Garvin Law Firm Blog Posts Tagged ‘OxyContin’

Florida Law Attempts to Reign in Pain Clinics

Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

Nearly two years ago, a post here discussed the growing problem of unregulated pain-management clinics, so-called “pill mills,” and how South Florida – Broward County in particular – was ground zero.

According to the Centers for Disease Control, overdose deaths from painkillers are rivaling the No. 1 killer, traffic accidents. It attributes much of the increase to the overuse of prescription opiates such as OxyContin and Vicodin. In Florida, deaths from prescription-drug use rose from 2,780 in 2006 to 3,750 in 2008 – more than cocaine, according to the Florida Medical Examiners Commission.

You don’t even have to be a doctor to run a pain-management clinic. “You need a background check to get a liquor license — you can’t be a convicted felon and open up a bar — but you can be a convicted felon and open up a pain clinic,” says Broward Sheriff Al Lamberti.

Fort Lauderdale Drug Trafficking Attorney at Law

But starting Oct. 1, 2010, a new law will go into effect that takes steps to regulate the clinics and punish offending doctors, although some think it isn’t far-reaching enough.

“No bill is perfect, but this lets the Department of Health and the police regulate, inspect, shut down and discipline [clinics and doctors] operating blatantly outside the legitimate practice of medicine,” says Bruce D. Grant, director of the Florida Office of Drug Control.

The law allows police to inspect patient files for violations without a warrant and enforces penalties for doctors, who can be charged with third-degree felonies and fined up to $5,000 a day of violations. Every clinic must be directed by a doctor with a clean record.

In addition, clinics are limited to selling patients only three days of pills at a time, making it more difficult for dealers who pay patients to buy drugs (however, clinics can get around the rule by charging more for an office visit and giving the pills away, skeptics point out). In 2009, members of the Bonanno crime family were charged with using pain clinics to distribute prescription drugs.

Still, the bill does not require the clinics to do criminal background checks on owners and employees, as other health clinics must.

And although the state has approved a database to track pill dispensing, there is no dedicated, ongoing funding source. Bruce Grant said that more than $500,000 in donations has been raised to pay for the prescription-tracking program, with three months to go in the campaign. The goal is to raise $1 million.

Laws for drug possession and abuse have grown progressively harsher, while the source has not been adequately addressed; according to an FBI report, 82.3 percent of all drug arrests in 2008 were for possession.

Now South Florida’s nearly 200 pain clinics and dozens of OxyContin-dispensing doctors, which have operated with no legal scrutiny, will face some accountability.

South Florida, a Top Destination for Prescription Drug Tourism?

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

They’re not coming for the beaches any more, they’re coming for the Pain Management Clinics. Within the past few years it seems like these clinics have been popping up everywhere, and they’re clearly making money. If you can’t tell from the lines wrapped around the back of the clinic on a Monday morning or the ads that appear on page after page in the New Times, this is a profitable business. The worst of these drugs is Oxycodone (aka. oxy’s, oxycontin); according to DEA statistics Broward County is the number Oxycodone distribution site in the Country, dispensing 3.3 million pills in the first 6 months of this year.

Broward Sheriff’s Deputy Sgt. Lisa McElhaney states that BSO has been “talking to hundreds of thousands of individuals trafficking into the State of Florida specifically to obtain pharmaceutical drugs.”

So why do all these people travel here to South Florida? Authorities say it’s because we make it easy for them to get pills. Additionally, they say it’s perfectly legal and the State Legislature is doing nothing to regulate this epidemic. Recently channel 7′s Carmel Cafiero investigated this growing trend with a story that appeared in her segment Carmel on the Case.

One of the worst part of these drug offenses is that if a person is found in possession of more than 4 grams of Oxycontin, they will be looking right down the barrel of a 3 year minimum mandatory Florida prison sentence. These minimum mandatory prison sentences only go up from there, if someone if found simply possessing more than 14 grams of the substance then the min/man is 15 years, day for day, Florida State Prison.

The bottom line of all of this madness is that while our citizens are being shipped off to prison, pain clinics are opening up in new neighborhoods.

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