Feds to distribute $53 million to states to fight opioids

Feds to distribute $53 million to states to fight opioids

While 53 million may seem like a lot of money..there is an estimated 2 million serious substance abusers… so this money will allocated about $25/substance abuser… That may not afford the cost of ONE DOSE of Naloxone and many times… someone who OD’s needs more than ONE DOSE..  Can you say DROP IN A BUCKET ?

http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20160831/NEWS/308319997

The Obama administration says it will distribute $53 million to 44 states in an effort to curb opioid abuse.

HHS Secretary Sylvia Burwell says the funding will focus on reducing over-prescribing of pain killers, increasing access to treatment and making sure the antidote naloxone is widely available.

The administration is also calling on Congress to provide $1.1 billion in new money, saying legislation recently signed into law didn’t do enough to expand treatment. That bill authorized $181 million in new spending.

Steve Williams, the mayor of Huntington, West Virginia, said in a conference call announcing the funding that opioid abuse is so common he carries an overdose reversal kit with him. He says federal funding is urgently needed so people seeking treatment don’t have to wait months.

COMMON SENSE AND APPROPRIATE LAW ENFORCEMENT IS NOT MUTUALLY INCLUSIVE ?

stevemailboxCOMMON SENSE AND APPROPRIATE LAW ENFORCEMENT IS NOT MUTUALLY INCLUSIVE ?

 

This happened  in the mall parking lot on Tuesday, August 30 at 5:30 pm in Joliet Illinois. So you can verify. Apparently  the dea set up a sting in a crowded mall parking lot during the busiest  time period and day of the week. My husband was working  at Carsons at the time. The lot serves the mall as well as the movie theater.  Tuesday is  $5.00 all day ticket day with several kids movies showing. Stores were having  Labor day and back to school sales. Workers were starting and ending shifts. The set up ended badly with at least 20 rounds fired. A suspect  was shot in the leg. 2 litres of cocaine  recovered, numerous windows doors and tires shot out in the surrounding area.  People interviewed were furious at the amount of damage, and the potential for  human damage. Who does that? Who arranges a sting to go down in a busy lot potentially  filled with families. 

Sign me angry nurse.

This is how the media reported the incident

DEA Has 1 Locked Up Following Louis Mall Shooting

http://patch.com/illinois/joliet/dea-has-1-locked-following-louis-mall-shooting

DEA Has 1 Locked Up Following Louis Mall Shooting

JOLIET, IL — A Cicero man was being held for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration at the Will County jail the morning after agents gunned a man down outside the Louis Joliet mall.

Fernando Gondinez, 44, was booked into custody just before midnight Tuesday.DEA agents shot a man during a drug investigation in the mall parking lot about 5:30 p.m. Tuesday.

The wounded man was also apprehended, police said.

Special Agent Leo Hawkins, the DEA’s Chicago spokesman, would not comment on the shooting Tuesday and has yet to provide information on the incident.

Why have policies and procedures … if no one follows them ?

Bottom story from two years ago about how inflexible some of CVS’ employees/Pharmacists are when it comes to patients and their life saving medications.  This FB post is very recent…just more of the same old denial of care and the consequences to the pt seem to be of little concern to the CVS’ employees/Pharmacists…. Pharmacists are suppose to be HEALTHCARE PROVIDERS… some apparently did not get that message during their education process.
cvspost

CVS Pharmacy changes prescription policy after death of Vegas man

http://news3lv.com/news/local/cvs-pharmacy-changes-prescription-policy-after-death-of-vegas-man

LAS VEGAS (KSNV & MyNews3) — Drug store chain CVS is changing its policy because of one Las Vegas father’s actions following the death of his son who couldn’t afford an expensive prescription.

Mitchel Marcus will never know for certain if that medication would have stopped Joshua’s fatal seizure, but the fact that he will spend his entire life wondering is a painful sentence that he wants to spare others.

Joshua began suffering from grand mal seizures six years ago. The loss of consciousness and violent muscle contractions plagued his life. “Some of the seizures are so bad that the brain gets so scrambled and the heart goes into an arrhythmia that they just can’t come out of it,” said Mitchel.

Mitchel says a cocktail of prescriptive medicines controlled the frequency. On January 15, Joshua went in for a refill at a CVS branch outside of San Diego, but came up short.

“His medication came out to about $700,” said Mitchel.

Mitchel — who lives in Centennial Hills — tried to pay for it with a card over the phone, but was told it was against CVS’ policy.

“I was not sure what to do,” said Mitchel. “Joshua wasn’t sure what to do and he said, ‘Dad don’t worry about it, I will just go home and I will take it easy. I won’t do anything, I will just lay low.”

It was too late.

“He had passed away in the night from a seizure,” said Mitchel. “Joshua suffered partially from suffocation, but they also ruled it as sudden unexpected death due to epilepsy.”

At 26 years old, Mitchel said goodbye to his son.

“Just started crying. I was devastated,” said Mitchel. “If Joshua had had his medication he more than likely would not have had the seizure and would still be alive today.”

What Joshua and Mitchel didn’t know at the time was that CVS offers a bridge supply — a partial dosage at no cost to the patient until payment arrangements are made.

“I wanted CVS to set up a policy where, number one, their pharmacy techs would say ok you don’t have enough money at this time, let me give you a partial supply,” said Mitchel.

For Mitchel, it isn’t Joshua’s death — but how he lived his life — that has been his inspiration for others.

“Josh has a lot of perseverance and a lot of inner strength,” said Mitchel. “I want to be able to do some good. I want to be able to help in some way. I wanted a legacy for Josh.”

As a result of Mitchel’s persistence with CVS — months of emails and phone calls that reached the vice president — the chain is now finalizing a policy requiring pharmacists at all locations nationwide to offer a bridge supply for patients in an urgent medical need like Joshua’s.

All therapies with controlled substances should be of limited duration ?

finalnailcoffinLimit Prescribing Opioids, Benzos Together, FDA Warns

http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/868217?nlid=109107_3901&src=wnl_newsalrt_160831_MSCPEDIT&uac=75309AG&impID=1189008&faf=1

To reduce the risk for overdose deaths, clinicians should not prescribe opioid pain medicines together with benzodiazepines to patients unless there are no adequate alternative treatments available, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced today.

Both classes of drugs are central nervous system (CNS) depressants, which can trigger respiratory depression, coma, and death.

The FDA is spelling out this and other precautions in class-wide boxed warnings on the labels of opioid painkillers such as oxycodone, prescription cough medicine containing opioids, benzodiazepines, which include alprazolam (Xanax, Pharmacia and Upjohn), and other CNS depressants.

The decision to essentially classify the combination of opioids and benzodiazepine as a last-resort therapy is the FDA’s latest measure to battle the nation’s epidemic of prescription opioid abuse. An agency review found that the rate of emergency department visits related to the nonmedical use of opioids and benzodiazepines in combination tripled from 2004 to 2011, going from 11 visits per 100,000 population to 34.2 visits. In this same time span, the rate of deaths related to overdoses on this mix of drugs tripled as well.

This rising death toll coincided with a 41% increase in the number of patients who were prescribed both an opioid painkiller and a benzodiazepine between 2002 and 2014, according to the FDA.

The agency advises clinicians that if they have no choice but to prescribe the opioid analgesics and benzodiazepines together, they should limit the dosage and duration of each drug to the minimum needed to effectively treat the patient. Clinicians should warn patients about the risks for slowed or labored breathing. They also should avoid prescribing opioid cough medicines for patients taking benzodiazepines and other CNS depressants, including alcohol.

More information on today’s announcement is available on the FDA website.

Follow Robert Lowes on Twitter @LowesRobert

Government Cover-Up of Illegal US Attorney Misconduct

blindjusticeGovernment Cover-Up of Illegal US Attorney Misconduct

doctorsofcourage.org/index.php/2016/08/30/government-cover-up-of-illegal-us-attorney-misconduct/

Today, August 30, 2016, I appeared in US District Court under Judge Glen Conrad to fight the destruction of the evidence held by the government that would show in a criminal court that they (the government) committed a criminal act in my prosecution through perjury and frank breaking of the law. I didn’t have much faith in justice being carried out, however. I did feel obligated to at least give the court the opportunity to act in righting a grave injustice—my conviction through illegal actions of the US Attorney’s office.  Here is my statement to the court:

I am an innocent citizen convicted through gross government misconduct. Some of the evidence of this misconduct is in the hands of the prosecution who led the misconduct, in the evidence gathered by them during the investigation. And now they are asking the court to destroy that evidence. I move that the court refuse to do that, and further guarantee that the evidence is protected from government tampering.

I am currently working on several avenues of communication with authorities in Washington over this flagrant miscarriage of justice. It is, in my opinion, the Court’s responsibility to maintain the record untampered with.

It has become general policy of US Attorney’s offices to achieve a conviction of a targeted citizen by whatever means available—through perjury of witnesses, threats, and frank illegal activity, all of which was used to convict me, an innocent doctor, whose only “crime” if I can use that word, was that I was an independent solo practice physician in a rural area without the means to fight back, (therefore an easy win), and I treated the “expendable” population of people now targeted by the government for extermination—the uninsured, the poor, the disabled, the Medicare and Medicaid insured.  At least 10% of my population of patients died at the hand of the government through the closure of my office. Many of those records are in the government’s possession. Destruction of that evidence would, in my opinion, be tantamount to conspiracy of a cover-up.

As I am now pro-se, I request the court to provide me with copies of all the records held by the government, as the copies in my office have been previously destroyed while I was incarcerated and I had no means of preventing that destruction. 

As a Christian, I know that the actions of the people who destroyed my life through illegal means will be dealt with on a much grander scale than this Court. But I also feel, as a Christian, that it is because of this flagrant lack of fear of God’s justice in the government officials in this country that we, as a nation, have lost the favor of the Lord. For my parting words, I speak Chronicles 7:14.

“if my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and I will forgive their sin and will heal their land.”

Justice department officials who break the law to convict innocent people should not be protected by Court order.

Judge Glen Conrad’s response was as if he didn’t even hear my statement. He proceeded to order the evidence destroyed. That, in my opinion, makes him a conspirator in the criminal act. I will appeal his decision. If there is a lawyer out there reading this that would like to help, please contact me.

One little tidbit for all you chronic pain patients, in hopes that you understand that you have to get a grasp of the real cause of drug abuse:  In the US Attorney’s presentation describing the medical records in their possession, she said “Medical records of the substance abusers”. Then she corrected herself and said “substance users”.  That should clue you in to what is planned with the new laws, the new DSM5 use of “substance use disorder” that all of you will be considered substance abusers. You should already be aware of that, with the fact that the doctors are peeling you off of your opiates. So if you don’t learn the real cause of drug abuse and start sending it out virally to everyone you know, your future will be your own doing.

 

Vote the bums out campaign … primary outcomes

http://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/azdailysun.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/e/d5/ed53b713-0efc-5d37-b1a4-364fe9f2566e/577b3b13da4c4.image.jpg

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/79/Marco_Rubio,_Official_Portrait,_112th_Congress.jpg

http://californiawomen4women.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/Debbie_Wasserman_Schultz.jpg

cryingeyevote

So far the “vote the bums out” campaign is off to a shaky start… since all three of these “establishment politicians” won their primaries..

I saw yesterday that someone started another WHITE HOUSE PETITION

PLEASE…. don’t reschedule Kratom to schedule I… I expect maybe 1000 people will sign this petition and it will far short of 100% of all other WHITE HOUSE petitions that have been created regarding the denial/treatment of chronic pain.

Who believes that those on THE HILL actually cares about what “the people” want… Congress has a single digit approval rating and 99% of those who run for re-election will get re-elected…  To me, sounds like a VOTE OF APPROVAL in what Congress has done over the last two years.

Progress can only be made if those that are affected … GET OFF THEIR ASSES AND DO SOMETHING … change does not happen without some driving force behind it.

Bye – Bye Kratom… the DEA making medical decisions without data ?

Feds Declare War On Herb Touted As A Solution To Opioid Addiction

Just imagine if more and more chronic pain pts found an alternative to legal opiates… say like a herb like Kratom and MJ… Opiate prescribing would drop… while those suffering with the mental health disease of addictive personality disorder… continues using Heroin and other street drugs and the number of OD’s would continue to increase.  What would the DEA do.. they would be hard pressed continuing to use the  2012 number on opiate prescriptions against the current number of OD’s..  to justify their continue to fight the war on drugs… focusing on prescribers.  Even the media would eventually have to admit that the 46 yr war on drugs was mostly fabricated.  The DEA by making/keeping MJ and Kratom as a schedule I…  places a huge obstacle in any entity doing clinical trials to prove the medical benefit of those two HERBS. It is illegal for someone to interfere in an police investigation.. too bad that it isn’t illegal for law enforcement to interfere with medical research/investigation.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/dea-kratom-schedule-i_us_57c5c263e4b0cdfc5ac98b83?vaz6it3alk5qj8aor

A new DEA push against kratom shows drug warriors haven’t learned from past failures.

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration is moving to place the herbal supplement kratom on its list of Schedule I drugs, effectively banning a naturally occurring psychoactive substance that some say holds promise as a therapy for opioid addiction.

The DEA, in a notice published in the Federal Register this week, said it wants to include two active kratom ingredients in its most restrictive classification of drugs with high potential for abuse and no known medical benefit, signaling that the government considers the plant as dangerous as heroin. The scheduling move would last for two years, with a possible extension of an additional year, and would go into effect at the end of September. 

Kratom is made from the leaves of Mitragyna speciosa, a Southeast Asian tree related to coffee, and has been consumed in Asia for millennia, typically as a tea or powder. The herb contains alkaloids that appear to activate opioid receptors in the brain and reduce pain. Although most opioids have sedative qualities, low to moderate doses of kratom serve as a mild stimulant.

These characteristics have led advocates and some researchers to claim that kratom can be used as a maintenance drug, or a step-down treatment, to help recovering opioid addicts.

But the DEA, in its Federal Register notice, dismisses these applications, seizing on the herb’s addictive potential and declaring that kratom is being “misused” to self-treat chronic pain and opioid withdrawal symptoms.

“Kratom does not have an approved medical use in the United States and has not been studied as a treatment agent in the United States,” reads the notice. “Especially concerning, reports note users have turned to kratom as a replacement for other opioids, such as heroin.”

Alissa Scheller
An assortment of products made from kratom, which the DEA wants to make a Schedule I substance.

The DEA notice shows that prohibition remains a favorite tool of the nation’s drug warriors, despite ample evidence that it doesn’t work. The DEA did not respond to a request for comment.

Susan Ash, founder of the American Kratom Association, a consumer-based nonprofit, shared her personal experience with The Huffington Post earlier this year, describing how the herbal supplement has helped her return to a normal life after a struggle with chronic pain ― and opioid addiction ― due to complications from Lyme disease. Ash said she didn’t hear about the DEA’s intention to place kratom in Schedule I until reports began emerging online Tuesday.

“We really believed that because of the progress medical marijuana has made through the states, that the federal government was going to leave kratom alone and leave it to the states to decide whether it was appropriate to be legal,” Ash said.

Some states have been addressing kratom over the past few years with bans or restrictions on its sale.

The American Kratom Association has advocated for measures that address labeling, marketing, age restrictions and other efforts to crack down on unscrupulous manufacturers who make outlandish medicinal claims or attempt to sell kratom as an opiate equivalent. The group had hoped to continue an active role in ensuring consumers could use kratom safely and responsibly, said Ash.

“Rather than have an emergency scheduling, why not host a summit meeting with all of the groups and organizations and investors that are out there selling this product and say, ‘Hey, these are our concerns. If you don’t clean this up this is what we’re going to do?’” said Ash. “Why not go to the sources that they’re having the problems with?”

The federal government’s decision may be devestating for Americans who have used kratom for pain management and treatment for a variety of other health issues, said Ash. With harsh penalties likely to come with the DEA Schedule I designation, many people will be forced to decide whether to risk the purchase of kratom on the black market, seek legal narcotics associated with addiction and other problems, or attempt to manage without any treatment.

A string of sensationalist news stories and reports of abuse have helped push a narrative that kratom is a dangerous and potentially deadly new recreational substance.

Some of the reports have involved fatalities. But in the majority of those cases, toxicology tests showed that kratom users who died also had signs of abusing other drugs or pre-existing health conditions. In a number of instances, they appear to have taken deceptively marketed products that also contained dangerous synthetic drugs.

 

Prohibition is going to be counter-productive and do more harm than good. Jag Davies, Drug Policy Alliance

 

The DEA notice cites the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s recent decision to declare kratom an “emerging public health threat,” based on calls to poison centers, as well as an increasing number of drug tests detecting kratom.

In the six years from January 2010 to December 2015, the CDC found 660 calls to U.S. poison centers related to kratom. From December 2014 to March 2016, the agency documented 555 positive test results for mitragynine, the psychoactive alkaloid in kratom.

The DEA notice says the trend shows “growing abuse and popularity of these substances.” Ash noted that the numbers are just a tiny portion of the more than 3 million annual calls to poison centers, and the millions of drug tests the CDC surveyed.

The DEA’s report contains confusing language about the substances it wants to ban, repeatedly referring to kratom ingredients mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine as “opioids,” which they are not. Although the compounds do activate opioid receptors, so do some chemicals found in cheese.

Walter C. Prozialeck, a professor of pharmacology at Midwestern University who wrote a comprehensive literature review on kratom for the Journal of the American Osteopathic Association, said he disagrees with the DEA’s characterization.

“Even though the ‘mytragines’ may have some affinity for opioid receptors, their actions are quite different from those of classic opioids, like morphine, hydrocodone, oxycodone, heroin, etc.,” Prozialeck wrote in an email to HuffPost. “After looking at the literature, I would certainly not classify them as classic ‘opioids.’”

Prozialeck described kratom as largely benign in an earlier interview with HuffPost, and said it doesn’t produce much in the way of psychoactive high in low to moderate doses. He called for additional research and cautioned against mixing the drug with other substances ― a concern the DEA notice also raised. But he said kratom doesn’t have a particularly high potential for recreational abuse and agreed with advocates who say the positive effects appear to outweigh the negatives.

There is little disagreement among kratom supporters, drug-policy reformers and some lawmakers on the need for regulation and education.

“These are all things that decades of public health research shows us are necessary,” Jag Davies, director of communications strategy at the Drug Policy Alliance, told HuffPost. “But prohibition is going to be counter-productive and do more harm than good.”

Classifying kratom as a Schedule I substance underscores some of the worst tendencies of U.S. drug policy. For one, plants and naturally occurring herbal supplements are subject to a complex regulatory challenge. Winning Food and Drug Administration approval to sell a synthesized drug typically costs pharmaceutical companies billions. Big Pharma has little incentive to seek approval for plants like kratom, as companies can’t exactly patent leaves that have been around for millions of years.

Opting to place kratom alongside the most dangerous drugs also shows that the nation’s drug enforcement apparatus remains dominated by abstinence-only tactics. Withdrawal symptoms and health effects associated with kratom are minor, compared with heroin or synthetic opioids, for example. By that measure, Davies said that if someone is using kratom as treatment for opioid addiction, that can be considered a step in the right direction.

Even as President Barack Obama and other government leaders increasingly come around to a more nuanced, treatment-centric vision of drug policy, the DEA is showing that old habits die hard.

“It’s kind of shocking that despite all of the progress that’s been made toward treating drugs as a health issue instead of a criminal justice, that still, after all these years, the immediate reaction of politicians and policymakers is to go with knee-jerk prohibition,” said Davies.

Are More ‘Purple Pill’ Lawsuits Around the Corner?

Astra ZenecaAre More ‘Purple Pill’ Lawsuits Around the Corner?

https://bol.bna.com/are-more-purple-pill-lawsuits-around-the-corner/

By Julie A. Steinberg, Bloomberg BNA

AstraZeneca’s “purple pill” Nexium caused an Illinois man’s kidney disease, according to the latest suit in what could be a
new wave of litigation.

The plaintiff George Mullen sued last week in federal court in Brooklyn and accused AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals LP and AstraZeneca LP of failing to warn that Nexium, a proton pump inhibitor (PPI) prescribed for stomach and other digestive problems, could cause kidney damage.

Mullen alleges he developed chronic kidney disease, or gradual loss of kidney function, after taking prescription Nexium for several years.

His attorney Daniel Burke, of Bernstein Liebhard in New York, said his firm has had several hundred inquiries and is investigating the medical records of potential clients. Other firms are also investigating cases, he said.

Burke said he would anticipate an eventual multidistrict litigation, or other type of coordinated proceeding.

At least four other complaints similar to Mullen’s have already been filed in federal court including one by Steven Goodstein, a New Jersey resident.

“AstraZeneca is confident in the safety and efficacy of Nexium and intends to vigorously defend this lawsuit,” the company said in a statement.

In 2013, more than 15 million Americans used prescription PPIs, costing more than $10 billion, Mullen’s suit says.

Doctors prescribe PPIs to treat acid reflux, stomach ulcers and other conditions. The drugs work by inhibiting the secretion of stomach acid.

Hundreds of injury reports associated with Nexium and other PPIs have been submitted to the Food and Drug Administration, Mullen alleges.

But AstraZeneca didn’t inform Mullen or his doctors about this risk, according to the complaint. Instead, they continued to represent that Nexium didn’t pose any risks of kidney injuries, the suit says.

The case is Mullen v. AstraZeneca Pharm. LP, E.D.N.Y., No. 16-04801, filed Aug. 26, 2016.

If we were at WAR.. would this be considered a WAR CRIME… wait a minute we are at WAR… on drugs & pts

For nine years, DEA withholds names of masked agents who violently raided two innocent women. Federal court shrugs.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-watch/wp/2016/08/30/for-nine-years-dea-withholds-names-of-masked-agents-who-violently-raided-two-innocent-women-federal-court-shrugs/?utm_term=.3d86d9ce5edb

A few years ago, I wrote about the raid on Geraldine and Caroline Burley for the Huffington Post:

When Caroline Burley, now 51, first heard the boom around 5:30 on the evening of June 13, [2007] it sounded like it had come from outside her bedroom window. She rushed to investigate, and as she came out of the room, a man with a gun confronted her, threw her into a wall and then hurled her to the floor. A SWAT team had burst through her front door. Wearing only her nightgown, she asked for mercy. She recently had back surgery, she explained. Instead, one officer, then another kept her close to the floor by putting a boot in her back, according to court filings.

Caroline’s mother, Geraldine Burley, was sitting at her computer in the basement when she heard a loud thud overhead, followed by a scream from her daughter and a man’s voice ordering Caroline Burley to the floor. When she ascended the stairs, she too found a gun pointed at her head, and a man ordered her to get on the floor as well. She thought at first that she was being robbed.

Geraldine, now 70, pleaded with the man to let her move to the floor slowly, explaining to him that she’d had both of her knees replaced. Instead, another officer approached, grabbed her by the face, demanded that she “get the [f–––] on the floor,” then threw her into a table. She tumbled to the ground. At that point, she said later in a deposition, everything turned to “a fire, white and ringing in my ear.” Another officer came up from the basement with her grandson, stepping on her knees in the process. She cried out again in pain.

This was part of Operation Eight Mile, a three-day period in 2007 in which drug cops from 21 federal, state and local police agencies conducted hundreds of raids on the famously crime-ridden road. (For all that manpower, the raids didn’t turn up much: 50 ounces of marijuana, 6.5 ounces of cocaine and 19 guns.) The Burleys tried to get the officers’ names and badge numbers to file a complaint. This presented a problem:

According to the Burleys’ accounts, the officers who raided their home were clad in black. Some wore balaclava masks or face shields that hid all but their eyes. Others pulled their hats down low to shield their identities. They had also obscured their names and badge numbers. Once the Burleys’ house had been thoroughly searched, both women asked the officers for their names. After holding an impromptu meeting, the officers told the Burleys that they wouldn’t divulge any information that could identify them individually. Instead, they told the women that they had just been raided by “Team 11.” The women weren’t given a search warrant.

“Team 11″ didn’t actually exist. It was part of a Drug Enforcement Administration squad called “Team 6.” But for the Eight Mile operation, the team was partially split up and reorganized with members of state and local police agencies, then renamed just for that particular operation.

The whole affair was coordinated by the Wayne County Sheriff’s Office. When the Burleys asked the office for the names of the officers who raided their home, the office said it had no record of that raid, directing them instead to the DEA. The DEA told the Burleys that the agency was transitioning to a new administration and couldn’t respond, but that it would eventually get back to them. It never did. The Burleys finally filed a lawsuit in state court, which forced the Wayne County Sheriff’s Department to give them the records of the raid that the office previously said didn’t exist. Included in those records was a DEA report with the names of the agents who participated in the raid.

