Attorney Macci defends a wide range of Connecticut healthcare professionals before the Department of Public Health, the Board of Nursing Examiners, the Department of Consumer Protection, and other state licensing boards and agencies, including:
You spent years earning the right to practice. The education. The clinical hours. The board examinations. The sacrifices that people outside your profession will never fully understand. That license is not a piece of paper — it is your identity, your income, and your future.
When the Connecticut Department of Public Health or the Department of Consumer Protection opens an investigation against you, the agency is not simply asking questions. It is building a case. And it is doing so before you have any idea how serious that case has already become.
Attorney Kyle D. Macci has been protecting Connecticut healthcare professionals since 2006. What distinguishes his representation is not just legal skill — it is a prosecutorial and investigative fluency that allows him to see your case the way the agency sees it, anticipate where it is heading, and position your defense ahead of it.
Most attorneys learn how regulatory investigations work by reading statutes and attending hearings. Attorney Macci learned how investigations work by conducting them. That distinction translates into concrete, practical advantages for every healthcare client he represents:
When the Department of Public Health receives a complaint, it opens a file. That file grows through witness interviews, record requests, employment documentation, incident reports, and internal communications. Attorney Macci knows the anatomy of that file intimately. He knows what documentation the agency is required to gather, what it is entitled to request, and — critically — what it is not. When he reviews your file, he is not simply reading what is there. He is evaluating what is missing, what was selectively included, and whether the investigation was conducted according to the procedural and constitutional standards that protect you.
Selective omission of material evidence in a regulatory proceeding is not a clerical error. It is a violation — of due process, of administrative procedure, and potentially of your constitutional rights. Attorney Macci identifies these gaps with precision. If a witness statement was taken but not disclosed, if an incident report was summarized rather than produced in full, if exculpatory documentation was available and not included in your file, Attorney Macci will find it. And he will use it.
By the time a healthcare professional receives formal notice of an investigation, the Department of Public Health has already made a preliminary assessment of the complaint. Decisions about the scope of the investigation, which records to subpoena, and which witnesses to interview are already underway. Attorney Macci’s familiarity with how agencies prioritize and triage complaints allows him to intervene at the earliest possible stage — shaping the investigative narrative before it hardens into a formal charging document.
The agency’s first communication often invites you to respond, explain, or provide documentation voluntarily. That invitation is strategic. What you say, how you say it, and what you choose to produce at that stage can define the entire trajectory of your case. Attorney Macci controls that initial response entirely — ensuring that nothing you submit creates new exposure, contradicts existing documentation, or inadvertently confirms an element the agency has not yet established.
Not every investigation proceeds to a formal hearing. Many matters can be resolved at the investigative stage through strategic engagement, targeted documentation, and carefully constructed responses that address the agency’s core concerns without expanding the scope of inquiry. Attorney Macci assesses the realistic posture of every case early and pursues the most effective path — whether that is a negotiated resolution, a contested administrative hearing, or an appeal to the Superior Court.
The Department of Public Health has sweeping authority. A complaint — from a patient, a colleague, an employer, or even an anonymous source — can trigger a formal investigation resulting in license suspension, probation, conditions of practice, mandatory treatment programs, or permanent revocation. Common allegations include:
Connecticut law also requires healthcare professionals to report colleagues who may be unable to practice safely. Navigating that obligation — when to report, how to report, and to whom — carries serious legal consequences if handled incorrectly. Attorney Macci provides direct, experienced guidance on these sensitive decisions before you make any statement or submission that cannot be taken back.
It is responding without counsel.
The moment you receive notice of a complaint or investigation, the clock is running — and the agency is already several steps ahead of you. Healthcare professionals who attempt to respond on their own, explain the situation directly to investigators, or produce records without legal guidance routinely create new problems that did not exist in the original complaint.
You built your career one careful decision at a time. Protecting it requires the same precision.
Attorney Macci intervenes before statements are made, before records are produced, and before positions are locked in. That early strategic presence is almost always the difference between a matter that resolves and a career that doesn’t recover.
Call Attorney Kyle D. Macci today for a free, confidential consultation — available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Every hour without counsel is an hour the investigation moves forward without you.
Connecticut veterinarians invest years earning the right to practice veterinary school, clinical training, board examinations, and the trust of every patient and client who walks through the door. A single complaint to the Connecticut Board of Veterinary Medicine or the Connecticut Department of Public Health (DPH the state agency that oversees health-related licensing) can put all of that at risk. The investigation begins the moment that complaint is filed — long before most veterinarians even know there is a problem.
Attorney Macci steps in at the earliest possible stage — before you respond to anything. Using his background in conducting and supervising criminal investigations, he understands exactly how investigators build cases, and he knows how to prevent an unfocused or one-sided inquiry from becoming a formal charging document.
Specifically, he:
Contact Attorney Macci’s office the day you receive your first inquiry letter. The earlier he is involved, the more options you have.