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“Operation Juice Doctor 2” targets Florida pill mills.

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  • “Operation Juice Doctor 2” targets Florida pill mills.

    Thirteen individuals, including five doctors, one pharmacist and one chiropractor, were charged today for their participation in the illegal distribution of pain killers, steroids and human growth hormones through “pill mills” operating in Broward, Palm Beach and Martin Counties in Florida, and through the internet, respectively. The charges in this case, dubbed “Operation Juice Doctor 2,” involve a wide-ranging scheme to illegally distribute these drugs nationwide.

    The indictment, filed August 31, 2011, and unsealed today, was announced by Tony West, Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Division of the Department of Justice; Wifredo A. Ferrer, United States Attorney for the Southern District of Florida; and Mark R. Trouville, Special Agent in Charge, Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) Miami Field Division.

    “According to the indictment unsealed today, these defendants were involved in a scheme to push dangerous drugs -- steroids, human growth hormone and oxycodone -- into the hands of buyers who lacked legitimate prescriptions,” said Tony West, Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Division of the Department of Justice. “Sadly, the defendants include physicians who, we allege, were doctors doing harm: ignoring their oaths and obligation to put the health and safety of patients first.”

    United States Attorney Ferrer stated, “Operation Pill Nation, Operation Snake Oil, Operation Oxy Alley, and now Operation Juice Doctor 2. In a span of just six months, we have attacked from every angle what can only be described as a homegrown prescription drug epidemic. In Operation Juice Doctor2, we have charged corrupt pharmacy and clinic owners, complicit doctors and employees, all of whom made a handsome living dealing in prescription drugs, while hiding behind a medical license. Working with our federal and local partners, we are shutting down these dangerous pill mills and internet pharmacy operations.”

    DEA Special Agent in Charge Trouville added, “Today’s announcement reflects the Drug Enforcement Administration’s continued efforts to take the profit out of the illegal diversion of pharmaceutical drugs. Furthermore, we are sending the message once again to those that are still profiting and those who are considering entering this business, that we remain vigilant and aggressively pursue those conducting business outside the course of accepted medical practice.”

    The 42-count indictment charges the defendants with numerous crimes, including conspiracy to distribute anabolic steroids (count 1); distribution of anabolic steroids (counts 2 through 21); conspiracy to distribute oxycodone (count 22); distribution of oxycodone (counts 23 through 25); conspiracy to distribute human growth hormone (count 26); distribution of human growth hormone (counts 27 through 41); and attempted importation of anabolic steroids (count 42).

    Charged in the indictment are Peter DelToro, Pharm.D ., 38, of Palm City, Fla.; Richard DelToro, 60, of Port St. Lucie, Fla.; Jaclyn Rubino, 31, of Stuart, Fla.; Pedro Carrillo, M.D ., 52, of Escondido, Calif.; Jeffrey Perelman, M.D ., 54, of Fort Lauderdale, Fla; Paul Joyce, 49, of Palm Beach Gardens, Fla.; Charles Cook, 50, of Palm Beach Gardens; Donald Montano, 74, of Jupiter, Fla.; Kevin Johnson, 41, of Jupiter; Craig Beaver, D.C ., 47, of Lake Worth, Fla.; Alan Lefkin, M.D ., 53, of Parkland, Fla.; Steven Pearlstein, M.D ., 56, of Coral Springs, Fla.; and Timothy Sigman, M.D ., 40, of Sebastian, Fla.

    According to the indictment, Peter DelToro, Richard DelToro and Jaclyn Rubino operated Treasure Coast Specialty Pharmacy, in Jensen Beach, Fla ., and distributed steroids, human growth hormone and oxycodone to individuals and clinics across the nation and abroad. Other defendants named in the indictment allegedly operated various clinics, including “anti-aging,” “hormone replacement therapy” and “pain management” clinics. The indictment alleges that the clinics employed physicians who signed prescriptions that were written by clinic operators and salespeople. The indictment further alleges that the prescriptions were issued without a physical examination of the patient, outside the usual course of professional medical practice, and not for a legitimate medical need. The prescriptions were for controlled substances and human growth hormone for unapproved uses.

    The indictment also alleges that the clinics forwarded the prescriptions to Treasure Coast Specialty Pharmacy in Jensen Beach for filing and shipment directly to customers and, at times, to the clinics. According to the indictment, the pharmacy owner illegally attempted to import steroids, of the same type used to fill the clinics’ prescriptions, from China.

    Researchers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report that Schedule II prescription painkillers, like oxycodone, today cause more drug overdose deaths than cocaine and heroin combined. Oxycodone and other Schedule II drugs have a high potential for abuse and can be crushed and snorted, or dissolved and injected, to get an immediate high. This abuse can lead to addiction, overdose, and sometimes death.

    If convicted, the defendants face a statutory maximum penalty of 10 years in prison on counts 1, 7, 8, 10-14, 17-21 and 42; five years on counts 2-6, 9, 15, 16, and 26-41; and 20 years on count 22 through 25.

    Today’s case is the result of the ongoing efforts of the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF), a partnership between federal, state and local law enforcement agencies. The OCDETF mission is to identify, investigate and prosecute high-level members of drug trafficking enterprises, bringing together the combined expertise and unique abilities of federal, state and local law enforcement.

    The case was investigated by the DEA with assistance from the Food and Drug Administration’s Office of Criminal Investigations and the Boca Raton Police Department. The case is being prosecuted by Trial Attorney Cindy Cho of the Civil Division’s Consumer Protection Branch and Assistant United States Attorney Ellen L. Cohen.

    An indictment is only an accusation and the defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty.

  • #2
    Internal medicine specialist Dr. Timothy Sigman used a Sebastian clinic he owned to push steroid and human growth hormone prescriptions, and the vice president of recently shut-down Treasure Coast Pharmacy in Jensen Beach helped run the business and fill prescriptions through the pharmacy, according to new indictment documents.

    Sigman, 40, of the 6000 block of 110th Street in Sebastian, was arrested Thursday along with Treasure Coast Pharmacy owner Peter Del Toro, his father and pharmacy vice president Richard Del Toro and pharmacy employee Jaclyn Rubino. Nine others also were taken into custody, including doctors, businesspeople and a chiropractor, according to the indictment.
    The four Treasure Coast stakeholders were taken to Palm Beach County Jail, and the group of 13 faces various a 42-count indictment for attempting to distribute and actually distributing steroids, HGH and pain pills like oxycodone. Sigman, who works out of 1515 U.S. 1 in Sebastian, only faces charges for steroid and HGH distribution, according to the indictment. The 42-count indictment states the arrested parties could face a maximum of 20 years in prison.

    Up until September 2010, Richard Del Toro, 60, of Port St. Lucie, helped manage Sebastian-based Health Transformations, a clinic owned and operated by Sigman at his home address, Department of State records show. The business dropped Richard Del Toro and added Sigman's wife, Elizabeth L. Sigman, as its registered agent last September, the records show.

    Sigman employed medical professionals and salespeople, including the receptionist and office manager, to approve drug orders for steroids, HGH and other prescription drugs, the indictment said.

    Customers paid Health Transformations for body-building, anti-aging and performance-enhancing drugs; the clinic sent Treasure Coast Pharmacy the order, and the pharmacy usually shipped the drugs right to its customers, according to the indictment.

    Health Transformations cut checks to Richard Del Toro and Pharmville Consulting, a corporation of which Peter Del Toro, 38, of Palm City, is president, the indictment states.

    DEA agents seized boxes of medical records from Treasure Coast Pharmacy during a late June raid. The agency hours later stripped the pharmacy's license to distribute controlled substances, and the state Department of Health ordered the pharmacy closed and suspended Peter Del Toro's pharmacist license.

    Treasure Coast Pharmacy dispensed almost 11,000 steroid and human-growth hormone orders and 3,700 other addictive prescriptions, such as oxycodone, from October 2010 to March 31, according to a Department of Health emergency suspension order.

    Doctors received the prescription orders, which were largely placed online, and signed off without in-person patient exams or regard for the orders' quantities or dosages, according to the order.

    Peter Del Toro filled more than 84 percent of those prescriptions, according to the order, after 57 physicians — including 30 in Florida — signed off on them.

    The drugs were shipped nationwide and internationally to locations like Finland, Guam and the Virgin Islands, according to the order.

    The Department of Health still lists Sigman's doctor license as clear and active. He's board-certified in internal medicine, graduated from the American University of the Caribbean and completed a residency in Memphis, Tenn.

    Sigman also has staff privileges at Indian River Medical Center and Sebastian River Medical Center, according to Department of Health records.

    Department of Health spokeswoman Jennifer Hirst said the department has not yet decided if it plans to suspend Sigman's license.

    It's not immediately clear if the arrest will affect his practice's operations.

    Comment


    • #3
      I've read that 85% of prescription meds prescribed via pill mills come from Florida. Take that NJ, lol.

      Comment


      • #4
        I have used Treasure Coast test cyp... damn shame, that is some good stuff.

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