Pubdate: Sun, 12 Feb 2006 Source: Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL) Copyright: 2006 Sun-Sentinel Company Contact: http://www.sun-sentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/159 Author: Derek Simmonsen, Fort Pierce Tribune Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?232 (Chronic Pain) Reference: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v06/n165/a07.html EX-PATIENTS TESTIFY IN MEDICINE MILL TRIAL Fort Pierce - One patient had legitimate back pain that quickly became an addiction. The other had no pain and sought the pills for the high. Their stories were different, but both were drawn to Dr. Asuncion Luyao for the same reasons -- her reputation as an easy source of pain medication. Two of her former patients were among the first witnesses to take the stand Friday as Luyao's retrial began on charges of racketeering, trafficking in oxycodone and manslaughter after a deadlocked jury in her first trial in June. "She was the seller and the demand was huge," Assistant State Attorney Erin Kirkwood said in her opening statement. Kirkwood led her argument with words Luyao, 64, allegedly told one patient: "You'll be back. They all come back." She showed how Luyao wrote prescriptions for oxycodone, hydrocodone, morphine and other painkillers without doing full exams, ordering extra tests or suggesting treatment plans. The trafficking charges are based on visits by an undercover investigator who lied about injuries and received painkillers without proper medical records or further tests to find the source of his pain. Kirkwood also summarized six deaths over 20 months that constitute the manslaughter charges. Racketeering, more commonly used in organized crime cases, applies here because her Port St. Lucie office was a criminal enterprise and the trafficking and manslaughter charges are the criminal acts committed there, Kirkwood said. Defense attorney Joel Hirschhorn countered that Florida law allows doctors to prescribe painkillers, even to addicts, if they think they are helping to treat pain. Luyao ran a small-town, storefront office and kept much of the information she didn't write on charts in her head because she knew her patients well, he said. "She wasn't in the pharmacy business. She was in the pain care, patient-protecting business," he said. Hirschhorn went through the six manslaughter counts, but laid out different reasons -- including natural causes and suicide -- that could not be ruled out as possible causes of death. In the end, the state's evidence is not enough to convict, he said. "I suspect the state will not be able to fan it into a fire," he said of the charges. Both sides used the cases of her former patients to illustrate their arguments, the prosecution saying their stories were evidence of Luyao's nonexistent treatment while the defense said they showed she was manipulated by the lies patients told. Michael Callocchio, 44, said he was injured at work in a fall from a truck in the late 1990s and eventually became addicted to the OxyContin he was prescribed. He never had a problem getting medication, even when he told her he was fresh out of rehab for his pill abuse, and at one point received more than 1,500 pills in four months. Another patient, Christina Brown, had no ailments and came to Luyao solely for the drugs. She described crushing OxyContin and injecting it into her veins to get a quicker high. The trial resumes Monday. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek