Pubdate: Thu, 09 Dec 2004 Source: Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA) Copyright: 2004 Richmond Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.timesdispatch.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/365 Author: Paul Bradley N.VA. JURY SET TO GET PAINKILLER CASE ALEXANDRIA - A federal jury was asked yesterday to decide between two widely disparate descriptions of a prominent Northern Virginia doctor accused of fueling a black market in potent prescription drugs. Did Dr. William E. Hurwitz, as prosecutors alleged in closing arguments, look the other way when he learned some of his patients were selling and abusing the medications he prescribed for them? Or, as defense lawyers contended, is Hurwitz a caring, courageous physician who was duped by a small number of patients enrolled in a practice that helped hundreds of other people deal with their chronic pain? After a six-week trial and hearing from more than 75 witnesses, the jury is to begin deliberations this morning on a 62-count indictment against Hurwitz. If convicted of the most serious charges, the McLean doctor could be sentenced to life in prison. The charges against Hurwitz stem from a two-year federal investigation into doctors, pharmacists and patients who allegedly marketed in potent prescription drugs, primarily OxyContin, a widely abused and highly addictive painkiller. Assistant U.S. Attorney Gene Rossi said Hurwitz was a reckless doctor whose therapies hooked some of his patients on drugs and resulted in the deaths of at least two of them. "The defendant was a key factor in making [patients] addicts, sellers and diverters," he said. "He gave them the keys to their own destruction." Rossi added: "The defendant's pain practice was out of control. For many patients, the defendant ran a pill mill." Rossi said Hurwitz repeatedly ignored "red flags and loud gongs" - signs that his patients were abusing illicit drugs, such as the appearance of needle tracks on their arms. Rossi said Hurwitz was indifferent upon learning that some patients had been arrested on drug charges. Hurwitz, who earned a reputation as an unconventional pioneer in the use of potent drugs to combat chronic pain, has run afoul of authorities before. He has been disciplined by medical boards in Virginia and the District of Columbia for improperly treating pain patients. Hurwitz has acknowledged that he prescribed massive amounts of painkillers to some patients, but insisted he always did so for sound medical reasons. Defense lawyer Patrick Hallinan said any mistakes Hurwitz has made should be handled by those civil boards, rather than in criminal court. "What this case is about is the question of who sets the medical standards for people in this country," he said. "Is it the clinicians, or is it law enforcement?" Hallinan said Hurwitz fell victim to his own conviction that all patients with chronic pain are entitled to treatment, even those who have had brushes with the law or have drug problems. A small number of patients abused the doctor's trust by selling or abusing legitimate prescriptions, Hallinan said. They later were enlisted as informants by the Drug Enforcement Administration as it investigated Hurwitz, he added. Hurwitz "gave these people a credibility they didn't deserve," Hallinan said. "His belief in his ethical duty was the key to the door to these predators, these thieves. Dr. Hurwitz, unfortunately, was the perfect mark for these people." "He never wrote a prescription that he didn't believe was going to be used by that patient to relieve his pain," Hallinan said. Rossi, noting that Hurwitz has medical and law degrees while most of his patients never went to college, implored the jury to reject defense assertions that Hurwitz was duped. "This defendant has a mind like a steel trap," he said. Hurwitz treated about 300 patients from across the country from the late 1990s to 2002, receiving a $1,000 initiation fee and monthly fees of up to $250 for each patient enrolled in the practice. Much of the evidence presented at his trial came from former patients who struck plea deals and testified against him. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth