A Florida nursing home owner whose 20-year prison sentence for a $1.3 billion Medicare fraud scheme was commuted by then-President Donald Trump in late 2020 has lost a federal court appeal and now appears headed for retrial on six health-care criminal charges that a jury previously deadlocked on.When charges were filed against him and two others in 2016, the U.S. Department of Justice called it the "largest single criminal health-care fraud case ever brought against individuals" in department history.Esformes' lawyers have indicated they plan to request a rehearing of their appeal by the entire line-up of the judges on the 11th Circuit.The same panel also said it did not have jurisdiction to address Esformes' argument that Trump's grant of clemency, which freed him from prison, bars prosecutors from re-trying him on at least one count of the six charges that jurors failed to reach a verdict on at his trial.Prosecutors also have said Esformes paid out $300,000 in bribes to Jerome Allen, who at the time was the University of Pennsylvania's men's basketball coach, who helped get Esformes' son admitted to the university's prestigious Wharton School of Business by falsely claiming he was a prized basketball recruit."