Pubdate: Sat, 06 Oct 2001 Source: Charleston Gazette (WV) Copyright: 2001 Charleston Gazette Contact: http://www.wvgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/77 Author: Lawrence Messina PIMP-TURNED-PHONY MD ON WEB RETURNS TO PRISON A one-time pimp has been posing as a doctor on the Internet, illegally selling drugs online, according to allegations filed in U.S. District Court. Louis Nomar claimed to hold a degree from a Beirut, Lebanon, medical school while peddling prescription drugs at New Hope Pharmacy, an online business, Judge Charles H. Haden II was told. "We are licensed to sell prescribed growth hormone and prescribed pharmaceuticals worldwide," the greeting page for New Hope's Web site said. "Our products are for sexual dysfunction, hair loss, arthritis and obesity." The greeting page lists a Charleston street address and telephone number and hawks Viagra, Propecia, Celebrex and Xenical. Other sections of the Web site were not available Friday. Nomar, 50, had promised to obey the law when he was released from prison in May. Haden sent him back to prison Thursday for 15 months, ruling that he had violated the terms of his supervised release. Nomar pleaded guilty in May 1995 to cocaine and weapons charges. Police had found 21 packets of the drug and 34 handguns and other firearms at his Charleston residence after arresting him in the previous month. He was arrested on charges that he served as a pimp for a 16-year-old prostitute who worked out of his business, Annie's Escort Service. The teen-ager told detectives that she worked for Nomar as a $100-an-hour call girl. She said he had recruited her in 1994 outside the former Job Corps center in downtown Charleston, where she was taking classes. County prosecutors dropped the pimping charges against Nomar after he pleaded guilty in federal court. An associate was convicted of serving as the girl's driver to and from motel meetings with clients and sentenced to prison. Haden revoked Nomar's release after hearing evidence that he had been "charging for consultations on the Internet through the use of credit cards and causing various drugs having legitimate medical uses to be illegally dispensed." Nomar listed Moon Tann of West Washington Street as his place of business when charged last month. Its address is near that of the one listed for New Hope Pharmacy on the Web site. He reported earning $1,200 in income, according to court papers. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth