Pubdate: Thu, 15 Jul 2004 Source: Sun News (Myrtle Beach, SC) Copyright: 2004 Sun Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/mld/sunnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/987 Note: apparent 150 word limit on LTEs Author: Kenneth A. Gailliard, The Sun News Oxycontin Case 3 DOCTORS FIGHT JAIL TIME AMID APPEALS FLORENCE - Three former doctors from the defunct Comprehensive Care and Pain Management Center in Myrtle Beach should remain free on bond because they may have been convicted and sentenced improperly, their lawyers said Wednesday. "That's not a technicality," said attorney Eli D. Stutsman, who has appealed the convictions based on the legal standard used. "That is huge." The doctors' lawyers also plan to appeal their sentences based on a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision regarding information juries should consider before sentencing, Stutsman said. Lawyers want the doctors free while the appeals are pending. Federal Magistrate Judge Thomas E. Rogers was expected to decide Wednesday whether doctors Deborah Bordeaux, Ricardo Alerre and Michael Jackson should begin serving the prison sentences they received in February. Instead, Rogers allowed defense lawyers and prosecutors time to research the Supreme Court ruling, which could lead to reduced sentences for the doctors. The three have orders to report to prison within a month, but it is not likely they will report before the next hearing before Rogers is scheduled, said Assistant U.S. Attorney Bill Day. Jackson, Alerre and Bor-deaux are among seven doctors sentenced in what prosecutors said was their largest case involving doctors charged with overprescribing narcotics, including the potent painkiller OxyContin. On Wednesday, Stutsman said appeals have been filed asserting that prosecutors convicted the doctors with a case based about 70 percent on whether the drugs prescribed at the pain clinic were medically necessary. He said prosecutors stressed throughout the trial that the drugs distributed were not medically necessary, instead of saying the drugs were prescribed outside normal medical practice. Stutsman told Rogers that, by arguing medical necessity, prosecutors used a civil standard in a criminal case, which was improper. The civil standard could be used to prove negligence but not a criminal violation, he said. Day said prosecutors used the correct standard by proving the doctors acted outside their the course of their professional practice. "You would expect a doctor to examine a patient before prescribing drugs," he said. "And I would think they would ask if they took all the medicine from the month before before prescribing more." Stutsman said lawyers also will challenge the doctors' sentences citing a Supreme Court decision last month - Blakely v. Washington. A judge cannot set a sentence using information a jury did not consider, according to the Blakely ruling, Stutsman said. Bordeaux, Jackson and Alerre's sentences were improperly tied to the total amount of narcotics distributed at the clinic and not the quantity each prescribed. Bordeaux, for example, was specifically charged with writing four prescriptions to two patients but was assigned a share of responsibility for the entire amount of drugs prescribed at the clinic. Day said although the indictment didn't link doctors to specific quantities of drugs, jurors heard during trial about specific prescriptions each was accused of writing. An appellate court must decide both issues. Stutsman said it could take as long as 15 months for the appeal to be heard. Jackson, Alerre and Bordeaux received sentences of 24 years and four months, 19 years and seven months, and eight years and one month, respectively. The clinic's owner, Michael Woodward, pleaded guilty in exchange for lighter sentences. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D