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You can search the entire site. or go to the recent opinions, or the chronological or subject indices. Seth Lookhart, DMD v. State of Alaska, Board of Dental Examiners (5/24/2024) sp-7702

Seth Lookhart, DMD v. State of Alaska, Board of Dental Examiners (5/24/2024) sp-7702, 548 P3d 1094

         Notice:  This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER.   

         Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,  

         303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email  

         corrections@akcourts.gov.  

  

  

                   THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA  

  



  SETH LOOKHART,                                           )     

                                                           )   Supreme Court No. S-18466  

                             Appellant,                    )     

                                                           )   Superior Court No. 3AN-20-09037 CI  

           v.                                              )     

                                                           )   O P I N I O N  

  STATE OF ALASKA, DIVISION OF                             )     

  CORPORATIONS, BUSINESS, &                                )   No. 7702 - May 24, 2024  

 PROFESSIONAL LICENSING,                                   )  

 BOARD OF DENTAL EXAMINERS,                                )  

                                                           )  

                             Appellee.                     )  

                    

                  Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third  

                  Judicial District, Anchorage, Frank A. Pfiffner, Judge.  

  

                  Appearances:    Chester  D.  Gilmore,  Cashion  Gilmore  &  

                  Lindemuth,  Anchorage,  for  Appellant.    Robert  Kutchin,  

                  Assistant Attorney General, Anchorage, and Treg R. Taylor,  

                  Attorney General, Juneau, for Appellee.  

  

                  Before:    Maassen,  Chief  Justice,  and  Carney,  Borghesan,  

                  Henderson, and Pate, Justices.  

                    

                  PATE, Justice.  

  



         INTRODUCTION  



                  The Board of Dental Examiners revoked  Seth Lookhart's dental license  



after he was convicted of dozens of crimes perpetrated in furtherance of a fraudulent  



scheme of staggering proportions that jeopardized the health and safety of his patients.   



Lookhart appealed the Board's revocation of his license, arguing that his punishment  


----------------------- Page 2-----------------------

  



was inconsistent with past Board decisions.  On appeal, the superior court concluded  



that the Board properly exercised its discretion by revoking Lookhart's dental license.  



                 We  conclude  that  the  Board  did  not  abuse  its  discretion  by  revoking  



Lookhart's license.  None of the Board's prior licensing cases involved misconduct of  



the scope and severity in this case, so there was no applicable precedent to limit the  



Board's exercise of its discretion.  We affirm the decision of the superior court.  



         FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS  



         A.      Lookhart's Dental Career And Misconduct  



                 The facts in this appeal are undisputed.  Lookhart was issued an Alaska  



                                                                     1 

dental license in June 2014 and a parenteral sedation  permit in May 2015.  Between  



May  2016  and  March  2017,  Lookhart  systematically  and  unnecessarily  sedated  his  



patients in a manner that allowed him to fraudulently bill the maximum amount covered  



                                          2 

by Alaska's Medicaid program,  overcharging Medicaid by more than $1.6 million.   



Lookhart  routinely  billed  Medicaid  for  sedation  that  was  not  performed,  billed  



Medicaid  at  higher  rates  than  other  insurers,  and  created  false  dates  of  service  to  



maximize his wrongful reimbursements.  During this same period Lookhart also stole  



an additional $412,500 from a business partner.  



                 In  order  to  maximize  his  billings  to  Medicaid,  Lookhart  engaged  in  a  



series  of  standard-of-care  violations:    He  sedated  patients  beyond  the  scope  of  his  



                                                                                                                

         1       Parenteral  sedation  refers  here  to  sedative  medications  administered  

intravenously, as opposed to in liquid or pill form.  

         2       Alaska Medicaid will pay for dentist-administered general anesthesia or  

sedation  if  the  dentist  provides  a  written  medical  justification  explaining  why  local  

anesthesia  would  be  "inadequate  to  control  pain."    7  Alaska  Administrative  Code  

(AAC)  110.155(a)-(b).     The  program  also  requires  the  dentist  to  obtain  prior  

authorization  and  submit  documentation  showing  the  patient  requires  the  service  

because of a severe disability or "medically compromised condition," or because of a  

"prolonged or difficult surgical procedure."  Id.  110.155(b)  



                                                     -2-                                                  7702  



  


----------------------- Page 3-----------------------

  



                           3 

training  and  permit,   sedated  multiple  patients  simultaneously,  billed  Medicaid  for  



sedation during routine cleanings, and sedated patients with underlying chronic diseases  



that made sedation dangerous.   He  allowed  his  unlicensed  office manager  to sedate  



patients, pressured patients into unwanted sedation,  and left  sedated patients to drive  



themselves home.  



                 On two occasions, Lookhart's patients nearly lost their lives as a direct  



consequence of his reckless sedation practices :  One displayed vital signs "inconsistent  



with signs of life," while another's heart rate dropped to 19 beats per minute with what  



Lookhart  described  as  a  "crazy  high"  blood  pressure.   Lookhart  also  extracted  one  



deeply sedated patient's tooth while riding a hoverboard, and then sent a video of the  



                                                                                                        4 

unsafe extraction to his friends and family members without the patient's consent.   



                 Lookhart was fully aware that his conduct was reckless and illegal, but  



declared that the Dental Board "would literally have to be there watching me do it" to  



catch him.  



                                                                                                                

         3       Lookhart's  permit  only  authorized  him  to  perform  light-to-moderate  

sedation, but 80% of the time he practiced deep sedation, which carries greater risks.  

         4       This  video  went  viral,  generating  national  and  international  headlines.   

See, e.g., Maria Alejandra Pachon Urrego, 12 Años de Cárcel a Odontólogo que Hizo  

 'Acrobacia'   al   Sacar   Diente,  EL   TIEMPO   (Bogotá)   (Sept.  17,   2020,   1:40 PM),  

https://www.eltiempo.com/mundo/eeuu-y-canada/odontologo-hizo-una-acrobacia-al- 

sacar-un-diente-en-estados-unidos-538358;  Dentist   Jailed   After   Extracting   Tooth  

 While on Hoverboard, DAILY NATION (Nairobi) (Sept.  19, 2020), https://nation.africa/ 

kenya/news/world/dentist-jailed -after-extracting-tooth-while-on-hoverboard-2303146;  

Alaska 'da Elektrikli  Kaykay Üzerinde diş Çeken diş Hekimine 12 Yıl Hapis Cezası,  

CUMHURIYET             (Istanbul)       (Sept.  19,      2020),      https://www.cumhuriyet.com.tr/ 

haber/alaskada-elektrikli-kaykay-uzerinde-dis-ceken-dis-hekimine-12-yil-hapis- 

cezasi-1767241.  We take judicial notice of these articles under Rule 201 of the Alaska  

Rules  of  Evidence  only  to  "indicate  what  was  in  the  public  realm  at  the  time,  not  

whether the contents of those articles were in fact true."   Von Saher v. Norton Simon  

Museum of Art at Pasadena , 592 F.3d 954, 960 (9th Cir. 2010)  (applying analogous  

federal rule).  



                                                     -3-                                                  7702  



  


----------------------- Page 4-----------------------

  



                 Lookhart was arrested in April 2017.  After a six-week bench trial ending  



in January 2020, he was convicted on 46 charges, including 11 felony counts of medical  



assistance fraud, three felony counts of scheming to defraud, one count of felony theft,  



three class A misdemeanor counts of reckless endangerment, one class B misdemeanor  



count   of   failure   to   meet   minimal   standards   of   dentistry,   and   27                 additional  



misdemeanors.  The trial court also issued an order finding that the State had proven  13  



sentencing  aggravators  beyond  a  reasonable  doubt.    The  trial  court  found  that  the  



evidence against Lookhart was "overwhelming."   He was ultimately sentenced to  20  



                                                        5 

years in prison with eight years suspended .   



         B.      Dental Board Proceedings  



                 Following Lookhart's convictions, the Division of Corporations, Business  



and  Professional Licensing filed  a  17-count accusation seeking to revoke Lookhart's  



                   6 

dental license.   Lookhart stipulated to the facts contained in the accusation, leaving it  



to an administrative law judge (ALJ) to determine whether revoking his license was an  



                                                                      7 

appropriate sanction consistent with AS 08.01.075(f).   



                 The ALJ issued  a proposed decision  in September 2020.    Although the  



ALJ devoted a significant portion of the proposed decision to discussing prior cases of  



the  Dental  Board,  other  Alaska  licensing  boards,  and  the  dental  regulators  of  other  



states,  she  also  rejected  the  idea  that  any  prior  Alaska  decision  could  control  the  



outcome  of this case.  The ALJ found that "there are simply no prior cases of this or  



                                                                                                                  

         5       State v.   Lookhart,   No. 3AN-17-02990 CR                  (Alaska   Super.,   Sept.  14,  

2020).    Lookhart's  appeal  in  his  criminal  case  is  pending  in  the  court  of  appeals.   

Lookhart v. State, No. A-13752 (Alaska App. filed Oct. 26, 2020).  

         6       See AS 44.62.360.  



         7       AS 08.01.075(f)  obligates  licensing  boards  to  "seek  consistency  in  the  

application of disciplinary sanctions" and "explain a significant departure from  prior  

decisions involving similar facts in the order imposing the sanction."  



                                                      -4-                                                   7702  



  


----------------------- Page 5-----------------------

  



any other Alaska board  involving facts that are truly comparable to those presented  



here."  



                 The ALJ concluded that Lookhart's "astonishing range of misconduct"  



was "more wide-ranging and severe" than in any prior case in which the Board imposed  



a lesser sanction.  Revocation, the ALJ wrote, "would be justified if the only misconduct  



here was the Medicaid fraud"; "might have been justified if the only misconduct here  



was the theft"; and "would also have been justified if the only misconduct here was the  



numerous  standard  of  care  violations."    Taken  as  a  whole,  the  ALJ  concluded  that  



revocation was the "clear and obvious sanction," adopting the Division's  contention  



that, "[i]f this case does not require it, no future case will."  



                 The Board adopted the ALJ's decision without modification.  



         C.      The Superior Court's Decision  



                 Lookhart appealed to the superior court, arguing that the Board's decision  



was inconsistent with its prior decisions revoking dental licenses.  The court concluded  



that  AS 08.01.075(f)  affords  the  Board  "wide  discretion"  to  determine  appropriate  



sanctions, rejecting Lookhart's argument that it was narrowly constrained by the two  



prior Board cases that resulted in revocation.  The court reasoned that even if it accepted  



Lookhart's  argument  that  the  Board's  decision  departed  from  precedent,  the  Board  



provided an adequate explanation justifying its decision in this case, which is all that  



AS 08.01.075(f) requires.  



                 The court noted that "no Alaska case is factually comparable to the sheer  



scale  of  malfeasance  here,"  that  the  Board   "painstakingly  detailed"  Lookhart's  



misconduct, and that it had  "carefully considered  and rejected any comparison with  



prior  Board  cases."    Although  the  court  stated  that  Lookhart  did  not  challenge  the  



adequacy or logic of the  Board's decision,  it concluded that the  Board's decision to  



revoke his dental license was a proper exercise of its discretion .  The superior court thus  



affirmed the Board's decision in full.  



                                                     -5-                                                 7702  



  


----------------------- Page 6-----------------------

  



                 Lookhart appeals.  



         STANDARDS OF REVIEW  



                 "When a superior court acts as an intermediate court of appeals reviewing  



an  administrative  or  agency  decision,  we  independently  review  the  merits  of  the  



                                                                                                       8 

administrative decision, giving no deference to the superior court's decision."    We  



review  an  "agency's  factual  findings  to  determine  whether  they  are  supported  by  



                            9 

substantial evidence."   The substantial evidence test is highly deferential and considers  



evidence substantial if it is "such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept  

as adequate to support a conclusion."10  This level of deference "reflects the prudence  



of deferring to a state professional board's special competence in recognizing violations  

of professional standards."11  



                 We  review  questions  of  law  implicating  agency  expertise,  such  as  an  

agency's selection of a particular sanction, using the reasonable basis test.12  Under this  



                                                                                                                 

         8       Odom  v.  State,  Div.  of  Corps .,  Bus.  &  Prof.  Licensing ,  421  P.3d  1,  6  

(Alaska 2018) (first citing Jurgens v. City of North Pole , 153 P.3d 321, 325 (Alaska  

2007); and then citing State, Dep 't of Revenue v. Merriouns, 894 P.2d 623, 625 (Alaska  

 1995)).  

         9       Id. (citing Jurgens , 153 P.3d at 325).  



         10      Id. (quoting Storrs v. State Med. Bd., 664 P.2d 547, 554 (Alaska 1983)).  



         11      Id.  (quoting State, Dep 't of Com., Cmty. & Econ. Dev., Div. of Corps.,  

Bus. & Prof 'l Licensing v. Wold, 278 P.3d 266, 273 (Alaska 2012)).  

         12      Fantasies  on 5th  Avenue,  LLC v.  Alcoholic  Beverage  Control  Bd.,  446  

P.3d 360, 367 (Alaska 2019).   In their briefing the parties relied on our statement in  

Odom v. State, Division of Corps., Business  & Professional Licensing , 421 P.3d at  6,  

that "we review the agency's selection of a particular disciplinary sanction for abuse of  

discretion."  This statement in Odom must be understood as representing the inquiry we  

make within the context of the reasonable basis test.  We take this opportunity to clarify  

that  the  appropriate  standard  for  reviewing  agency  decisions  that  implicate  agency  

expertise is the reasonable basis standard.  See, e.g.,  Wendte v. State, Bd. of Real Est.  

Appraisers ,  70  P.3d 1089,  1091  (Alaska  2003);  State,  Div.  of  Corps.,  Bus.  &  Prof.  

Licensing, Alaska Bd. of Nursing v. Platt , 169 P.3d 595, 598 (Alaska 2007).  



                                                      -6-                                                  7702  



  


----------------------- Page 7-----------------------

  



standard, "we ask 'whether there was a prejudicial abuse of discretion,' which we will  



find  'if  the  agency  has  not  proceeded  in  the  manner  required  by  law,  the  order  or  



decision  is  not  supported  by  the  findings,  or  the  findings  are  not  supported  by  the  

evidence.' "13  



                 We apply our "independent judgment" when interpreting the meaning of  



a statute that "does not  'implicate an agency's special expertise or determination of  

fundamental policies.' "14  



         DISCUSSION  



                 Lookhart argues that AS 08.01.075(f) narrowly circumscribes the Board's  



authority to revoke licenses and that the revocation of his license was inconsistent with  



the  Board's  prior  decisions.    Both  arguments  lack  merit.  While  AS 08.01.075(f)  



obligates the Board to "seek consistency" with its prior decisions, there is simply no  



prior case comparable to the scope of Lookhart's egregious dishonesty and misconduct.   



The Board did not abuse its discretion in concluding that revoking Lookhart's license  



was an appropriate sanction.  



        A.       Alaska Statute 08.01.075(f) Affords The Dental Board The Flexibility  

                 To     Craft      Appropriate         Sanctions       In     Response        To     Novel  

                 Circumstances.  



                 Alaska Statute 08.01.075(f) provides that the Board of Dental Examiners  



"shall seek consistency in the application of disciplinary sanctions."  Throughout his  



briefing,  Lookhart   insists   that   "Board   decisions   must   be   consistent   with   prior  



precedent" and  argues the statutory framework and the Board's prior decisions  allow  



the Board to revoke a license only when two conditions are met :  (1) the dentist shows  



"contempt for the Board's ability to discipline" by refusing to accept responsibility or  



                                                                                                              

         13      Fantasies on 5th Avenue, 446 P.3d at 367 (quoting AS 44.62.570(b)(3)).  



         14      Rosauer v. Manos, 440 P.3d 145, 147-48 (Alaska 2019) (quoting Mun. of  

Anchorage v. Suzuki , 41 P.3d 147, 150 (Alaska 2002)).  



                                                     -7-                                                7702  



  


----------------------- Page 8-----------------------

  



adhere to conditions of prohibitions, and (2) the dentist  either fraudulently prescribes  

medicine  while  exhibiting  addictive  behaviors  or  causes  "extreme  patient  harm."15   



Lookhart  argues  that  he  did  not  do  either  of  these  things,  making  revocation  an  



inconsistent sanction in his case.  



                 If we were to adopt Lookhart's  understanding of the Board's statutory  



mandate, it would artificially limit the ability of the Board to craft appropriate sanctions  



in response to new factual situations.   The Board is obligated to "seek consistency"  



between cases involving similar facts.  But it is not obligated to operate strictly within  



the bounds of existing precedent when a case presents novel circumstances.  Lookhart's  



interpretation of AS 08.01.075 cannot be squared with the language of the statute or the  



surrounding provisions.    



                 Alaska      Statute 08.01.075(f)        provides     that    the   Board      "shall    seek  



consistency" in applying disciplinary sanctions.  The U.S. Court of Appeals for the First  



Circuit has interpreted the use of "shall seek" rather than "shall"  as  reflecting  clear  



legislative intent "to require only that the [agency] take reasonable, affirmative steps"  

toward the statute's goal.16  We agree with the First Circuit's reasoning and decline to  



read  the  words  "shall  seek"  to  impose  the  strict  mandate  that  Lookhart  proposes.   



                                                                                                                

         15      See  In  re  Greenough,  OAH  Nos.  1200-94-006  &  1200-96-5  (Dec. 22,  

1998), https://aws.state.ak.us/OAH/Decision/Display?rec=6585  (concluding  dentist's  

misconduct while on probation provided "a basis for revocation"); In re Robinson , OAH  

No.  1200-95-013,           at      8-9       (Sept.       13,      1996),        https://aws.state.ak.us/ 

OAH/Decision/Display?rec=6583                 (revoking       license    where      dentist    fraudulently  

prescribed medication "for the purpose of maintaining [a person's] addiction to drugs") ;  

Smith v. State, Bd. of Dental Exam 'rs, No. 7806, 1984 WL 908389, at * 1, *3 (Alaska  

May 2, 1984)  (affirming Board's decision to revoke license after "willful and gross  

malpractice or negligence").  

         16      Conille v. Sec'y of Hous. & Urb. Dev., 840 F.2d 105, 112-13 & n.12 (1st  

Cir. 1988) (noting that, absent clearly expressed contrary legislative intent, "shall seek"  

does not mean "shall").  



                                                      -8-                                                 7702  



  


----------------------- Page 9-----------------------

  



Moreover, AS 08.01.075(f) explicitly recognizes that the Board may depart from its  



prior decisions, provided that the Board "explain [s] a significant departure from prior  



decisions  involving  similar  facts."    While  consistency  is  a  goal  that  the  Board  is  



obligated to seek, the statute affords the Board significant discretion in fashioning an  



appropriate sanction.  



                  The statutory scheme of dental licensing also weighs against Lookhart's  



reading.  Alaska Statute 08.36.315 sets forth a list of fourteen conditions, any of which  



may justify the Board's decision to "revoke  or suspend the license of a dentist."  But  



Lookhart argues that only instances of demonstrated "contempt for the Board's ability  



to discipline" and either fraudulent prescriptions or "extreme patient harm" may justify  



the decision to revoke a dental license.  This reading would render several sections of  



AS 08.36.315 effectively superfluous.  As relevant to this case, subsections .315(1) and  



(2),  which  provide  for  license  revocation  in  cases  of  fraud,  and  subsection  .315(6),  



providing the same for standard-of-care violations, would be rendered meaningless.  



                  Lookhart's  reliance  on  Odom v.  State,  Division  of  Corps.,  Business  &  

Professional Licensing17 is misplaced.  In Odom, the Medical Board revoked a doctor's  



license after a single case of inappropriate prescribing.18  The Medical Board in Odom  



provided no explanation of why  its  decision  to revoke  was consistent with its prior  

cases.19  We concluded that the Medical Board, by adopting a decision that "contain[ed]  



no findings of its own" and providing no written explanation for its decision to revoke  



Odom's license, failed to comply with its statutory duty to either "be consistent in the  

application of disciplinary sanctions" or explain an inconsistency.20  



                                                                                                                    

         17       421 P.3d 1.  



         18      Id. at 3-6.  



         19      Id. at 8.  



         20      Id. at 9 (citing AS 08.64.331(f)).  



                                                       -9-                                                    7702  



  


----------------------- Page 10-----------------------

  



                 Unlike in  Odom, the Dental Board here adopted a detailed order setting  



forth its rationale for revocation.  Unlike the Medical Board in  Odom, which failed to  



reference prior decisions involving similar facts, the Dental  Board considered a range  



of  past  decisions  and   concluded   that  none  were   comparable   to   the  facts   and  



circumstances of Lookhart's case.   It examined  each of the decisions put forward by  



Lookhart  and  provided  a  detailed  explanation  of  why  its  decision  to  revoke  was  



consistent with its prior decisions.  The errors present in Odom simply do not appear in  



the Board's decision in this case.  



                  The   Board   is   obligated   to   "seek   consistency"   in   its   disciplinary  

decisions.21  But this obligation does not trap the Board in amber, rendering it unable to  



respond appropriately to the unique facts and circumstances presented in each case.   



Lookhart's  interpretation  of  this  requirement  would  effectively  strip  the  Board  of  a  



significant range of its statutory powers, while also hindering its ability to  adapt to  



evolving professional standards.   The Board must be afforded the flexibility to craft  



appropriate  sanctions  in  response  to  novel  factual  circumstances,  such  as  those  



presented in this case.  Alaska Statute 08.01.075(f) affords the Board this flexibility.  



         B.       No Prior Dental Board Decision Involves Similar Facts.  



                  The  Board  is  obligated  to  "seek  consistency  in  the  application  of  



disciplinary  sanctions"  and  "explain  a  significant  departure  from  prior  decisions  

involving similar facts."22  



                  The Board found that "there are simply no prior cases of this or any other  



Alaska board involving facts that are truly comparable to those presented here," because  



Lookhart's conduct was "more wide-ranging and severe than in any [prior] cases."  The  



                                                                                                                   

         21      AS 08.01.075(f).  



         22      Id.  



                                                      -10-                                                   7702  



  


----------------------- Page 11-----------------------

  



superior court likewise concluded that "no Alaska case is factually comparable to the  



sheer scale of malfeasance here."  



                 We agree.  Lookhart stole millions of dollars from the state program that  



provides  medical  care  for  the  indigent,  while  simultaneously  defrauding  a  business  



partner  of  several  hundred  thousand  more,  and  committing  an  egregious  string  of  



standard-of-care violations that not only jeopardized the safety, privacy, and autonom y  



of his patients, but also brought the dental profession into disrepute .  The lack of any  



comparable previous case meant that the Board was free to use its expertise to determine  



an appropriate  sanction  that would  deter future misconduct and restore public trust,  



based on the unique facts and circumstances of this case.  



                 Although Lookhart  cites a string of prior Board decisions  as addressing  



similar circumstances, none bear more than a superficial resemblance to his own case.   

In re Greenough ,23 which Lookhart argues is the Board decision "that bears the most  



comparable  relationship  to  the  current  case,"  involved  a  dentist  whose  license  was  

suspended for two years following an  insurance fraud  conviction.24   But  Greenough  



defrauded several insurers of roughly $5,000;25 whereas Lookhart stole $1,600,000, or  



over  300  times  that  amount,  and  committed  a  series  of  other  wrongful  acts  in  



combination with his billing fraud.  



                 Likewise,  Lookhart argues  that revocation of his  license  is inconsistent  



with In re Houseman , a case in which a dentist was given a two-week suspension for a  



                                                                                                                

         23      OAH         Nos.  1200-94-006           &      1200-96-5         (Dec.       22,     1998),  

https://aws.state.ak.us/OAH/Decision/Display?rec=6585.  

         24      Id. at 20-21, 59-60.  



         25      See id. at 20-21.  The Board also observed that Greenough's misconduct  

would "provide a basis for revocation," but declined to consider revocation because the  

State only sought a suspension.  Id. at 57.  



                                                     -11-                                                 7702  



  


----------------------- Page 12-----------------------

  



negligent  procedure.26    Lookhart  suggests  that  he  "did  not  cause  the  kind  of  actual  



serious  harm  to  patients"  that  Houseman  did.    But  Houseman  committed  a  single  



negligent procedure, while Lookhart  nearly killed two of his patients  and recklessly  



endangered the lives of others  -  and did so in the course of  committing extensive  



Medicaid fraud,  an element  that has no  equivalent in Houseman .   The Board did not  



abuse its discretion by concluding that the magnitude of Lookhart's conduct merited a  



harsher sanction than it imposed in In re Greenough and In re Houseman .  

                  Finally,  Lookhart points to the superior court decision in Ness v. State27  



for the proposition that the Board's sanctions may not impose "pure punishment."  In  



Ness, the superior court concluded that a four-month suspension was an unduly harsh  

penalty for "a first case of improper procedure in a seventeen year career."28  The court  



explained  that  this  penalty  "seem[ed]  to  constitute  unwarranted  and  unnecessary  



punishment" that did not further the goals of protecting the public or instilling public  

respect and confidence.29  But unlike Ness's single error, Lookhart committed a "litany  



of bad acts," which "began at virtually the start of his career and continued until he was  



caught and arrested."  The Board accordingly concluded that a more severe penalty was  



necessary, not to punish Lookhart, but to deter misconduct, "ensure public safety and  



restore trust to the profession."  



                  Lookhart stole millions of dollars from Medicaid.  In furtherance of this  



massive fraud, he repeatedly subjected his patients to great risk of harm.  There are no  



cases in the Board's history comparable to Lookhart's.  In light of the lack of any cases  



                                                                                                                   

         26       OAH        No.  1200-89-00011           at     12-15,      19-20       (June  14,      1990),  

https://aws.state.ak.us/OAH/Decision/Display?rec=6584.  

         27      Ness v.  State,  Bd.  of  Dental  Exam 'rs,  No. 3AN-06-8587 CI  (Alaska  

Super., Apr. 28, 2008), https://aws.state.ak.us/OAH/Decision/Display?rec=6581.  

         28      Id. at 2.  



         29      Id. at 6.  



                                                      -12-                                                   7702  



  


----------------------- Page 13-----------------------

presenting similar facts  or circumstances, the Board's conclusion that revocation was  



the "clear and obvious sanction" given the "sheer magnitude of admitted misconduct"  



was not an abuse of discretion.  



       CONCLUSION  



              The judgment of the superior court is AFFIRMED.  



                                          -13-                                     7702  

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