Pubdate: Thu, 27 Jun 2002 Source: Charlotte Observer (NC) Copyright: 2002 The Charlotte Observer Contact: http://www.charlotte.com/mld/observer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/78 Author: Cristina C. Breen Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?186 (Oxycontin) 32 CHARGED WITH SALE OF CARDS USED TO BUY DRUG TABOR CITY - Clara Graham was hunched over, picking green beans in this eastern N.C. town Wednesday when patrol cars pulled up and officers surrounded, handcuffed and searched her. The charge against her: Police say she twice sold her Medicaid card to dealers of the powerful prescription painkiller OxyContin. "Whose Medicaid card is it supposed to be?" the 45-year-old yelled, then laughed and tossed her head back as an officer searched her pockets. "This is crazy." In a first-of-its-kind raid in North Carolina, Graham was one of 32 Medicaid recipients federal, state and Columbus County authorities searched for during a roundup of people they believe sold their monthly Medicaid cards. Investigators say the card users then fraudulently bought $28,926 in OxyContin at pharmacies. The bust was the latest step in the state's fight against Medicaid fraud and the illegal use of OxyContin. Medicaid cards work much like insurance cards, so people with Medicaid can pay for doctor's appointments and prescriptions. Police said those who sold the cards made between $20 and $200 each. By late afternoon Wednesday, officials had charged 24 suspects with medical assistance recipient fraud. Some gave up easily. One put up a fight, hiding in a closet while officers raided his home, guns drawn. All are scheduled to be arraigned in Columbus County District Court today and could face up to two years in prison if found guilty. Officials say Columbus County -- an agricultural county of 55,000 people about 160 miles east of Charlotte -- has been a target for a Medicaid ring partly because drug dealers know poor people willing to sell their cards. Another factor, they say, is its proximity to South Carolina. Towns on state borders often have worse drug problems because dealers find it easier to evade police in two states. Investigators say many of the cards were used to buy OxyContin in Charlotte and surrounding cities, including Matthews and Indian Trail, leading authorities to believe the ringleaders are from those areas. Officials in the Columbus County social services department started to notice a problem about six months ago, when local pharmacists called them, wondering why so many Medicaid patients were buying OxyContin. Some pharmacists suspected some prescriptions for the drug had been forged. An investigation revealed that those buying the drug had bought the Medicaid cards. For just a $3 copayment, buyers of the Medicaid cards were able in some cases to buy a $670 bottle of OxyContin. The bottle's street value would be as much as $7,200, officials said. Investigators say more busts of this type are likely. "This may really be bigger than what we think. I can't believe that it's (only) here," said Columbus County Sheriff Jimmy Ferguson. "People are trying to figure out a way to get drugs without working the streets." One suspect, Devaugh Prince of Tabor City, said his Medicaid card had been stolen by his friend's father, a man he knew was an OxyContin dealer. Prince, 31, is disabled and said he was surprised when officers arrived at his home shortly after 9:30 a.m. Wednesday. Authorities say Prince's card was used to buy more than $1,000 worth of OxyContin. "I knew it was being used to buy Oxy," Prince said. "I'd told the SBI about it. I didn't know they were going to pop me or nothing." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth