Pubdate: Fri, 05 Aug 2005 Source: Gainesville Sun, The (FL) Copyright: 2005 The Gainesville Sun Contact: http://www.sunone.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/163 Author: The Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) SCHOOL WORKERS ARRESTED ON DRUG DISTRIBUTION CHARGES MIAMI - Days before schools open, federal agents Thursday arrested 29 people, including school bus drivers, bus attendants and other school employees, on charges of operating a distribution ring for the powerful painkiller OxyContin. Although no teachers were involved and no evidence has surfaced of drug sales to children, U.S. Attorney R. Alexander Acosta told reporters that the employees occupied positions of trust in schools and needed to be removed from contact with students before Miami-Dade County schools open Monday. "That is something that we here in Miami cannot tolerate in our public school employees," Acosta said. "We felt it prudent and necessary to take action with the information we already had." Of those charged in an 84-count federal grand jury indictment unsealed Thursday, five are school bus drivers, 13 are school bus attendants and one is a former school bus driver now driving a city bus. Two school custodians, a cook and a cashier were also charged, along with a Miami doctor and five other people. Miami-Dade schools spokesman Joseph Garcia said all of the employees would be either placed on paid leave or given assignments that do not include contact with students while the charges against them are resolved. They will be fired if convicted, he said. "These employees have hurt kids by feeding a culture of drug abuse and by betraying a trust we've placed in them to teach right from wrong," Garcia said. OxyContin is legal if prescribed by a physician for treatment of severe, chronic pain. But it has become an increasing problem on the black market because crushing the time-release tablets and snorting or injecting the powder yields an immediate, heroin-like high. Hundreds of deaths are blamed each year on overdoses. According to the indictment, three of the people charged recruited the school employees to use their United Healthcare insurance cards to obtain thousands of OxyContin tablets using more than 100 forged or fraudulent prescriptions. The physician named in the case, Dr. Ronald E. Harris of Miami, was also charged in March 2004 by state prosecutors with illegally selling OxyContin prescriptions to Florida Medicaid recipients, costing the program more than $694,000 in 2003 and 2004. According to the state attorney general's office, Harris was the top prescriber of OxyContin to Medicaid recipients in the entire state in 2004. Once their prescriptions were filled, the Miami-Dade school employees sold them to a middleman, who in turn sold them to a street dealer. The tablets can bring as much as $80 each, officials said. Mark Trouville, special agent in charge of the Miami office of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, said the conspiracy began in January 2003 and involved more than 50 pharmacies in Miami-Dade and Broward counties. Trouville said more arrests are likely. "We felt the time was right now to take this part of the operation down," Trouville said. Those charged in the indictment case face up to 20 years in prison and a $1 million fine for each count of possession of OxyContin with intent to distribute, as well as additional prison time and fines for alleged fraud , prosecutors said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth