Pubdate: Wed, 29 Jan 2003 Source: Florence Morning News, The (SC) Copyright: 2003 Media General, Inc. Contact: http://www.morningnewsonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1525 Author: Traci Bridges, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) FORMER PATIENTS TESTIFY IN DRUG CASE FLORENCE -- A former patient of the Comprehensive Care and Pain Management Center in North Myrtle Beach testified in federal court Wednesday that one of the three former clinic doctors on trial for illegal drug distribution, health care fraud and money laundering prescribed OxyContin to his fiancee when she was six months pregnant. Gerald Gantt is one of several former clinic patients who have testified in the ongoing trial of Drs. Ricardo Alerre, Deborah Bordeaux and Michael Jackson. Gantt said although he was never treated by Alerre, his fiancee was. He said despite the fact that she was six months pregnant, Alerre prescribed the powerful narcotic OxyContin. "She went to the clinic to get pain medicine," Gantt said. "He (Alerre) said he was a little concerned about prescribing Oxy-Contin to someone in her condition, but he ended up doing it, just cutting the quantity from 60 to 90." Gantt, who is serving a prison sentence for conspiracy to possess and distribute Oxycodone in connection with the case, said he began driving from his home in Lancaster to Myrtle Beach on a regular basis in 1996 to obtain narcotics from the clinic. "I had heard there was a clinic in Myrtle Beach that gave out large amounts of drugs, so I decided I would make an appointment with the clinic to get some of those narcotics," he said. Gantt said on his first visit, he was seen by Dr. D. Michael Woodward, the former owner of the clinic who already pleaded guilty to lesser charges in connection with the case. He said he told Woodward he'd been in a car accident and was having back pain. He said Woodward gave him "basically no physical examination" before writing him a prescription for 84 tablets of the painkilling narcotic Loricet. "I had asked him for another painkiller, Tylox, but he prescribed the Loricet instead," Gantt said. "He said if the Loricets weren't doing no good to come back the next day, and he'd prescribe the Tylox." Gantt said he did just that. During the visit, Gantt said he and Woodward had a strange conversation. "He told me, 'Don't let this prescription get you in trouble,'" Gantt said. "I asked him what he meant, and he said, 'If you were to lose this or it was to get stolen, I'd need a police report to prove that before I could write you another." Gantt, a drug abuser for about 30 years by then, said he re-turned to Lancaster, filed a false police report indicating the drugs had been stolen, then returned to the clinic to get another. Over the next year or so, Gantt said he began referring other drug users from Lancaster to the clinic and even driving them there in exchange for half of whatever painkillers they were prescribed. Gantt eventually was terminated from the clinic after the staff counselor found out he was trying to buy prescriptions from other people in the waiting room and seeing other physicians between clinic visits to get more narcotics. However, a few years later, Gantt said he returned to the clinic and was seen by Bordeaux without any questions. Again, he said he had been injured in a car wreck and was suffering from chronic pain. "That was my typical line -- the car wreck that never happened," Gantt said. Though she did not physically examine him and spoke with him for less than five minutes, Gantt said Bordeaux wrote him another prescription for the narcotic painkiller Norco. On cross-examination, Gantt admitted he had obtained prescriptions for powerful narcotic painkillers from other physicians outside the clinic. However, he said those doctors did not continue to prescribe him drugs. "Occasionally, I'd get a few pills here and there from other places, but they all figured me out pretty quick," he said. "That's why I had to keep going back to Myrtle Beach." Another former patient, Kevin Larimore, testified Wednesday that he was prescribed large amounts of OxyContin with little to no physical examination. He said he then turned around and sold the drugs on the street for anywhere between $10 and $75 on the street. Testimony in the trial will resume at 10 a.m. today at the McMillan Federal Building in Florence. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager