KANSAS CITY, Mo. – A Kansas City, Mo., Fire Department
paramedic has been indicted by a federal grand jury for stealing fentanyl and
morphine from ambulances and replacing fentanyl with another substance.
Michael L. Fostich, 36, of Kansas City, Mo., was charged in
a two-count indictment returned under seal by a federal grand jury in Kansas
City, Mo., on Tuesday, March 27, 2018. That indictment was unsealed and made
public today upon Fostich’s arrest and initial court appearance.
Fostich is charged with one count of obtaining a controlled
substance by fraud (related to the theft of fentanyl and morphine) and one
count of tampering with a consumer product (related to the replacement of
fentanyl with another substance).
Fostich was employed at the Kansas City Fire Department
(KCFD) as a paramedic from August 2014 to Dec. 11, 2016. Fostich had access to
fentanyl and morphine, which were stored in sealed narcotics boxes and locked
in safes on KCFD ambulances. Each sealed narcotics box contained two vials of fentanyl,
each containing 100 micrograms of liquid fentanyl, two syringes of morphine,
each containing 10 milligrams of liquid morphine, and two vials containing 5
milligrams of liquid midazolam. As a paramedic, Fostich was able to unlock the
electronic safe and open the sealed narcotics boxes in order to administer
controlled substances to patients, if necessary.
The federal indictment alleges that Fostich engaged in a
scheme from Jan. 1, 2016, through Dec. 11, 2016, to fraudulently obtain
fentanyl and morphine. As part of the scheme, Fostich allegedly prepared
patient care records and state reporting forms that contained
misrepresentations regarding his use of fentanyl and morphine.
According to the indictment, Fostich reported he was
responsible for the use of 806 doses of fentanyl, which accounted for
approximately 39 percent of all of the KCFD’s total reported use during that
period of time. Fostich also reported he was responsible for the use of 636
doses of morphine, which accounted for approximately 63 percent of all of the
KCFD’s total reported use of morphine during that period of time.
The federal indictment also alleges that Fostich tampered
with a container of fentanyl on Dec. 11, 2016. Fostich removed fentanyl from
the vials contained in a KCFD narcotics box and replaced them with another
solution in the vials, the indictment says, with reckless disregard for the
risk that another person would be placed in danger of death or bodily injury.
Fostich allegedly placed the vials back in the narcotics box, attempted to
reseal the narcotics box, and then placed the narcotics box back in a safe
located on a KCFD ambulance.
The charges contained in this indictment are accusations,
and not evidence of guilt. Evidence supporting the charges must be presented to
a federal trial jury, whose duty is to determine guilt or innocence.
This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys
Jess E. Michaelsen and Jeffrey Q. McCarther. It was investigated by the Kansas
City, Mo., Police Department, the FBI and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
– Office of Criminal Investigation.
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