Tampa, Florida – Hong Truong (54, Dunedin) has pleaded
guilty to the unlawful distribution of oxycodone outside the scope of
professional practice. Truong faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in federal
prison. She has agreed to a money judgment in the amount of $766,819 to the
United States, representing the proceeds of her illegal drug distribution.
According to the plea agreement, Truong was a licensed
pharmacist who owned and operated HP Pharmacy located in Pinellas Park,
Florida. Under federal regulations, pharmacists registered with the Drug
Enforcement Administration, such as Truong, were responsible for the proper
prescribing and dispensing of controlled substance prescriptions. At HP
Pharmacy, Truong filled Schedule II controlled substance prescriptions for
oxycodone and hydromorphone that were outside the usual course of professional
practice and not issued for a legitimate medical purpose. In connection with these
prescriptions, Truong ignored and failed to resolve red flags, in violation of
her responsibility as a pharmacist. For example, in return for filling 30 mg
oxycodone and 8 mg hydromorphone prescriptions, Truong charged and only
accepted in cash, a higher-than-market-per-pill price – usually $5-6 per pill.
Truong ordered a much higher volume of opiates for HP Pharmacy inventory than
average in comparison to other Florida pharmacies and those across the United
States. Further, Truong and the pharmacy tech she employed, Jessica Evans,
falsely noted on the back of many prescriptions that the prescriptions had been
verified with the prescriber’s office, when they had not. Evans has also
pleaded guilty for her role in the scheme and is awaiting sentencing.
Truong also filled prescriptions for “opiate naïve” patients
(those who had never been previously prescribed opiates) without consulting
with the prescribing physician or the patient as to the diagnosis and need for
the prescription. Many of Truong’s opiate patients were young, healthy-looking,
and had traveled far distances to Truong’s small pharmacy in Pinellas Park,
usually after visiting a prescribing physician located in Tampa.
This case was investigated by the Drug Enforcement
Administration and the United States Attorney’s Office’s Opioid Fraud Abuse and
Detection Unit. The OFAD Unit focuses on opioid-related fraud and abuse by
medical and health care professionals who have contributed to the prescription
opioid epidemic. This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys
Kelley Howard-Allen and Greg Pizzo.
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