WASHINGTON – The Drug Enforcement Administration’s Los
Angeles Field Division today announced Operation Faux Pharmacy, a multi-pronged
initiative aimed at attacking the opioid epidemic by targeting rogue pharmacies
throughout southern California, Hawaii and Nevada. DEA investigations over the
last year identified as many as 26 pharmacies in these areas that may have
operated outside the bounds of legitimate medicine.
The United States has been increasingly devastated by opioid
abuse, created in large part by the over-prescribing of potent opioids. Across
the country, approximately 11.8 million Americans misuse prescription opioids each year, which
contributes to the estimated 65,000 drug overdose deaths in the United
States. A majority of these deaths were
related to opioids, including heroin, illicit fentanyl, and prescription drugs
such as hydrocodone and oxycodone.
“DEA is fighting the opioid crisis on multiple levels, using
every resource available to identify reckless doctors and rogue businesses that
fuel addiction in our neighborhoods and communities,” said DEA Acting
Administrator Robert W. Patterson. “We will continue to identify and hold accountable
the most significant drug threats, using every tool at our disposal –
administrative, civil and criminal – to fight the diversion of controlled
substances.”
DEA and other law enforcement partners utilize a host of
tools and resources available to identify some of the most egregious violators
of the Controlled Substances Act. As part of this initiative, DEA special
agents, diversion investigators, and intelligence analysts examined data that
manufacturers and distributors report to DEA, Prescription Drug Monitoring
Program information, and Health and Human Services data to determine those most
likely to be operating as drug traffickers disguised as legitimate pharmacies.
As part of Operation Faux Pharmacy, 26 pharmacies were
identified as potential violators of the Controlled Substances Act as a result
of investigations triggered by data that was exhaustively compared and analyzed
with previous administrative or criminal violations from previous, similar
cases. Common indicators include pharmacies that had filled exceptionally high
numbers of oxycodone prescriptions, excessive or frequent opioid purchases,
multiple customers with identical addresses, or customers traveling extreme
distances to specific pharmacies despite access to more convenient options.
DEA partnered with federal, state, and local law enforcement
partners as part of this initiative. To date, Operation Faux Pharmacy has
seized close to 600,000 dosage units of scheduled drugs. The investigation is
ongoing and violators of the Controlled Substances Act may face administrative,
civil, and criminal penalties.
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