Tag: Florida

  • Behavioral Health of the Palm Beaches

    Behavioral Health of the Palm Beaches

    Behavioral Health of the Palm Beaches (BHOPB) is a collection of rehabilitation facilities all located within about 10 miles from each other. Donald K. Mullaney, a recovering addict with a doctorate in psychology, started BHOPB in 1997 as a 12-bed Florida drug rehab. It has since grown to be a 200-bed facility that also has a detox unit. The detox unit covers alcohol, drugs, heroin, pain pills and Suboxone.

    Introduction and Basic Services

    BHOPB’s General Treatment Program covers residential drug and alcohol rehab, young adult rehab, rehab for baby boomers, pain medication addiction treatment, heroin addiction treatment and DUI rehab. It also covers mental health issues such as depression, anger management, bipolar disorder, binge eating disorder, codependency, domestic violence and depression treatment, dual diagnosis treatment, eating disorder and chemical dependency, gambling addiction, internet addiction, sex addiction, social skills development and trauma recovery treatment.

    The team at BHOPB also runs intervention programs, holistic treatment programs, professional programs, spiritual programs, family programs and alumni programs.

    BHOPB was recently purchased by Banyan Treatment Center. BHOPB is Banyan’s 8th and 9th rehabilitation center.

    Facility and Meals

    When a client arrives at Behavioral Health of the Palm Beaches, their first stop is the clinic in Lake Worth, Florida for intake. After all the paperwork is run through, depending on their insurance and financial resources, the client is sent to one of three facilities: the lovely Seaside facility in West Palm Beach, the single sex residence in West Palm or Singer Island, or the Cottages in Palm Beach. All residences are within 10 miles of each other.

    If detox is needed, BHOPB is there to help. The detox program lasts about seven to 10 days. BHOPB is among the 10 percent of Florida rehabs that offers detox. The top tier residents detox separately and everyone else detoxes together in a co-ed space. The clients are put in spacious double rooms and attend classes during the day and, if they are able, they also go to 12-step meetings.

    The Cottages are efficiency condos with vacation house style furniture. There is maid service but clients have to clean the floors and bedrooms themselves. They, as well as the mid level residents, also cook their own meals with a $60 food allowance each week at the Winn Dixie. When not in group, they are free to watch TV and hang out as much as they’d like.

    The Seaside residence at BHOPB has lovely modern furniture, queen sized beds, marble countertops and private chefs who cook meals to order. They also have a very large pool, which is nice in the Florida heat. Drivers shuttle clients to meetings as opposed to the vans for everyone else.

    At the Seaside residence, clients are allowed to keep their cellphones and use the computer at the business center. At the Cottages, they are not allowed to keep their phones or use computers.

    Treatment Protocol and Team

    The real difference between Seaside the rest of the BHOPB residences is that counselors at the other facilities are not qualified to diagnose co-occuring issues. Therefore, those clients can primarily expect classes and 12-step meetings.

    A typical day starts at 7 am where, at Seaside, a chef cooks a wonderful healthy breakfast. At the residences and cottages, the clients usually fend for themselves at mealtime. Then off to co-ed community groups, then single sex groups until lunch. After lunch (which is catered for the Seaside residents), there are tracks like pain management, anger management, nutrition, HIV and Hep. C, anxiety, and grief and loss and trauma, among other topics. Twice weekly they are offered acupuncture, Light and Sound Neurotherapy, and EMDR. After dinner, they attend outside AA meetings or have them at the residence.

    Treatment at Seaside Palm Beach combines 12-step methods with evidence-based practices. Supplemental therapies are offered twice weekly including EMDR (eye movement desensitization and reprocessing), hypnotherapy, acupuncture and biofeedback, massage, and meditation.

    A treatment team includes a medical director, a Master of social work, and a Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW).

    Clients may also participate in anger management groups and relapse preventions workshops. Specialized treatment tracks are offered for professional athletes, healthcare professionals, first responders and aviation professionals.

    A comprehensive three-day family program is available for families and includes counseling and education.

    After discharge, BHOPB counselors call the client once a week to monitor their progress and lessen the calls as the year goes on and they adjust to a new life. They then follow up with contacts who make the commitment to monitor patients and be honest in their reporting. In the event of a relapse, an alumni member will get in touch to see if a readmittance is needed and if so, they can help set that up quickly so the relapse is a short one and the road to sobriety is back on track. BHOPB even has a support group for friends and family of BHOPB clients to share stories and be supportive of others who are in the same position as they are.

