Pubdate: Sun, 10 Dec 2006
Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL)
Copyright: 2006 St. Petersburg Times
Contact: http://www.sptimes.com/letters/
Website: http://www.sptimes.com/home.shtml
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/419
Author: Kris Hundley, Times researcher Angie Holan contributed to this report.

DID KEN SHOBOLA STEP OVER THE LINE? OR DID THE GOVERNMENT OVERREACH?

Prosecutors Claimed The Tampa Pharmacist Operated A Cyberspace Drug 
Mill. He Said He Did No Wrong, But Surrendered $400,000 In Assets

The Lawsuit

In January 2005, the U.S. Attorney's Office in Tampa sought the 
forfeiture of 18 vehicles and three pieces of property owned by 
Kenneth O. Shobola, a Tampa pharmacist. The government claimed the 
assets were purchased with proceeds from illegal drug transactions. 
Shobola owned several Internet drug sites and four clinics in Tampa 
and Kissimmee. The businesses, which had $7.6-million in sales in 
2004, employed doctors who prescribed mostly hydrocodone, a narcotic 
painkiller, to out-of-state patients.

The Settlement

In October, Shobola forfeited assets with an approximate total value 
of $400,000. They include 15 cars, $15,000 in cash and $55,000 from 
the pending sale of a vacant lot in Tampa. No criminal charges have 
been filed against Shobola, who holds a Florida pharmacist license.

Shobola's Businesses

Web sites: www.medsviaweb.com, www.medsviaweb.net, 
www.modernlifestylesmeds.com, www.netpain.com

Status: Shobola closed these sites voluntarily in November 2004

Clinics: In September 2004, Shobola had three Ken Drugs 
pharmacy/clinics in Tampa and one in Kissimmee

Status: He owns a Ken Drugs Pharmacy/Kenneday Medical Clinic at 4730 
N Habana Ave., Tampa, and another in Kissimmee

Kenneth O. Shobola, a Tampa pharmacist, paid a high price in October 
to get the federal government off his back.

In order to settle a 2-year-old civil forfeiture case, Shobola, 45, 
gave the government 15 vehicles - including a $75,000 BMW - plus 
$15,000 in cash and $55,000 from the sale of a vacant lot in Tampa. 
All told, nearly $400,000 was forfeited.

In making the costly concessions, Shobola did not admit wrongdoing 
for operating four medical clinics and a number of Web sites that 
reaped millions of dollars primarily from the sale of addictive pain 
medications like Vicodin.

Through his attorney, Shobola defended his dispensing practices and 
blasted the lawsuit, which claimed the fleet of cars and three 
properties were bought with proceeds "traceable to illegal drug 
transactions." It was, his lawyer argued in a motion to dismiss the 
complaint, "a classic example of government overreaching."

Regardless, Shobola's case provides a window into how the government 
is struggling to police rapidly proliferating Internet drug sites. 
Garrison Courtney, a spokesman with the Drug Enforcement Agency in 
Washington, D.C., said regulators end up playing the equivalent of a 
"whack-a-mole" game with drug sites that can appear and disappear in 
a matter of minutes.

"We searched on the word 'Oxycontin' about a week ago and came up 
with over 50,000 Web sites," he said. "But by the time law 
enforcement gets to a site, it could be disengaged. And tracking it 
back to the operator is harder than many people think."

According to court documents, Shobola's doctors never saw patients in 
person and seldom reviewed their medical histories before prescribing 
painkillers. So was his Internet business a legitimate medical 
practice or a cyberspace drug mill?

"It's a very complicated area where the law and the 21st century are 
trying to converge," said John Fitzgibbons, a former federal 
prosecutor and Tampa lawyer who was not involved in the Shobola case.

"If you have clearly egregious conduct vs. a Web site that might be 
close to the line, neither the government nor the defendant may be 
willing to bet the ranch on where that line is located."

Dale Sisco, a Tampa lawyer who represented Shobola in the forfeiture 
case, said the settlement was simply a matter of expediency.

"In the long run, it was probably cheaper than the cost of 
litigation," he said, noting that his client voluntarily closed his 
Web sites soon after the government's investigation became public. 
"The settlement was not perfect, but it gave Ken some flexibility."

Shobola, who worked as a pharmacist for Eckerd and Medco Health 
Solutions in Tampa before launching his drug businesses in 2002, 
declined to be interviewed.

Federal officials refused to comment. But the forfeiture complaint in 
U.S. District Court in Tampa details the government's nearly two-year 
investigation of his Internet and retail operations, which did 
business in Tampa and Kissimmee as Ken Drugs and Kenaday Medical Clinic.

Investigators from five agencies conducted 17 undercover buys of 
painkillers from Shobola's Web sites and stores. Authorities gathered 
evidence from customers in Kentucky, Connecticut and West Virginia 
who said they had no problem getting addictive drugs - using an 
assortment of aliases and addresses - from Shobola's operations.

Shobola's doctors told investigators that nearly all their patients 
were out-of-state residents who paid $120 to $125 for a brief phone 
consult, then received the drugs by mail. The doctors said the vast 
majority of prescriptions they wrote were for hydrocodone, popularly 
known as Vicodin, Norco and Lortab. Records showed that from June 
2002 through June 2003, Shobola's businesses filled more than 50,000 
prescriptions, most for hydrocodone.

Though Shobola didn't start his Web sites until 2002, they quickly 
became a booming business. Financial records showed 2003 sales of 
$5.3- million; in the first nine months of 2004, sales were $7.6-million.

No criminal charges have been brought against Shobola, a U.S. citizen 
of Nigerian descent educated in England. And though the Florida 
pharmacy board conducted an investigation, Shobola has maintained his 
state pharmacist license.

"He's growing his business again," Sisco said of his client. "He's 
got a pharmacy in Tampa and another in Kissimmee, but his operations 
are nowhere near the size and scope they were previously."

The fall has been steep for Shobola, whose remaining Ken Drugs in 
Tampa is a sparsely decorated suite in a medical office complex on 
North Habana Avenue.

In early 2004, Shobola not only owned a booming pharmacy business, 
with three clinics in Tampa, one in Kissimmee and an Internet 
presence, he opened Faze 2 Lounge, a "nightclub for adults," on Busch 
Boulevard and a gym, Tranzitions, on nearby Fletcher Avenue. Shobola 
offered VIP memberships and stretch limo rides to both attractions.

But Shobola, who had a full-time bodyguard/driver and a home in Lutz 
with an indoor pool, soon ran into problems. In February, he was 
named among the defendants in a wrongful death claim filed by the 
widow of Michael E. Toole. Toole was a former bank auditor in 
Columbia, S.C., who committed suicide after buying painkillers 
through one of Shobola's Web sites. The case was settled out of court 
for an undisclosed amount.

By March, the landlord of Shobola's nightclub had sued for late rent 
and neighbors were claiming about the noise.

In September, 50 law officers raided Shobola's four pharmacy/clinics 
and his office at 10004 N Dale Mabry Highway, hauling away boxes of documents.

Then, just before Christmas 2004, authorities confiscated 18 vehicles 
registered in the name of Shobola, his wife Omaemo or one of his 
corporations. They included five Lexuses, a 2003 Hummer, a 2000 
Jaguar and the 2003 BMW that had been a birthday gift to his wife.

In addition to taking Shobola's fleet of cars, federal officials made 
a claim on three of his properties: the $1.5-million home on Berger 
Road in Lutz, the health club on E Fletcher Avenue and a vacant lot 
on Tampa's Cachet Isle Drive.

In January 2005, just a few weeks before the U.S. Attorney's office 
filed its forfeiture complaint, Shobola was hit with a divorce 
lawsuit. Married for 18 years, the couple has three children.

Responding to the divorce filing, Shobola said he had debts of nearly 
$1.6-million, including $250,000 in unpaid taxes for 2003, 2004 and 
2005 and $200,000 set aside for legal fees "if indicted."

With his pharmacy operations curtailed in response to government 
pressure and his nightclub closed in late 2005, Shobola estimated his 
income for the year would be $76,200.

Shobola's lawyer said his client suffered financial hardship by 
having his assets tied up for two years in the forfeiture action. As 
for Shobola's future, Sisco declined to speculate.

"It's been more than two years since the search warrants were 
executed, and as of now, there have been no criminal charges," he 
said. "But I don't anticipate anyone is going to call me up and tell 
me he's free and clear."
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