Rob Duncan, U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Kentucky, announced the cases. (Associated Press photo by John Minchillo) |
Those indicted included "31 doctors, seven pharmacists, eight nurse practitioners and seven other licensed medical professionals" who wrote more than 350,000 illegal prescriptions in Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee and Alabama, according to federal indictments filed in Cincinnati. “That is the equivalent of one opioid dose for every man, woman and child in the five states in the region that we’ve been targeting,” Brian Benczkowski, the assistant attorney general in charge of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, told the Post.
Those indicted in Kentucky, according to the USA Today Network, include:
• Dr. Denver Tackett, who ran a dental clinic in McDowell, is accused of prescribing Oxycodone and hydrocodone that were not reasonable for the treatment of a patient's illness or injury. He also is accused of pulling teeth from six patients who had no need for extractions, as well as submitting claims to Medicare and Medicaid for procedures he did not perform.
• Dr. Ijaz Mahmood, who operates a clinic in Elizabethtown, charged with authorizing prescriptions for drugs, including controlled substances, through presigned, blank prescriptions and directing employees, including some who weren't licensed to practice medicine, to perform medical services on patients. Mahmood told a Courier Journal reporter that he didn't want to discuss the charges.
• Dr. Scotty Akers and Serissa L. Collier, who also used the last name Stamper, are charged in an indictment with distributing the opioids hydrocodone, oxycodone and fentanyl between August 2016 and May 2018. Both are from Pikeville.
• Dr. Mohammed A.H. Mazumder of Prestonsburg, who owned Appalachian Primary Care, is charged with telling his employees, who were not doctors, to receive patients at the clinic when he was not there. The indictment says a medical technician evaluated patients, then two receptionists called pharmacies with prescription orders for opioids and other controlled substances under Mazumder’s name. The clinic then submitted claims to Medicare and Medicaid as if Mazumder had examined the patients and ordered the prescriptions.
• Dr. Sai P. Gutti, who has offices in Pikeville, Harold, Paintsville, Whitesburg and Belfry and also saw patients in Frankfort and other Kentucky towns, is accused of eight counts of health-care fraud by ordering medically unnecessary drug tests for Medicare and Medicaid patients.
• Gary Green of Louisville is accused of failing to inform the Drug Enforcement Administration when he transferred and stored controlled substances in the offices of Guaranteed Total Construction, for which he acted as a registered agent; of furnishing false and fraudulent information in, and omitting material information from documents required to be made, kept, and filed.
The indictments merited a statement from Attorney General William Barr: “The opioid epidemic is the deadliest drug crisis in American history, and Appalachia has suffered the consequences more than perhaps any other region.”
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