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Unlicensed Medical Practice: Charges, Investigations, and Defense



Unlicensed medical practice occurs when a person performs acts that constitute the practice of medicine without a valid state-issued medical license.

Every state makes unlicensed medical practice a crime. Most states charge it as a felony. A charge does not require patient harm. The act of practicing without a license is itself the offense.

Contents


1. What Qualifies As Unlicensed Medical Practice?


The practice of medicine is defined by each state's medical practice act. The definition is broad. It covers far more than surgery and prescriptions.



What Acts Constitute the Practice of Medicine?


Unlicensed medical practice is the unauthorized practice of medicine without meeting state medical licensing requirements. Diagnosing, treating, or prescribing without a valid license is the practice of medicine. It is also a criminal offense. Telemedicine consultations from a state where the provider is not licensed violate that state's licensing requirements, even if licensed elsewhere. Holding oneself out as a physician is the practice of medicine even if no treatment occurs.

 

Unlicensed practice of medicine counsel analyzes the specific acts alleged, identifies the applicable state medical practice act's definition of medical practice, and advises on whether the conduct falls within or outside the authorized scope of practice for the respondent's credential level.



Scope of Practice, Delegation, and Supervision Failures


Licensed practitioners can also face unlicensed practice exposure. It arises when they exceed the scope of their own license. A dental hygienist who performs a procedure reserved for a dentist is practicing outside scope. A medical assistant who independently diagnoses or prescribes is practicing without authorization. A physician who supervises a non-physician extender without maintaining the required level of oversight creates an unlicensed practice problem for the supervised provider. Delegation rules vary by state. Failing to understand them is not a defense.

 

Practice of medicine counsel reviews the supervision and delegation arrangements in the respondent's practice, identifies scope-of-practice violations before they become enforcement targets, and advises on compliance with state-specific delegation requirements.



2. Legal Standards and Criminal Provisions


Unlicensed medical practice is not only a licensing violation. In most states, it is a criminal offense. The criminal threshold is low. The standard is lower than malpractice.



What Are the Criminal Charges for Unlicensed Medical Practice?


Most states classify unlicensed medical practice as a felony. First-time offenders can face state prison sentences of up to five years or more. Federal charges arise when unlicensed practice intersects with federal healthcare programs. Billing Medicare or Medicaid for services rendered without a valid license is healthcare fraud under 18 U.S.C. Section 1347. That is a federal felony carrying up to ten years in prison per count. The criminal consequences of unlicensed medical practice are not proportional to the harm caused. They are proportional to the number of acts committed.

 

Healthcare regulations counsel evaluates the criminal exposure under the applicable state medical practice act, identifies whether federal healthcare fraud statutes apply to the alleged conduct, and advises on the full range of criminal charges the respondent may face.



How Does Healthcare Fraud Intersect with Unlicensed Practice?


Healthcare fraud charges are separate and cumulative exposure on top of the unlicensed practice charge. They arise when the practitioner bills Medicare, Medicaid, or an insurer for services only reimbursable if rendered by a licensed provider. Each fraudulent billing is a separate count. The False Claims Act adds civil exposure. Civil penalties under the FCA range from approximately $13,000 to $27,000 per false claim, plus treble damages. A practice that submitted hundreds of unlicensed claims faces catastrophic civil liability entirely separate from the criminal prosecution.

 

Health care fraud counsel evaluates the billing records for false claim exposure, identifies the aggregate dollar amount at risk under the False Claims Act, and develops the defense strategy for both the criminal prosecution and the parallel civil investigation.



3. Medical Board Investigations and Administrative Proceedings


The medical board moves faster than the criminal courts. An investigation can suspend a license before any criminal charge is filed.



How Does a Medical Board Investigation Begin and Progress?


Medical board investigations begin with a complaint. Complaints come from patients, other providers, insurers, hospitals, or law enforcement. The board investigates records, takes testimony, and may conduct on-site inspections. The board's standard of proof is preponderance of the evidence, not beyond a reasonable doubt. That lower standard makes administrative discipline easier to impose than criminal conviction. A physician disciplinary hearing before the board results in findings that become public record. Those findings follow the respondent to every future employment, credentialing, and licensing application.

 

Physician disciplinary hearing counsel prepares the respondent's response to the board complaint, manages the production of records, advises on the investigation process, and represents the respondent at the disciplinary hearing.



What Sanctions Can a Medical Board Impose?


Medical board sanctions range from a formal reprimand to permanent license revocation. Intermediate sanctions include probation, mandatory education, practice restrictions, and suspension. Consent orders are the most common resolution. In a consent order, the respondent agrees to specific conditions without admitting wrongdoing. License revocation is permanent in most states unless successfully appealed. Voluntary license surrender avoids a formal revocation hearing. But surrender does not prevent criminal prosecution. It is often treated as an admission by subsequent employers and licensing boards in other states.

 

Administrative hearings counsel negotiates the consent order terms to preserve the respondent's ability to practice, advises on the consequences of voluntary surrender versus contested revocation, and represents the respondent in reinstatement proceedings when license restoration is sought.



4. Civil Enforcement and Defense Strategy


Criminal prosecution and administrative sanctions are not the end of the exposure. Civil enforcement actions run in parallel. They proceed even when the criminal case is dismissed.



What Civil Enforcement Actions Target Unlicensed Medical Practice?


State attorneys general seek civil injunctions against unlicensed practitioners. An injunction stops the practice immediately. It does not require a criminal conviction. It does not require patient harm. Cease and desist orders impose fines for each day of continued violation. Civil penalties accumulate quickly. Civil enforcement actions generate public records indexed by state health department websites. Healthcare compliance obligations for licensed facilities create additional liability when an unlicensed provider works within a licensed institutional setting.

 

Healthcare compliance counsel seeks to vacate or limit the scope of injunctions and cease and desist orders, advises on civil penalty mitigation, and evaluates the institutional liability exposure for facilities that engaged the respondent's services.



How Should a Person under Investigation Respond?


The first mistake in an unlicensed medical practice investigation is speaking to investigators without counsel. Due process protections apply to both proceedings. Exercising them requires counsel at the earliest stage. Anything said to a medical board investigator or federal agent can be used in the prosecution. Medical records, billing records, and communications are central evidence in both the administrative and criminal proceedings. Early retention of counsel is the single most important step in any unlicensed practice investigation.

 

Criminal defense counsel evaluates the constitutional validity of the charged statute, identifies suppression issues in the evidence gathering process, advises on the interaction between the administrative and criminal proceedings, and develops the defense strategy that minimizes both criminal and regulatory exposure.


23 Apr, 2026


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