Pubdate: Fri, 01 Feb 2002 Source: Redding Record Searchlight (CA) Copyright: 2002 Redding Record Searchlight - E.W. Scripps Contact: http://www.redding.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/360 Author: Kimberly Bolander Related: http://www.asappain.com/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) AGENTS RAID DOCTOR'S OFFICE Redding Physician Suspected Of Illegally Prescribing Drug Drug agents raided a Redding doctor's clinic for evidence he illegally treated drug addicts and may be investigating whether his practice contributed to five deaths. J. Gregory White, 54, opened Shasta Immediate Care more than a year ago. The medical doctor of 26 years specializes in pain treatment using methadone, he said at his office Thursday. Shasta Interagency Narcotics Task Force (SINTF) agents served a search warrant on White's Rosaline Avenue business Wednesday, combing it for 12 hours and seizing 62 bottles of methadone tablets, White's prescription slips and more than 100 patients' files, Cmdr. Ed Pecis said. White said law enforcement agents think his prescriptions killed five people. "They want to send me to jail for murder," he said. Pecis would not confirm whether White is suspected for any patient's death. One patient died days after White upped her daily methadone dose from 40 to 50 milligrams, to further alleviate her pain, White said. Two other patients, one a man about 70, overdosed on street drugs, not White's prescribed methadone, White said. He doesn't remember treating the remaining two, or if they were even his patients. Drug agents originally obtained a search warrant for nine patients' files, but got a second warrant Wednesday for all White's files after their initial search that morning, Pecis said. They also searched White's home, next door to the clinic. He described SINTF agents as a "Nazi squad" who surrounded his house with guns drawn, pointing one in his face when they surprised him and he shut the door. "They treated me as if I was running a meth lab," he said. Pecis said officers must protect themselves when entering a home. They can't give suspects a chance to arm themselves, he said. "Just because he's a doctor doesn't mean he doesn't have guns or a violent record," Pecis said. Agents found no guns, nor any evidence of illegal street drugs, Pecis said. White was not arrested and no charges were filed against him Thursday. However, the commander expects allegations will be filed at some point, he said. Methadone is a synthetic narcotic that can relieve pain or curb the withdrawals suffered by heroin or opium addiction, White said. Some of his patients happen to suffer from both conditions, he said. "If you're an addict, and you have severe neck pain after three surgeries, don't you think you have the right to pain medication?" he asked. Not if White is the physician, Pecis said. White is not licensed to prescribe narcotics to people who are addicted to narcotics, he said. State law requires special certification to treat drug addicts, Pecis said. "You can provide methadone for pain, but if you're going to treat narcotic addiction, you have to be licensed by the state," he said. White said he is only treating pain. But often his patients come to him addicted to pain medicines prescribed by previous doctors, he said. Methadone reduces their pain while saving them from drug withdrawals. It doesn't get them high, he said. It's the stigma of methadone law enforcers know, not the drug's benefits, he said. "You have people that don't understand something and they don't want to understand it," he said. White's clients pick up methadone tablets once a week, and are told to consume the drug about every other day, White said. For those with dependency problems, he mandates they attend two 12- step meetings a week at his office and undergo frequent drug tests. "I'm doing the best I can with what I have to work with," he said. Without his prescriptions, White expects his patients will suffer withdrawals and end up in hospital emergency rooms, he said. Many of his clients are strictly pain cases, White said. He has sent at least two people to Sacramento for help, he said. "I couldn't treat them - they didn't have pain. They had addiction," he said. Pecis said drug addicts take methadone when they can't get heroin or morphine to avoid withdrawal symptoms until their next high. "What the California law has endeavored to do is not allow an addict to supplement one narcotic for another," he said. Most methadone clinics issue the drug in a liquid or wafer form, to ensure patients consume it immediately, Pecis said. Some clinics send patients home with a three-or seven-day amount, but the majority receive it on a daily basis, he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake