LONDON, Ky.- Wilma Thompson, 41, of London, pleaded guilty
in federal court on Tuesday, before U.S. District Judge Claria Horn Boom, to
obtaining a controlled substance through the registration of another and
identity theft.
In her guilty plea, Thompson admitted that she was employed
as an office manager for a physician, that prescription tablets repeatedly went
missing from the office, and that she was observed on multiple occasions taking
Xanax at the office. Thompson’s
employment with the office ended in October 2017; but in her plea agreement,
she admitted that, in May 2018, she attempted to obtain 180 Hydrocodone
tablets, using a forged prescription bearing her previous employer’s name and
DEA registration number.
After obtaining a search warrant, officers seized 582 forged
prescriptions, bearing the physician’s name and DEA registration number, and 23
empty prescription bottles. Thompson admitted that she had been forging
prescriptions, monthly, since January 14, 2016, and she had obtained a total of
8,370 hydrocodone tablets and 2,358 alprazolam (Xanax) tablets.
Thompson was indicted in November 2019.
Robert M. Duncan, Jr., United States Attorney for the
Eastern District of Kentucky; James Robert Brown, Jr., Special Agent in Charge,
Federal Bureau of Investigation; and Chief Darrell Kilburn, London Police
Department, jointly announced the guilty plea.
The investigation was conducted by the FBI and London Police
Department. The United States was represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Nick
Rabold.
Thompson is scheduled to be sentenced on May 19, 2020. She
faces up to 20 years in prison and a maximum fine of $500,000. However, any
sentence will be imposed by the Court after its consideration of the U.S. Sentencing
Guidelines and the federal sentencing statutes.
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