Pubdate: Thu, 17 Apr 2003 Source: Standard-Times (MA) Copyright: 2003 The Standard-Times Contact: http://www.s-t.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/422 Author: John Doherty, Standard-Times staff writer EX-PRISON GUARD ACCUSED OF RUNNING DRUG RING New Bedford - Boston - A former prison guard and accused drug dealer who liked to flaunt his ties to local police and prosecutors was arrested by federal agents yesterday and charged with running a ring that used phony prescriptions to obtain the powerful prescription narcotic OxyContin. Peter Medeiros, 36, of Oakley Street, New Bedford, was arrested with five other city residents yesterday and arraigned in Boston's federal court. A seventh man, Myron Pina, was indicted yesterday but not arrested. He is considered a fugitive, the U.S. attorney's office said yesterday. Mr. Medeiros, who had been out on bail following an arrest by state police and local detectives in July for cocaine trafficking, was held in federal custody yesterday pending a bail hearing Monday. Mr. Medeiros is a former Norfolk County correctional officer whom local police sources describe as a well-groomed, upper-level drug dealer whose clientele was more professional class than street level. "He's a pretty boy," said one investigator yesterday. "His hair was always perfect, he always had a tan, well-dressed." He tried to cultivate friendly relations with the detectives and prosecutors who had set their sights on him in recent years -- waving hello to police surveillance units trailing him, hanging out in cop bars and at political fund-raisers and chatting up local investigators during his workouts at the local YMCA. The image hasn't helped Mr. Medeiros stay out of court, though. Yesterday's arrest was his second serious charge in less than a year. Yesterday, a federal indictment was unsealed alleging Mr. Medeiros, his wife and five others forged prescriptions for OxyContin -- a powerful painkiller preferred by many heroin addicts -- at least 40 times in 2001, then re-sold the drug. Mr. Medeiros was still employed as a correctional officer during that time. He went out on disability and was terminated after his arrest in July. Mr. Medeiros also was charged with three federal counts of cocaine distribution. State police, New Bedford detectives and agents from the Drug Enforcement Administration office in New Bedford and Worcester rounded up the suspects yesterday morning. Arrested yesterday were: Joyce C. Medeiros, 29, Mr. Medeiros' wife; Stephen Lopes, 63, of Purchase Street, a former electrician who is charged with passing a forged prescription at least 10 times during 2001; Douglas Lopes, 53, of Cottage Street, a former fourth-grade teacher in Boston, the brother of Stephen Lopes, and Mr. Gay Massachusetts; he is charged with health-care fraud for billing his insurance company for the drug OxyContin and passing forged prescriptions at least six times. Justin Lopes, 40, of Pleasant Street, charged with passing a fake prescription seven times. As of last night, it was unclear what his familial relationship to the two other Lopes men was. Myron Pina, 34, whose listed address is City Councilor Joseph P. Fortes' two-family Pleasant Street home. Mr. Pina is charged with passing forged prescriptions at least three times, and billing his insurance company for it. Nicole Lopes, 31, of Venus Drive, charged with passing a forged prescription at least three times and with illegally billing her insurance company for the drug. All the defendants face federal charges of conspiracy to possess and distribute OxyContin, which carry a maximum 20-year prison sentence and $1 million fine. All but Mr. Medeiros were granted bail by Magistrate Judge Robert B. Collings. He faces an additional 20-year prison sentence on the federal cocaine charges, in addition to the state cocaine case. Prosecutor John Farley of the U.S. Attorney's Public Corruption Unit is handling the case, but gave no further details about the investigation yesterday. Area law enforcement sources say yesterday's indictment was the second run at Mr. Medeiros by federal authorities in the past year. After the first federal investigation unraveled, members of the Bristol Task Force, assigned to District Attorney Paul F. Walsh Jr.'s office, did their own investigation of Mr. Medeiros' alleged cocaine-dealing activities and arrested him following a car chase in July. When detectives searched his home last July, they found cocaine, marijuana and keys to bank boxes with more than $120,000, according to court records. They also found prominently displayed pictures of Mr. Medeiros shaking hands with Mr. Walsh at fund-raisers, police sources said. Mr. Walsh called in a prosecutor from Suffolk County to shepherd the Medeiros case through Superior Court and avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest, Gerald FitzGerald, spokesman for Mr. Walsh, said yesterday. Mr. Medeiros made campaign contributions totaling a few hundred dollars in recent years, according to Mr. FitzGerald, and has no personal ties to the county's top prosecutor. "If you wanted another picture, you could have had a photographer get one of him in court, in the dock and in cuffs last year," said Mr. FitzGerald. "The decision to target this guy was made right here, in this office." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek