Pubdate: Sun, 08 Aug 2004 Source: Redding Record Searchlight (CA) Copyright: 2004 Record Searchlight - The E.W. Scripps Co. Contact: http://www.redding.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/360 Author: Maline Hazle Series: Other articles in this series may be found at http://www.mapinc.org/source/Redding+Record+Searchlight Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?232 (Chronic Pain) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) STATE OFFICIAL SAYS PROSECUTION WAS THE RIGHT THING TO DO Frank Fisher says he knew his prescription practices had attracted law enforcement's attention the day a purported Medi-Cal patient came to his Westwood Walk-in Clinic and asked for a Vicodin prescription. "I said, 'What's wrong with you?' and he said, 'Nothing,'" Fisher recalled. "I threw the door to my office open and said, 'You need to leave.'" That was in the summer of 1996. Fisher billed Medi-Cal for the visit, a bill that later became part of the original fraud charges filed against him in 1997. "They initially came after me in 1996 just because poor people were getting some kind of pain treatment," Fisher said. "That's enough to get you on the radar." Collin Wong, director of the state Bureau of Medicare Fraud and Elder Abuse, said the investigation was a "garden-variety fraud case" that stemmed from two complaints from business owners and law enforcement that Fisher was prescribing medication for patients without a good-faith medical examination. Then came a series of overdose deaths involving OxyContin, the brand name for oxycodone, a sustained release opioid prescribed for chronic pain. The drug first went on the market in 1995, the same year Fisher says he started "treating pain appropriately" with opioids and other drugs. "I had been ignoring people's pain and denigrating them for it," he said. "Subconsciously or not, I had been shirking my duties as a doctor." Fisher said his treatment and the high dosages he eventually prescribed for some patients were completely within the limits of the law. He "titrated" patients, or worked with them to find what effectively killed their pain while allowing them to function. Data from the federal Drug Enforcement Administration, which tracks opioid prescriptions, showed that in 1998 the Miller's Shasta Pharmacy filled prescriptions for 14,336 grams of OxyContin, mostly prescribed by Fisher, Wong said. Those high doses and the sheer volume of OxyContin prescriptions were "red flags" to Medi-Cal investigators who looked at deaths in Shasta County in which OxyContin was found in the bodies' systems and found they had one thing in common, Wong said. In each of the deaths, the prescription had been written by Fisher and filled at the Redding pharmacy owned by Stephen and Madeline Miller. State investigators took a look at Drug Enforcement Administration data collected on all opioid prescriptions and became even more suspicious when they learned that the pharmacy's Medi-Cal billings had quadrupled over a short period of time and that in 1998 Stephen Miller was the second-largest purchaser of OxyContin in the nation, Wong said. Prosecutors described Fisher as a "Dr. Feelgood" who ran a "pill mill." Fisher said what investigators failed to understand -- or ignored -- was that pain can be safely treated with seemingly large opiate doses, given proper titration and acquired tolerance. Fisher's attorney, Patrick Hallinan of San Francisco, contended the state's case boiled down to money. OxyContin is expensive, sometimes costing $7 a pill as opposed to about 8 cents for a comparable dose of methadone, according to testimony at Stephen Miller's recent pharmacy board hearing. "There isn't any question about it," Hallinan said. "It was costing Medi-Cal too much money. He was treating poor people with rich people's drugs," Hallinan said. "They realized Medi-Cal fraud wasn't going to get them anywhere, so they came up with the big guns," the murder charges. Hallinan, Fisher and the Millers also allege that the state was so desperate for a conviction, investigators and prosecutors skirted rules and intimidated witnesses, all to help build their case. "Whenever one of Frank's patients was in jail, they were there the next day" pushing for statements against Fisher and the Millers, Hallinan said. Former Fisher patient Toni Briano, 40, and her boyfriend, D.J. Black, 41, both of Red Bluff, contend that after Fisher's arrest two investigators turned off their tape recorder and threatened to cut off their Medi-Cal benefits if they didn't "help take him (Fisher) down." Wong bristles at the charge. He was named to his position in 1999, he said, and since then has presided over some 700 investigations. "Since then, I can uncategorically (sic) state that these alleged strong-arm tactics have never been used by this office," he said. Wong maintained that the case was strong and shocking. Medical experts told prosecutors that the level of Fisher's prescriptions "lacked sound medical basis and constituted patient abuse," he said. "When they say that, we have to act," adding that it's his office's mission to protect the $32 billion Medi-Cal program ... not only to protect the system and the money, but also to protect poor, disabled patients." The five murder charges filed against Fisher and the Millers, which included one overdose on stolen drugs and a truck-crash death, were "fruit of the poisoned tree," and demanded prosecution, he contended. The five murder charges were reduced to three manslaughter counts after the preliminary hearing and were dropped entirely for Madeline Miller. Shasta County Superior Court Judge Bradley Boeckman, weary of years of delays, threw the case out entirely in 2003 after a new team of prosecutors asked for another postponement. Prosecutors said they would refile the charges, but changed their minds after consulting anew with medical experts, Wong said. They learned there had been "a dramatic shift" in medical science regarding the use of OxyContin in the treatment of chronic, intractable pain. Standard treatment had veered to allow larger doses of the drug. The shifting opinion was enough to leave jurors with reasonable doubt about Fisher's culpability, Wong said. He defends the original decision to prosecute Fisher and the Millers by paraphrasing one expert who testified five years ago that he would not expect to see the amount of OxyContin Fisher prescribed in Redding unless there was a nuclear explosion. "When they say nuclear explosion, we have to respond," Wong said. "When they say the state of science has changed, we have to listen." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake