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Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 11, 2006
Florida
Physician Sentenced To Life Imprisonment On Drug And Fraud Charges
Arising Out Of Improper Dispensing Of Controlled Substances TALLAHASSEE -- Gregory R. Miller, United States Attorney
for the Northern District of Florida announced that a former Apalachicola
osteopathic physician, Thomas G. Merrill was sentenced to life imprisonment
on 98 counts of wire fraud, health care fraud, and distribution of controlled
substances.
United States District Judge M. Casey Rodgers sentenced Merrill, age
70, to life imprisonment on five counts in which Merrill prescribed quantities
of oxycodone, morphine, and fentanyl that resulted in the deaths of:
- Bridgette Persinger, age 53, in Panama
City on July 10, 2002;
- Leslie Dyer, age 39, in Gulf County on
June 14, 2003;
- Deanna Hayes, age 58, in Franklin
County on July 29, 2003;
- Kenneth Noles, age 38, in Panama City
on August 30, 2003; and
- Katherian Seay, age 47, in Franklin
County on November 3, 2003.
Judge Rodgers also
sentenced Merrill to concurrent twenty, ten, and five year terms of
imprisonment
on the remaining 92 counts. privileges
to dispense highly addictive drugs outside the legitimate practice of
medicine. Judge Rodgers also ordered Merrill to pay a special assessment
of $9,800 to the United States, and ordered that a hearing be conducted
shortly to determine the amount of restitution that the defendant will
have to pay to the State of Florida’s Medicaid program, Tricare,
and BlueCross/BlueShield of Florida.
Following a three week trial in United States District Court in Pensacola
in January of this year, a jury found Merrill guilty of:
1. eighteen counts of wire fraud,
2. five counts of defrauding health care benefit programs, including
two counts that charged that death resulted from the violation.
3. seventy-five counts of dispensing or distributing controlled substances
including oxycodone, commonly known as OxyContin, Percocet, and Percodan;
morphine, commonly known as Kadian or Avinza; hydrocodone, commonly known
as Lorcet, Lortab, and Vicodin; fentanyl, commonly known as Duragesic;
alprazolam,
commonly known as Xanax, and diazepam, commonly known as valium; including
four counts that charged that death resulted from the use of the drugs
distributed by the defendant.
The evidence at trial revealed that MERRILL, a licensed osteopathic
physician practicing at the Magnolia Medical Clinic in Apalachicola,
prescribed excessive and inappropriate quantities of controlled substances
to patients outside the usual course of professional practice, prescribed
quantities and combinations of controlled substances to patients but
failed to monitor the use and abuse of the prescribed controlled substances
by the patients, and prescribed controlled substances in quantities and
dosages that would cause patients to abuse and misuse the controlled
substances.
This successful
prosecution is the result of a joint Federal/State North Florida Health
Care Fraud
Task Force investigation that involved the
Drug Enforcement Administration, the Federal Bureau of Investigation,
the Defense Criminal Investigative Service, the Florida Attorney General’s
Office Medicaid Fraud Unit; the Florida Department of Law Enforcement,
the Florida Department of Financial Services; the Florida Department
of Health, and the Franklin County Sheriff’s Office. United States
Attorney Miller commended the tireless efforts of investigators of the
agencies involved in this complex investigation, and praised the cooperation
of citizens and pharmacists who alerted investigators to excessive prescribing
of highly addictive controlled substances by Merrill. United States Attorney
Miller stated that, "the protection of citizens in the community
from licensed doctors who dispense highly addictive controlled substances
such as OxyContin outside the usual course of professional practice is
a primary concern of health care fraud investigations. The North Florida
Health Care Task Ford will vigorously investigate and identify those
medical practitioners who use their licenses to peddle controlled substances
to abusers and addicts outside the course of standard medical practice.
This conduct, along with the theft of public funds and fraud committed
against the taxpayers and health care benefit programs remains a priority
with the Department of Justice."
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