Healthcare Systems of America operates five hospitals in South Florida.

Healthcare Systems of America operates five hospitals in South Florida.

Miami Herald staff

The operator who runs Palmetto General and four other South Florida hospitals is taking its former chairman and CEO to court, accusing him of trying to lock it out of several bank accounts he still has access to that are critical for payroll and patient care services.

The lawsuit alleges Michael “Mike” Sarian “contacted City National Bank and improperly attempted to remove authorized signatories and add signatories of his choosing,” including his wife Evelina Sarian, a day after he was quietly ousted as chair and CEO of Healthcare Systems of America’s (HSA) Florida division due to another money-related allegation. Evelina Sarian, who is currently running for a city council position in Glendale, California, on LinkedIn lists herself as HSA’s vice president of business development.

An email attached to the 353-page complaint filed by HSA on March 5 in Miami-Dade Circuit Court shows that on March 4, the day after Sarian was removed as CEO, he asked City National Bank to remove two HSA officers, including Chief Financial Officer Carlos Alcazar, from all bank accounts “asap” and to add Evelina, his wife, “as a signor on all accounts effective immediately.”

Reached by the Miami Herald, Quinn Emanuel, the law firm representing Sarin in the case, declined to comment.

Late Friday afternoon, Miami-Dade Circuit Court Judge Thomas Rebull issued a temporary restraining order barring Sarian from accessing or transferring funds from the bank accounts and from presenting himself as a representative of HSA. The judge’s order instructed City National Bank to remove him from the accounts.

The bank accounts hold money the health system receives primarily from Medicare, Medicaid and commercial health insurance payors — including United and Blue Cross Blue Shield — for services related to patient care at Palmetto General Hospital in Hialeah, Coral Gables Hospital, Hialeah Hospital, North Shore Medical Center in North Miami-Dade and Florida Medical Center in Lauderdale Lakes. The funds in the accounts are used for hospital operations, including payroll, vendor payments and essential services.

In a statement to the Herald, HSA Florida said that the issue with the bank accounts would not impact patient care and that it would like “to reassure our patients, staff, and the communities we serve that the current dispute has no impact on our clinical operations.”

What led to the CEO’s removal

HSA’s suit against Sarian, who founded the company, comes after he faced another financial-related accusation earlier this month. He was removed from his CEO position on March 3 for the Florida hospitals after allegations surfaced that “he had allegedly taken funds from the bank account” of HSA Florida’s parent company “in an unexplained manner,” according to the lawsuit filed by the health system.

His ousting was led by hospital landlord Medical Properties Trust, which has a master lease and other financial agreements with the health system that gives it “proxy rights over governance matters of the HSA Florida System.” The landlord used the allegations to exercise its voting power during a special meeting of the governing body of HSA’s Florida division on March 3 to oust Sarian and appoint Faisal Gill, an attorney for the health system, as HSA Florida CEO and sole member of its board of directors, according to court documents.

Medical Properties Trust in a statement earlier this week said it’s not involved in the lawsuit and that it doesn’t expect the situation to impact its ability to get rent from HSA, which is “fully current on rent owed.”

The Herald has not been able to confirm if Sarian’s ousting is specifically related to HSA’s Florida division or if he was ousted from the entire health system, which also runs at least one hospital in Louisiana and two in Texas, according to its website. His photo and biography still appeared on HSA’s website Friday.

Who is HSA’s CEO? Healthcare Systems of America’s website still lists Michael “Mike” Sarian as chair and CEO. Healthcare Systems of America’s website still lists Michael “Mike” Sarian as chair and CEO. Screenshot of HSA’s website

HSA, which was founded by Sarian in 2024, took over the five South Florida hospitals from bankrupt Steward Health Care System that same year as part of a deal Steward made to thin debt. At the time of the deal, HSA, which was registered in the state of Nevada, told the Herald the company was mostly managed by the same team that oversees Los Angeles-based American Healthcare Systems. Sarian at the time was listed as the CEO for both companies.

Sarian’s biography describes him as having over 30 years of experience in the healthcare industry. Before his role at HSA, he served as president of hospital operations at Prime Healthcare and served on the boards of the California Hospital Association and the Southern California Hospital Association. He recently spoke to a graduating class of students at Florida National University in September.

He’s also listed in Nevada business records as the director of Nor Healthcare Systems Corp, a recently registered company that last year bought six bankrupt California hospitals for millions from Sarian’s former employer Prospect Medical Group Holdings, whose hospital landlord is also Medical Properties Trust. The two companies had a legal tussle in January shortly after the sale closed, with Prospect accusing NOR of owing it millions in overdue payments, including not paying medical supply vendors and other debts, according to CT Insider.

Gill, the new HSA Florida CEO, is listed as the lead attorney representing Nor Healthcare Systems during Prospect Medical Group’s ongoing bankruptcy case. His LinkedIn also lists him as the chief legal officer of American Healthcare Systems.

HSA’s Miami-Dade lawsuit also names City National as a defendant, with the health system saying the bank has refused to remove Sarian as a signatory from the accounts without a court order or an agreement from the parties. Two active HSA executives still remain as authorized signers on the accounts.

“Each side claims to be in control of the HSA entities that hold accounts” at the bank and “each side is asking us to remove the other side from access and control over those accounts,” City National attorney Mario Carballo wrote in an email to the law firms involved in the case, noting that it “is not the role of the bank” to determine who should still have access to the accounts.

What the health system had asked for

The health system had asked Judge Rebull to immediately file a temporary restraining order and temporary injunction to prevent Sarian from “accessing, withdrawing, transferring, or directing the transfer of funds” from any HSA bank accounts at City National Bank of Florida and prevent him from representing to the bank or other financial institutions that “he has authority to act on behalf” of HSA. Rebull did so on Friday.

“Given the nature of these accounts — receiving daily patient-care deposits that cannot quickly be redirected — any interference with the Bank Accounts threatens immediate disruption to payroll, vendor payments, and patient care operations,” Miami-Dade attorney David Geller, who is representing the HSA hospitals in the suit, wrote in the company’s emergency motion.

The complaint stated that the “amount in controversy exceeds $750,000.”

HSA Florida, in a statement provided to the Herald through its attorney, said it’s “confident that the legal dispute will be resolved in the near future” and that “our hospitals remain fully operational, and our commitment to excellence in healthcare is unwavering. HSA will continue to provide high-quality care to our patients every day.”

This story has been updated to reflect a decision late Friday afternoon by Miami-Dade Circuit Court Judge Thomas Rebull.

This story was originally published March 13, 2026 at 4:21 PM.


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Michelle Marchante

Miami Herald

Michelle Marchante covers the pulse of healthcare in South Florida and also the City of Coral Gables. Before that, she covered the COVID-19 pandemic, hurricanes, crime, education, entertainment and other topics in South Florida for the Herald as a breaking news reporter. She recently won first place in the health reporting category in the 2025 Sunshine State Awards for her coverage of Steward Health’s bankruptcy. An investigative series about the abrupt closure of a Miami heart transplant program led Michelle and her colleagues to be recognized as finalists in two 2024 Florida Sunshine State Award categories. She also won second place in the 73rd annual Green Eyeshade Awards for her consumer-focused healthcare stories and was part of the team of reporters who won a 2022 Pulitzer Prize for the Miami Herald’s breaking news coverage of the Surfside building collapse. Michelle graduated with honors from Florida International University and was a 2025 National Press Foundation Covering Workplace Mental Health fellow and a 2020-2021 Poynter-Koch Media & Journalism fellow. 
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