    They also offer Individualized aftercare that includes: referral for counseling, alumni programs and transitional living to bridge that gap between rehab and the real world.

    Summary

    Behavioral Health of the Palm Beaches is a solid option for care, especially for those with extensive insurance coverage or financial means. The Cottages are still a solid alternative for anyone not financially able to cover the cost of BHOPB’s more upscale offerings. If the client is motivated, then the cushiness of the accommodations shouldn’t make much of a difference. Overall it’s a well rounded treatment experience offering 12-step support, plenty of therapy and lots of specialized programming. This facility is one of the many reasons why South Florida is considered a premier destination for recovery.

    Behavioral Health of the Palm Beaches Location

    7859 Lake Worth Rd

    Lake Worth, FL 33467

    (561) 264-1138

    [email protected]

    Behavioral Health of the Palm Beaches Cost

    $12,000-$80,000

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  • Florida Versus Evidence: How I Lost My Children Because of Past Drug Use

    Florida Versus Evidence: How I Lost My Children Because of Past Drug Use

    When my first slew of drug tests returned negative, the opposition began slinging whatever they could think of in my direction, hoping something would stick.

    I am living in two worlds. One is a world populated by doctors and advocates, run on the tenets of research and science and reason. It is a world in which addiction is treated with medicine, and where there’s no question that people who use drugs deserve to be safe and free of avoidable infections and diseases. In this world, nobody hesitates to administer naloxone if the occasion calls for it. In this world, people are not afraid to touch the bodies of drug users, and we all understand that if you can self-administer naloxone, you don’t need naloxone. I experience this world through phone lines, e-mails, and social media. I write about this world; this world is my template for how all worlds should be.

    Addiction as Moral Failure

    Then there is the world where my life takes place. In this world, having an addiction is a moral failure. Drug use is met with punishment. Judges replace doctors and toxicologists, making medical decisions and determining the results of drug tests with reckless abandon. In this world, abstinence is the only route to health. In this world, a hit of pot is just as chaotic as compulsive, daily injections of heroin. In this world, there is no sterile equipment; in this world, everyone is sick. Here, you can be sentenced to death just for being the friend of someone who overdoses. This is the world I touch with my fingers and teeth—the world where I walk, and eat, and breathe. This is the world where I live.

    I became involved with the Florida Department of Children and Families in April 2018. I was never charged with a crime or afforded the presumption of innocence, evidentiary standards, or jury decision that would have accompanied a criminal charge. Instead, one judge—virtually accountable to no one and equipped with full immunity—deemed my husband and me guilty of some nebulous pre-crime like the woeful characters in Philip K. Dick’s short-story-turned-film “Minority Report.” Apparently, I am guilty of the possibility of neglecting or otherwise harming my children in the future because I have a diagnosed substance use disorder.

    Since that decision, I have been forced to obey the mandates set forth by my county’s child welfare authorities in an attempt to win back custody of my girls. So far, not a single mandate has been evidence-based.

    I love writing about harm reduction, evidence-based addiction care, and trauma-informed mental health practices. I enjoy staying informed about best practices in addiction medicine. I am proud that I get to help demystify and destigmatize addiction and mental illness, and I am honored to have the opportunity to speak with the researchers who have dedicated themselves to driving us out of the dark ages of addiction medicine. But now that I am living in those dark ages myself, I can’t shake a sense of bitterness: I write about a better world, but it’s one that I only get to view from afar.

    Substance Use Disorder Treatment and Geography

    In 2017, I wrote an article for OZY about the general disparities between addiction care in red states and blue states. I was living in Seattle, Washington, at the time but I’d had some experience trying to get help for addiction in Florida—so I knew how backward providers could be. For example, when I gave birth to my daughter in Palm Beach while on prescribed methadone, hospital staff refused to let me breastfeed her. She was treated for Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome (NAS) and pediatric staff claimed that enough methadone would be passed through my breast milk to potentially harm her. In reality, numerous studies have found the exact opposite to be true and breastfeeding is now recognized as one of the most effective balms for NAS, due to the maternal contact and general health benefits of breast milk. The amount of methadone passed through breast milk is too negligible to help or harm.

    As I wrote in the OZY article, Democratic-ruled states are more likely to offer Medicaid coverage for methadone and buprenorphine, while Republican states are less likely to even offer the medications themselves, much less cover them. People in red states also face harsher penalties for drug crimes and are less likely to be allowed to continue a methadone or buprenorphine prescription while incarcerated. (Though this is a nationwide issue, blue states are leading the reform.) But writing the story from Seattle meant writing from a place of comfort: I was living among the reformers—walking within the pages of history that will be attributed to the good guys. I was able to take my buprenorphine every day because my state insurance covered it. I was surrounded by intelligent, informed people with whom I could speak honestly about my decision to engage in non-abstinence-based recovery. When I wrote about the issues in the system, I wrote from a place of distance. Of privilege.

    I did not appreciate how lucky I was until I dove headlong into the true trenches of the Drug War. 

    In Recovery and Losing Custody

    In Broward County, Florida, my children were removed from me because of unsubstantiated accusations of drug use. When my first slew of drug tests returned negative, the opposition began slinging whatever they could think of in my direction, hoping something would stick. Most of it revolved around the fact that I was poor—but ignorance about mental illness and addiction reared its ugly face yet again. The opposition cited my prior child welfare investigation in Florida—the one that was triggered by my daughter’s NAS. It was a routine investigation that had been deemed unsubstantiated. These types of investigations are typically labeled “harmless.” I had been in compliance with my methadone program, and my daughter’s doctors had no concerns—but five years later, the opposition used that prior methadone prescription as a basis for deeming me an unreliable witness: the dirty, lying junkie. 

    When I was asked under oath whether I had spoken with one of my husband’s siblings about possibly purchasing marijuana, I admitted that I had. Clinicians in addiction treatment recognize that drug cravings are normal and applaud us when we admit that we think about buying drugs but then decide against it. But the guardian ad litem attorney—the counsel whose job it is to protect my daughters’ interests—argued that by considering using marijuana, I placed my sobriety and therefore my children at risk. It didn’t matter that I canceled the purchase and honestly acknowledged that I’d thought about it. The judge called my process of considering marijuana but then deciding against it “drug-seeking behavior.” She gave custody of my daughters to my husband’s parents.

    The terribly irony underscoring the entire proceeding is that if I were still living in a state that embraced the most current research on addiction, I would never even have been in a courtroom. The accusation against me stated that I left my daughters in the care of their grandparents for three days while I used drugs outside of the home. According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, “drug tests do not provide sufficient information for substantiating allegations of child abuse or neglect or for making decisions about the disposition of a case.” Drug use on its own, away from any children, is not child abuse. A parent who leaves their child with a family member to go to a bar for an evening is generally considered to be engaging in responsible substance use.

    The federal government recognizes that child abuse cannot reasonably be defined as placing a child with a trusted caregiver, leaving the home for a couple days, and returning sober. It doesn’t much matter what went on during those two days. True or false—the accusation against me never described child abuse. A more enlightened jurisdiction would have recognized that. The separation trauma that my children and I have endured over the past nine months is completely attributable to our location.

    I used to write about addiction and drug policy from a place of privilege. Now I am writing from the deep trenches. I feel as though I am performing a kind of literary necromancy whenever I publish—except that instead of communing with the dead or demonic, I am writing from within that unillumined place, hoping that, by disseminating research, facts, and the words of distant experts, I can summon reason back into my life.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Will Florida Repeal Its Ban On Marijuana Smoking?

    Will Florida Repeal Its Ban On Marijuana Smoking?

    Florida’s newly elected governor says the ban was not “up to snuff.” 

    Newly elected Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has asked his state’s legislature to drop a ban on smoking marijuana.

    DeSantis, a Republican, announced his decision at a press conference on January 17, where he said the ban was not “up to snuff,” and doubled down on his decision by stating that if lawmakers don’t implement the change by mid-March, he’ll drop former governor Rick Scott’s appeal of a judge’s ruling which prohibited the ban because it violated the state’s amendment to legalize medical cannabis

    Amendment 2 was intended to legalize the use of medical marijuana for individuals living with a variety of debilitating conditions or ailments with the approval of a licensed state physician. Though 71% of voters approved the bill in 2016, the state legislature did not implement Amendment 2 in 2017, prompting Scott to call for a special session in the summer of that year to address its implementation.

    The Florida State Legislature then passed Senate Bill 8A, which established regulations for the amendment. These included a cap on the number of retail dispensaries, as well as a ban on smoking medical marijuana—though cannabis in spray, oil or vapor form was allowed.

