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Recent Blog Posts in August 2010

August 31, 2010
  Los Angeles Doctor Under DEA Probe for Over-Prescribing Painkillers
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Dr. Lisa Tseng, a Rowland Heights osteopath, is the focus of a DEA probe into the over-prescribing of painkillers. At least six of her patients in their 20s have died since 2007.

Last December, Joey Rovero and a couple of pals from Arizona State University set out on a road trip to Southern California.

They weren't headed to Hollywood or some other spot likely to attract a trio of rowdy frat boys out for a good time. Their destination was a clinic in a mini-mall off the 60 Freeway. After a short visit with Dr. Lisa Tseng, the young men left with a handful of prescriptions and headed back to ASU. Nine days later, Rovero, a muscular former high school football star, was dead of an overdose. He was 21.

Rovero was one of at least six men in their 20s who have died of overdoses since 2007 after making the trek to Tseng's office in Rowland Heights. Two others died after getting drugs from patients who got them from Tseng. Though Tseng is a general practitioner without a specialty, some patients drove from San Clemente, Palm Springs and places even farther away to see her.

Many who died were white men in their early 20s from Orange County. As kids, they played baseball and soccer and went surfing. They had nice homes and loving parents. Several shared a mischievous streak or bad-boy edge that led them to experiment with drugs. Friends and family members of some patients described their loved ones as addicts who used old injuries,  a once-shattered ankle from riding motocross, a sore knee from a snowboarding mishap or a stiff back from a car accident, as excuses to score drugs.

Tseng prescribed an array of painkillers, muscle relaxants and anti-anxiety medications, according to records. Sold under the brand names OxyContin, Vicodin, Soma and Xanax, these drugs are widely abused by teens and young adults who increasingly are ending up in detox centers, emergency rooms and county morgues. The United States Drug Enforcement Administration deemed her "an imminent danger to public health and safety" and suspended her license to prescribe drugs prone to abuse. Since then, law enforcement officers have received calls from more parents alleging that their children had overdosed after getting prescriptions from Tseng.

Hsiu-Ying "Lisa" Tseng graduated from Michigan State University's College of Human Medicine with an osteopathic degree in 1996. Her California medical license remains in good standing, according to state records. She has no reported malpractice judgments against her or settlements of note and has not been charged with any crime. The drugs Tseng prescribed, although addictive, can provide much-needed relief to patients in pain. The law gives doctors broad latitude to make diagnoses and treatment decisions, but requires that they conduct physicals and document a patient's medical history.

Experts say such measures should help physicians tell the difference between a patient with real pain and an addict shopping for his or her next high. Among the most obvious signs of abuse are patients willing to drive long distances to see a doctor; patients asking for a specific medication in its most potent dosage; and patients going to multiple pharmacies to have their prescriptions filled. Tseng said she had noticed that some of her patients drove long distances to see her. She said she asked them why and was told that they had been referred by friends or relatives, an explanation she accepted.

Cases against doctors are fraught with the difficulties medical and legal authorities face in drawing the line between legitimate medicine and drug dealing. "If somebody is selling heroin or coke on the street, one undercover buy and they are going to prison," said Steve Opferman, a Los Angeles County sheriff's detective who specializes in medical fraud. "With doctors, it's a whole other matter. You need overwhelming evidence."

Matt Stavron was happiest soaring through the air on his Yamaha dirt bike after hitting a jump on the various motocross tracks throughout Southern California that he would visit with his dad and little brother. Landing wasn't always so much fun. Stavron was 13 when he suffered a compound leg fracture in the mid-1990s, the first of many injuries. He was hospitalized and given morphine for the pain. His parents think that's when he started on the road toward addiction.

Over the next decade, Stavron was in and out of rehab, battling an addiction to painkillers. As much as his son loved competing in motocross and hoped to turn pro, Bruce Stavron said, it got to the point where he began to wonder whether Matt was crashing his bike on purpose to get drugs. In 2007, however, things began to look up. Stavron spent the summer in rehab and this time, his parents said, it appeared to be taking. He had been clean for three months and was engaged to be married.

That September, Stavron's fiancee broke her neck and, rather than continue with his rehab in Long Beach, he stayed home to take care of her. He relapsed about two weeks later. His mother, Kelle, found him curled up in the fetal position on the bathroom floor, dead at age 24. Pills,  large white ones, small bluish green ones and rectangular bars,  were strewn about: There was OxyContin, Soma and Xanax,  all traced back to Tseng, more than 50 miles away in Rowland Heights, according to Orange County coroner's records. She prescribed 80 milligrams of OxyContin, intended for people in extreme pain and favored by addicts. Of the 30 tablets Tseng prescribed just two days earlier, four remained.

Stavron's parents said they had never heard of Tseng and didn't know how their son had met her. What they did know, they said, was that he had no legitimate injury requiring the sort of medication he was given. Kelle Stavron said she knows her son could have died after scoring drugs on the street, "but the truth is this doctor gave him those pills, and he died," she said. "She's gotta live with that."

Ryan Latham was 21 when he overdosed in 2008. He died of the combined effects of hydrocodone, Xanax and Soma,  the same drugs prescribed by Tseng less than a week earlier. The coroner ruled his death a suicide, noting, among other things, that Latham had grown depressed after breaking up with his girlfriend about a year earlier.His mother, Tina, said her son was particularly upset because his ex-girlfriend was about to get married. Handsome and gregarious on the surface, Latham was "pretty sensitive, emotional" underneath, his mother said. He struggled with drugs for years, but had been clean for about six months before he started seeing Tseng.

Tina Latham said her son was born with a mild case of spina bifida and had suffered a broken jaw in a fight a year or so before his death. Neither was causing him any pain, she said. In fact, Latham said, her son confided to her that Tseng, given some pretext,  "an old X-ray, whatever," would prescribe "all the drugs you want." Ronnie Wiessbrod, one of Ryan Latham's roommates when he died, recalled his friend sending him a text message from Tseng's waiting room in which he talked about other patients laughing about the things they were planning to tell Tseng to get drugs.

Jeffrey "Neil" West did not die of an overdose. But his mother says she believes Tseng played a role in his death. In the two weeks before West fatally shot himself in July 2009, Tseng wrote him seven prescriptions totaling 325 pills,  Adderall, Xanax, Soma, hydromorphone and 80-milligram tablets of OxyContin, coroner's records show. At one point, she wrote him overlapping prescriptions for Soma, 90 tablets on July 8 that should have lasted a month, then another 45 a week later. Upon learning after his death that Tseng had been prescribing such powerful drugs to her son, she blamed the doctor for fueling his addiction.

Criminal defense lawyers Donald Marks and Anthony Brooklier have been representing clients on prescription drug and other drug related matters since 1976. When faced with unlawful prescription drug charges you need experienced Los Angeles criminal defense attorneys with experience in representing individuals for prescription drug crimes. Such charges could include offenses for unlawful prescription drug possession, drug trafficking and other drug related charges. If you have been charged with a prescription drug crime, we recommend you contact us in order to begin to prepare your case for a successful defense.

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August 19, 2010
  Police Seize $24 Million Worth of Marijuana in Granada Hills, California
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Police officers seized $24 million worth of marijuana in Granada Hiils, California, in the San Fernando Valley. The grass was growing high at O'Melveny Park in Granada Hills this summer, but don't blame groundskeepers at the rugged city facility.

Authorities this week destroyed nearly 3,000 marijuana plants valued at $24 million that towered more than 10 feet high and thrived on a sophisticated irrigation system hidden off the main trail.

The plants were discovered in July but police spent months investigating the large operation, leading to the arrest of a West Hills man last week.

"It's the largest outdoor grow I've ever seen," said Detective Robert Holcomb, who has worked in LAPD's Narcotics Enforcement Detail in the San Fernando Valley for 20-plus years.

The plants were discovered just hundreds of yards off the trail and 1½ miles north of the parking lot. More arrests were expected, detectives said Wednesday.

"One person, I don't think, could have tended to all these plants," Holcomb said.

Natale Gabriele, 49, was the first person arrested in the case last Thursday after air surveillance photos were taken in April. He was charged with possession of marijuana for sale and released Friday after posting $100,000 bail.

"So what this guy did was he went about 1½ miles up, through the brush, up over a ridgeline, into another secluded part of the park," Holcomb said. "You'd never see it from the hiking trail or the biking trail. Never. You'd have to go through the brush."

The plants, which ranged from 2 feet to more than 10 feet high, were planted in a ½-acre area along the hillside and in a ravine and were interspersed among existing shrubbery, Holcomb said. Officers have since cleared out the site.

Gabriele, who investigators believe tended the plants, had created an elaborate watering system by damming up a stream that ran through the hillside in the city's second-largest park, Holcomb said. Gabriele allegedly rigged the system using irrigation tubing, a battery-powered pump and timer to water the plants.

The regular watering was what enabled investigators to find the site, which was no easy feat. Detectives enlisted the help of the California Air National Guard Condor Squadron, which uses a C-130 plane outfitted with high-tech imaging equipment, to find and photograph rural areas believed to be sites of illegal marijuana operations throughout state and federal parks.

"They look for symmetrically planted and different-colored plants," Holcomb said. "Because vibrant marijuana plants are a different color from the California chaparral that we normally get, it will maintain that color even in the dry season that we have now."

The pictures were verified to contain evidence of an illegal grow in April. Detectives hiked up to the site in July, discovered more than 100 plants, and set up surveillance of the area.

When investigators returned to destroy the plants after Gabriele's arrest, they discovered thousands more in various stages of growth, Holcomb said. Another illegal outdoor grow operation was found within park boundaries about a mile away in May 2007. Several have been discovered along La Tuna Canyon Road, in the foothills.

In 2009, the Drug Enforcement Agency destroyed nearly 10 million marijuana plants being cultivated outdoors across the country, up 31 percent from the 7.6 million eradicated in 2008. "It's not that common to discover them in the San Fernando Valley," Holcomb said. "It's not something you usually find in an urban area."

At Marks & Brooklier, we have been representing our clients on marijuana and other drug related matters since 1976. We are aware of all the issues and complexities that can arise from such charges and have successfully handled numerous cases for our clients. When faced with marijuana and drug charges you need experienced Los Angeles criminal defense attorneys with experience in representing individuals for drug crimes. Such charges could include offenses for drug possession, drug trafficking and other drug related charges. If you have been charged with a drug crime, we recommend you contact us in order to begin to prepare your case for a successful defense.

Continue reading "Police Seize $24 Million Worth of Marijuana in Granada Hills, California" »

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