Pubdate: Tue, 05 Aug 2003 Source: Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL) Copyright: 2003 Sun-Sentinel Company Contact: http://www.sun-sentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/159 Author: Nancy McVicar, Health Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) STATE ORDERS 3 BROWARD PHARMACIES ALLEGEDLY INVOLVED IN DRUG SCHEMES TO CLOSE Citing a danger to the public health, state health officials on Monday issued emergency orders to shut down three Broward County pharmacies -- two in Hollywood and one in Plantation -- and to suspend the licenses of a doctor and three pharmacists for allegedly trafficking in prescription painkillers. Two of the pharmacies are owned by Seth Mahler, 50, of Plantation, president of the Broward County Pharmacy Association. His license to practice was suspended by the Florida Department of Health along with that of one of his employees, Jason Villano, 29, of Oakland Park. Mahler and Villano operate the Plantation Chemist Pharmacy, 250 S. University Drive, Plantation, and the United Prescription Center, 4517 Hollywood Blvd., which had their operating permits suspended. The Drug Store Pharmacy, 3397 Sheridan St., also lost its permit to do business, and its owner and operator Julius Seiler, 49, of Coral Springs, had his pharmacy license suspended. The health department also suspended the license of Dr. Theodore Racciatti, 74, an osteopath from North Miami Beach. All four were arrested July 22 on charges of trafficking in prescription painkillers after an investigation by the Broward County Sheriff's Office, the FBI, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, and Hollywood and Plantation police departments. In taking the action Monday, Dr. John Agwunobi, secretary of the Florida Department of Health, said diversion and abuse of prescription painkillers is a major health problem in the state. An investigation last year by the South Florida Sun-Sentinel found almost 400 deaths from prescription narcotics in a seven-county area during 2000 and 2001. A town meeting in Fort Lauderdale last week brought the governor's wife, Columba Bush, law enforcement officials, and the mothers of several young adults who had died from overdoses together to shed light on the problem. According to the emergency suspension orders provided by the state, two confidential informants separately told Plantation police in June that they had been able to purchase prescriptions for a variety of narcotics from Racciatti without any legitimate medical reason. Later that month, one of the informants visited Racciatti's office and obtained prescriptions in exchange for cash while law enforcement officers nearby monitored the conversations electronically, the documents said. On one visit, the informant provided the doctor with $2,000 in cash and nine magnetic resonance imaging reports, MRIs, each in the name of a different fictitious patient so that the doctor could "justify" the prescriptions, which included 300 OxyContins at 80-milligram strength, 300 at 40-milligram strength, and 300 Percocets, according to the suspension order. Both drugs are powerful narcotics and normally, prescriptions are limited. "Dr. Racciatti wrote two additional prescriptions for 100 OxyContin 80 mg for [the confidential informant's] cousins," the documents said. The informant presented OxyContin and Percocet prescriptions to Seiler at the Drug Store Pharmacy July 9 as investigators monitored the transactions, but Seiler rejected the Percocet transaction as "unprofitable," according to the documents. He filled the OxyContin prescriptions even though he was "aware from his past dealings with [the informant] that the nine prescriptions were fraudulent," the documents said. A confidential informant also visited the Plantation Chemist in late June and was able to purchase 300 OxyContin from Villano for $3,000 without providing any prescriptions, and then asked to buy 1,000 more in a conversation that was electronically monitored by investigators, according to the documents. Villano agreed to arrange a meeting between the informant and Mahler, and Mahler sold the 1,000 OxyContin tablets without a prescription, accepting $1,000 on the spot, with the informant promising to pay the rest, $5,500, to Villano on a later date, according to the documents. On another occasion, also monitored electronically, Villano sold 27.5 grams of OxyContin and 129.5 grams of alprazolam, the generic for Xanax, an anti-anxiety drug, to the undercover informant, the documents said. None of the men whose licenses were suspended could be reached for comment, but Alan Katz, executive director of the Broward County Pharmacy Association, said he was surprised to learn that the pharmacists did not get a hearing before the action was taken. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk