default judgment against other defendants in the same healthcare RICO scheme had no preclusive effect in the proceeding against the Rossel defendants. Because defaulted issues are not "actually litigated," the prior default judgment established nothing as a matter of issue preclusion for a different defendant's case.

This cuts both ways but ultimately favors a licensed professional defendant: if other members of an alleged scheme have defaulted and those judgments went unappealed, those defaults do not establish that this defendant's conduct constituted RICO predicate acts. Each defendant's case must be evaluated independently. The insurer cannot point to prior default judgments against co-defendants and argue that the scheme is established — because those defaults were not litigated on the merits.
United Healthcare Services v. Rossel, N.D. Tex. Sept. 27, 2024 — "issue preclusion applies only when an issue was actually litigated. In a default judgment, issues are generally not actually litigated."
The strategic synthesis for a licensed professional defendant
The strongest position available combines three arguments that do not depend on factual dispute: (1) the statutes cited as RICO predicates do not govern the defendant's regulated conduct as a licensed professional; (2) even if they do, the complaint does not plead specific facts establishing the intent required for mail or wire fraud — only conclusory allegations that default does not cure; and (3) any prior default judgments against co-defendants have no preclusive effect on this defendant's case. These are pure legal arguments that survive default and can be raised even after judgment, particularly if service was defective (Rule 60(b)(4)) or the default was non-willful (Rule 60(b)(1)).
"By analogy, in a healthcare RICO default proceeding: factual allegations may be admitted by default; but the court still must determine whether those facts satisfy the legal elements of § 1962(c), including enterprise, conduct, pattern, racketeering activity, causation, and damages."
Cigna Healthcare of Texas v. VCare Health Services, N.D. Tex. June 2020 — even strong healthcare-fraud allegations do not cure a legal defect in the cause of action
Question V

The case authority map — what exists and what does not

Before citing any authority in a healthcare RICO default proceeding, understand precisely what each case does and does not establish. The absence of a directly on-point case is itself significant — and must be argued, not hidden.

§
Healthcare RICO Default — Case Authority Map
Fifth Circuit area authorities · 1975 to present
Case
Healthcare
RICO
Individual licensed professional
What it establishes
Nishimatsu / Wooten
Default admits well-pleaded facts, not legal conclusions. Court must find sufficient legal basis independently.
UnitedHealthcare v. Holley (5th Cir. 2018)
Willful default by anesthesiologist = motion to vacate denied. Sum-certain healthcare billing damages can be proven by affidavit without hearing.
UHC v. Next Health (N.D. Tex. 2023)
Sanctions/default judgment for discovery misconduct + fraud summary judgment against healthcare entity. Damages deferred.
UHC v. Rossel/Narosov (N.D. Tex. 2025)
Default RICO liability entered (individual, not licensed professional). Damages deferred in multi-defendant case. Prior default previously set aside.
UHC v. Rossel (N.D. Tex. 2024)
Prior default has no preclusive effect on different defendants. Intent for mail/wire fraud is independently evaluated. Default findings are not "actually litigated."
Cigna v. VCare (N.D. Tex. 2020)
Healthcare fraud pleading sufficiency. Legal defects in cause of action are not cured by strong factual allegations. Court evaluates legal elements independently.
SDTX healthcare RICO default vs. individual licensed NP, physician, or pharmacist
Does not exist. No such decision has been identified in SDTX or the Fifth Circuit. A court entering such judgment would be acting without binding or even persuasive precedent directly on point.
How to use the gap in the authority
The absence of controlling authority is an argument, not just a neutral observation. In a brief or motion in SDTX, the argument structure is: (1) the Fifth Circuit has not decided how RICO predicate acts apply to a licensed healthcare professional operating within their regulatory framework; (2) the N.D. Tex. cases that come closest involved entities and individuals who were not licensed professionals operating within a state licensing scheme; (3) therefore the court must undertake an independent legal analysis of whether the predicate acts are legally sufficient as to this defendant, rather than relying on the general default rule to supply the answer. Courts appreciate candor about the state of the law. Acknowledging the gap while arguing for a favorable resolution is more persuasive than pretending the precedent is cleaner than it is.
The bottom line for practitioners
The most defensible proposition from all available authority: in healthcare RICO default proceedings in the Fifth Circuit, default may establish liability only if the complaint's factual allegations are well-pleaded and legally sufficient on every RICO element; damages must still be proven independently; courts may defer damages in multi-defendant RICO cases; and a legal argument that the predicate act statutes do not apply to the specific category of licensed professional is a pure question of law that default does not resolve.
Healthcare RICO Defense

Facing a RICO claim as a licensed professional?

The legal deficiency of predicate acts is the strongest available argument — but it must be raised strategically and promptly.

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