    Orlando attorney John Morgan filed a lawsuit to challenge the smoking ban, which a Leon County circuit court judge ruled in favor of in May 2018. The Florida Health Department appealed the ruling, which is the subject of DeSantis’ request.

    “What the Florida legislature has done to implement the people’s will has not been done in accordance with what the amendment advised,” said DeSantis at the January 17 announcement. “Whether patients have to smoke it or not, who am I to judge that? I want people to be able to having their suffering relieved. I don’t think this law is up to snuff.”

    DeSantis also plans to remove regulations and drop appeals in several other cases involving licensing for medical marijuana companies to grow, manufacture and sell their own product. 

    “We have a lot of fish to fry in Florida,” he said. “The last thing I want to be doing is cleaning up something that should have been done two years ago. I don’t want to continue fighting some of these old battles.”

    In an interview after the press conference, John Morgan called the governor’s decision a “victory for the people of Florida. This plant was put into nature by God for us, and it works.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Fisherman Reels In Cocaine

    Fisherman Reels In Cocaine

    The fisherman found a bale of cocaine worth a reported $500,000.

    A south Florida fisherman got a surprise catch when he spotted a bale of cocaine after returning from a day on the ocean. 

    According to the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office, which covers the Florida Keys, a fisherman noticed something floating beneath the docks when he returned from a day out at sea. When he cut into the package and saw white powder, he alerted authorities. 

    Sheriff’s Office Deputy Martin Digrius and Coast Guard officials responded, and the US Border Patrol also arrived on the scene. Inside the plastic package, authorities found 25 smaller packages, which contained 40-60 pounds of cocaine, the sheriff’s department said. According to The Miami Herald, the cocaine was worth about $500,000. 

    Cocaine use has been rising, especially as the drug becomes more commonly used alongside opioids. The amount of cocaine seized by the Coast Guard has been increasing: In 2015, the agency seized 145 tons of the drug and detained 503 people; by 2017 those numbers had risen to 225 tons and 708 suspects, according to The Miami Herald.

    Intercepting cocaine in the ocean — or even washed up on beaches — isn’t wholly unusual in Florida and on the West Coast, but it still makes headlines. 

    In December of 2017, Coast Guard sailors rescued a sea turtle that was floating amid 1,800 pounds of cocaine, worth about $53 million. 

    “After a period of lengthy questioning, it was determined the turtle did not have any useful information. We released him on his own recognizance after he agreed not to return to these waters again. #turtlesmuggler,” the agency posted on Twitter

    They followed up with a more somber note:

    “In all seriousness, we love our sea creatures and do everything we can to help them when we see them in distressed situations. Additionally, during this patrol nearly seven tons of illicit narcotics with a street value over $135 million was confiscated.”

    Intercepting cocaine in the ocean before it lands in the US can help save lives, Acting US Attorney Alana Robinson said in September 2017

    “The seizure of this cocaine means tens of thousands of pounds won’t make it to our communities and hundreds of millions of dollars won’t make it into cartel coffers,” she said. 

    “To drug traffickers who may think they are invisible in the middle of what seems to be a vast, empty ocean: You are not alone. We are doing everything we can to prevent you from using the high seas as your personal freeway.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • "Hedge Fund Tycoon" Helps Fund Mental Health Clinic For Vets

    "Hedge Fund Tycoon" Helps Fund Mental Health Clinic For Vets

    The Cohen Veteran’s Network in Tampa, Florida will soon add another clinic to its ranks thanks to a “hedge fund tycoon.”

    Veterans in the Tampa area will soon have another option for mental and behavioral health treatment, as the Cohen Veterans Network plans to open a new clinic by March.

    The clinic, according to The Tampa Bay Times, is funded by “hedge fund tycoon” Steven A. Cohen. This will be the network’s 12th such clinic, and the concept behind them is to fill in the areas of mental and behavioral health that the Department of Veterans Affairs doesn’t reach.

    This, according to the Times, will include services for veterans with “less than honorable” discharges as well as members of their families.

    The clinic is expected to serve about 500 patients in the first year of operation. To start, the clinic will be funded with $8 million in seed money, the Times states. The network covered the costs for the clinic buildout and the first three years of operation. By the six-year mark, clinic officials are required to have raised 50% of the operating costs.

    While both the American Veterans (AMVETS) and the Department of Veterans Affairs have expressed support, others aren’t so convinced. Marvin Southard, who was CEO of the Cohen Veterans Network’s first clinic at the University of Southern California, tells the Times that the clinics avoided treating more difficult patients for “commercial reasons.”

    “Both USC and NYU had problems with the Cohen program,” Southard said.

    Southard added that he feels “that what is required in a veteran-heavy locality like Tampa is a true convener organization or person who could bring the veterans service community together as collaborators rather than as competitors. I had hoped that the Cohen project could have served that role, but in Los Angeles, at least, they were inclined to do the opposite.”

    However, Anthony Hassan, the Cohen Veterans Network CEO and president, says the clinic’s mission is to simply fill the gaps in care. He says that since the first clinic opened in 2016, more than 8,600 patients have been treated through the network, and about half of those were non-veteran family members who were not eligible for treatment from the VA.

    According to the Times, US Rep. Gus Bilirakis (R-Trinity), who is the vice chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, is giving the clinics the benefit of the doubt.

    “Any entity serving the veteran community … should be held accountable for meeting the highest standard of care,” his spokesperson, Summer Robertson, told the Times via email. “If the Cohen Network helps meet an unmet need by providing mental health services in the Tampa area, that could potentially be a good option for some veterans.”

    Like the other clinics, Hassan tells the Times that the Tampa clinic will work with the VA and other local services to find patients needing care. He also says the clinics are not a method of privatizing care or profit-making.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Florida Sues CVS, Walgreens For Their Alleged Roles In Opioid Crisis

    Florida Sues CVS, Walgreens For Their Alleged Roles In Opioid Crisis

    The suit claims that the companies failed to stop “suspicious orders of opioids,” and dispensed “unreasonable quantities” of such drugs.

    The state of Florida has named two of the largest drugstore chains in the United States—Walgreens and CVS—as well as Insys Therapeutics, in a lawsuit that alleged that they “played a role in creating the opioid crisis.”

    Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi issued a press release stating that the pharmacy giants and Insys, which manufactured the fentanyl-based medication Subsys had been added to a state-court lawsuit filed on May 15, 2016 against Purdue Pharma, L.P.—the manufacturer of OxyContin—and other pharmaceutical manufacturers for allegedly contributing to the opioid epidemic with their opioid-based products.

    The suit against CVS and Walgreens alleges that the companies failed to stop “suspicious orders of opioids,” and dispensed “unreasonable quantities” of such drugs from their locations.

    In the complaint, the Attorney General’s Office alleged that Walgreens Co.—the largest drugstore chain in the nation—has distributed vast amounts of opioids throughout the state of Florida, and in some cases, reportedly distributed millions of pills that far outnumbered town populations.

    The suit cites an unidentified Florida town where the Walgreens location is alleged to have sold 285,000 pills in a single month to a town with just 3,000 people.

    According to the suit, some stores reportedly experienced six-fold sales growth for pills in just two years time. Walgreens previously paid a record settlement of $80 million in 2013 for violations of record-keeping and dispensing regulations that allowed oxycodone and other pain medications to be diverted for black market sales.

    The accusations against CVS Healthcare Corp. and CVS Pharmacy, Inc.—the second largest U.S. drugstore chain—claim that the company sold more than 700 million opioid products between 2006 and 2014, including three towns that received and dispensed “huge quantities” of opioids during that time frame.

    CVS also paid $22 million to resolve allegations by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) that retail stores in the town of Sanford, Florida sold painkillers that were not prescribed for “legitimate medical purposes.”

    The suit’s allegations against Insys Therapeutics echo similar charges levied against the troubled pharmaceutical firm, which has been accused of paying doctors to prescribe Subsys, a medication for patients with breakthrough cancer pain, to patients without cancer or similar diagnoses.

    The suit cites public records that showed that Insys paid $18.7 million to doctors between August 2013 and December 2016, including one Florida physician who received $270,000 from the company.

    According to data from the Center for Medicaid and Medicare Services, more prescriptions for Subsys were written in Florida than in any other state.

    A spokesperson for CVS labeled the lawsuit “without merit” and said that in recent years, the company “has taken numerous actions to strengthen our existing safeguards to help address the nation’s opioid epidemic.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Sheriffs Ban Alcohol After Hurricane Michael

    Sheriffs Ban Alcohol After Hurricane Michael

    Unsurprisingly, the move was met with a wave of criticism. 

    In the aftermath of Hurricane Michael, two Florida counties briefly banned alcohol sales as part of an emergency disaster declaration.

    The Category 4 storm walloped southeastern seaboard states earlier this month, leaving at least 30 people dead in the U.S. and wreaking particular havoc on Florida and Georgia. Five days after the hurricane made landfall on Oct. 10, sheriffs in two Panhandle counties on the Gulf cut off booze-buying.

    As the ban set in, a spokesman for the Gulf County sheriff said the top cop “feels like people need to not focus on drinking.” State statute allows local sheriffs the authority to pause alcohol sales during riots, states of emergency and other crises, officials told the local paper.

    “He just wants to give people time to adjust and cope and the businesses time to get open and their feet back on the ground,” Gulf County sheriff’s spokesman Corey Dobridnia said.

    But even as word of the modern-day Prohibition spread, Panama City—the Bay County seat—voted to dial back the ban there four days after it began. Elsewhere, officials promised to re-open booze sales once power was restored. 

    Both counties were open for a full bar by Saturday, according to local reports.

    While it was in place, the short-lived restrictions—predictably—drew some backlash. And after Hurricane Katrina, there were no such bans in Mississippi and Louisiana, according to the Sun Herald.

    But this time around it was not so much thirsty would-be customers who objected as it was devastated business owners already dealing with losses from the storm, now coupled with the dip in income from a lack of booze sales.

    “This alcohol ban puts them in a bind,” Laguna Beach resident Nancy Estes told the Northwest Florida Daily News. “I don’t see where the business owners should be penalized for something they had to get a license to do. They paid to get a license to sell beer, wine or spirits, they should not be penalized.”

    Some took to social media to air their concerns. 

    “Banning all sales of alcohol only rubs salt in the wounds of those already affected financially by this disaster,” wrote Jonathan Hampel, “especially all of those in the restaurant business.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Alleged Drug Dealer Indicted For Fentanyl Overdose Death

    Alleged Drug Dealer Indicted For Fentanyl Overdose Death

    Calvin Warren Jr. is the first person to be arrested and charged under a new Florida law.

    A new Florida law regarding the prosecution of drug dealers, signed by Gov. Rick Scott in 2017, has gone into effect. The law expanded the state’s first-degree murder code to include adults who sell a lethal dose of fentanyl.

    The Palm Beach Post reported that Calvin Warren Jr., 35, was arrested on first-degree murder charges in the overdose death of 36-year-old Thomas Matuseski. Warren is the first person to be arrested and charged under the new law.

    Thomas Matuseski died on January 28 after ingesting fentanyl; Warren is accused of providing the deadly drug. Warren remains in the Palm Beach County Jail without the possibility of parole. The indictment against him states that he caused Matuseski’s death “unlawfully from a premeditated design.”

    The Palm Beach County State Attorney’s Office announced that Warren distributed heroin, cocaine, and fentanyl. On January 28, Matuseski’s roommate found him collapsed on his bedroom floor in Boynton Beach, according to city police records. Matuseski’s friend called 911 but the Boynton rescue crews were unable to resuscitate him.

    Police reported no sign of drugs or paraphernalia in Matuseski’s home on Citrus Park Lane, and it was not announced how Warren was suspected to be linked to Matuseski’s death. Police records do show that Warren was arrested in February on a case that remains open and includes multiple drug-related charges.

    Greg Newburn, Florida’s state policy director for Families Against Mandatory Minimums, told The Daily Beast, “Most deaths we’ve seen since the rise of fentanyl in Florida have been a mixture of heroin and fentanyl.”

    Florida’s new law does not account for the mixture of drugs or if the dealer claims to have known they were using fentanyl. If a drug mixture containing any amount of fentanyl is involved in the drug user’s death, the dealer can be charged with first-degree murder, a charge for which “the only two sentences available are life without parole and the death penalty,” Newburn said.

    “We will aggressively charge drug dealers who spread fentanyl-laced heroin into our community,” Palm Beach County State Attorney Dave Aronberg said in a statement, as reported in The Palm Beach Post. “We will use all tools provided us by the Florida Legislature to hold drug dealers accountable for causing the deaths of others.” 

    Thomas Matuseski was a New York native, and according to his obituary was remembered as a loving father and son who loved sports.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Doctor Who Made 6K A Day For Prescribing Oxy: "I Was A Scapegoat"

    Doctor Who Made 6K A Day For Prescribing Oxy: "I Was A Scapegoat"

    “When I started treating people with chronic non-cancer pain. I felt it was unethical and discriminatory to limit the dose of medication.”

    Florida physician Barry Schultz was convicted to 157 years in prison for illegally prescribing enormous amounts of opioids to his patients.

    Now he calls himself a “scapegoat” for the pharmaceutical companies who produce, distribute and advocate for the prescription of opioids.

    Mallinckrodt pharmaceutical company was the provider of opioids in Schultz’s practice. The company eventually paid a fine for its part. Mallinckrodt provided 500 million oxycodone pills to the state of Florida, which has a population of 20 million people.

    Even after Mallinckrodt’s own internal investigation concluded that Dr. Schultz’s prescriptions had “a suspicious pattern indicating diversion” the company continued to supply him with opioids.

    Barry Schultz interviewed from prison with 60 Minutes to announce that he was a “scapegoat” for those really to blame—the opioid manufacturers.

    State Attorney Dave Aronberg’s office prosecuted Barry Schultz. Aronberg blamed Florida’s lax laws at the time for fueling the opioid overdose crisis. Pain clinics in Florida allowed patients to visit, pick up pills, and pay in cash. As a result, people from other states began coming to Florida to obtain opioids, creating a frenzy where waiting rooms would be overflowing.

    This was the kind of pain clinic that Schultz operated in Delray Beach, Florida. DEA records show in 2010 that Dr. Schultz was prescribing some patients as many as 100 pills a day, and making more than $6,000 a day from prescribing opioids.

    Despite this, Dr. Schultz refuses to take responsibility for his actions. “When I started treating people with chronic non-cancer pain,” he told 60 Minutes, “I felt it was unethical and discriminatory to limit the dose of medication. And if I had known that the overdose incidents had increased dramatically the way it had, I would have moderated my approach.”

    Carol Tain’s son David died in 2010 of an opioid overdose from pills prescribed by Dr. Schultz for pain management after a car accident. Tain’s mother considers Dr. Schultz responsible for her son’s death.

    “He didn’t even examine him. He hadn’t seen him in four-and-a-half years,” Tain said to 60 Minutes of the doctor’s prescriptions for her son. “He just—just wrote—wrote out these scripts… As far as I’m concerned, he’s a murderer and—and not a doctor. He murdered my son. He – he didn’t need a gun. He used his pen to murder my son.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Thrift Store Workers Uncover Massive Pot "Donation"

    Thrift Store Workers Uncover Massive Pot "Donation"

    The unusual donation was worth a few thousand dollars, according to police.

    Employees at a Florida thrift store found much more than the usual faded blouses and old shoes when they were sorting through donations this week and found five pounds of marijuana outside the store’s donation box. 

    According to Fox 13, employees at Pines Thrift Store in Sarasota found a large tote outside the donation box, where items for the store can be left after hours.

    Initially, employees ignored the tote, but when they opened it on Thursday they found a taped paper bag containing four plastic bags.

    When they cut into a bag it became clear what was inside: 2,100 grams of vacuum-sealed marijuana, according to 7 News Miami. That’s when they decided to call the police. 

    The unusual donation left area residents and store employees wondering about the motives of whoever left the cannabis behind. 

    “Somebody probably had a change of heart or something and wanted to turn it in, but didn’t want to get themselves in trouble,” said Bles Mclean, who was interviewed about the find. “So they just probably thought they were doing a good deed in donating it. I guess. I don’t know.”

    Mclean speculated that it could have been a joke gone wrong.

    “Maybe someone is being vindictive,” she said. “It doesn’t sound like a prank. I wouldn’t know, but it’s very shocking.”

    If it were a prank, it would be an expensive one. The drugs have a street value of a few thousand dollars. No arrests have been made, and no one knows where the drugs might have come from or how they came to be in the donation box. 

    “Either someone lost track of a really big package or someone didn’t calculate the numbers right or something,” Mclean said. “How it got in the donation box is definitely baffling.”

    Finding the drugs at the thrift store, which is part of The Pine Retirement Community, was jarring for some residents. 

    “That’s pretty shocking to hear about, to know it was in the donation box,” Jacueline Aguilera said. 

    Police have requested surveillance video from the store and from neighboring businesses, hoping that that might help them identify the person who left the tote outside the donation box.  

    Police are also doing testing on the drugs to try to identify where they may have come from, according to ABC News

    Although Florida does have a medical marijuana program, recreational use of cannabis is illegal under state law. 

    View the original article at thefix.com