For their lawsuit, the Burleys sent the named agents questionnaires. The agents filled them out, denying that they ever violated the women’s civil rights. But notably, none of the agents denied that they had participated in the raid.

That all changed during depositions for the lawsuit. In what came as a complete surprise to the Burleys’ attorneys, every agent named in the report denied participating in the raid. Instead, they claimed that “Team 11″ had actually been split into two on that particular day. One team raided the Burleys, while the other raided a home nearby. The agents claimed that the DEA report must have included the names of the wrong half of “Team 11″ by mistake. They were all in the other house.

So the Burleys’ attorneys did what you’d expect them to do: They deposed the other half of the team. You probably know where this is going. All of those agents also claimed to have been in the other house. No one denies that the Burleys were raided. No one denies that one half of “Team 11″ conducted that raid. But both halves of “Team 11″ insist it was the other half that was in in the Burleys’ home. Deputies from the Wayne County Sheriff’s Department were also on the raid, but apparently stood outside the home while the DEA agents did the dirty work. Yet none of the deputies on the Burley raid could remember which DEA agents were with them.

“It’s one of the most bizarre things I’ve ever seen,” Burley attorney Stanley Okoli told me a few years ago. “I asked, ‘which amongst you went to one address?’ and they said they couldn’t remember. So I asked, ‘which amongst you went to the other address?’ and they said they couldn’t remember.”

To file a civil rights lawsuit against law enforcement officers, you need to know the names of the actual officers. The courts won’t allow you to file a civil rights claim against a police or government agency in general. By the time the DEA agents sprang their surprise on the Burleys, the statute of limitations on their lawsuit had nearly run out.

The Burleys filed their lawsuit anyway, hoping they could persuade a court to compel the DEA to name the officers who participated in the raid. It just got worse from there:

In June 2012, U.S. District Court Judge Bernard Friedman first dismissed the Burleys’ claims against Wayne County, then preempted a jury verdict in the trial against the federal agents. He ruled that, given the evidence, no reasonable jury could find in the plaintiffs’ favor, and in addition ordered the Burleys to pay the DEA agents $5,000 to compensate them for court costs.

“These women are destitute,” Okoli told HuffPost. “That was completely discretionary. He didn’t have to do that.” Because the women couldn’t pay, the government moved to garnish their Social Security disability checks to cover the fine.

The following year, a panel from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit upheld the dismissal of the sheriff’s deputies from the lawsuit, but reinstated the claims against the federal agents and vacated the order for the Burleys to pay court costs. The panel found that “the agents’ intent to conceal contributed to the plaintiffs’ impaired ability to identify them.”

The problem: The appeals court did not require the DEA to produce a definite list of names of the agents who participated in the raid. The Burleys’ lawsuit was reinstated, but they were also right back where they started.

Okoli welcomes the Sixth Circuit’s decision. But he said that, in addition to having to go before Friedman — who appeared hostile to his clients’ case — again, the Burleys are at even more of a disadvantage than they were in the first trial. The agents and their attorneys are now aware of inconsistencies the first trial exposed in their stories, and can attempt to explain them away. “We lost that element of surprise,” Okoli said.

Back before Judge Friedman, the Burleys argued the second time around that the burden of producing the real officers’ identity should fall on the officers named in the report, not the Burleys. They cited a case in which the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit had taken that approach in ruling on an unlawful arrest lawsuit. In that case, police in San Francisco arrested a woman at a protest but refused to give their names or badge numbers. In her lawsuit, she named all the officers on the arrest report (in San Francisco, police policy is apparently to name all the officers on the scene in an arrest report). Because neither the officers nor the city would name the officers involved in the arrest, the court shifted the burden to the city to prove that the arrest was lawful.

“This minimal burden shifting forces the police department, which is in the better position to gather information about the arrest, to come forward with some evidence of probable cause. . . . By shifting the burden of production to the defendants, we prevent this exact scenario where police officers can hide behind a shield of anonymity and force plaintiffs to produce evidence that they cannot possibly acquire.”

But the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, of course, has no authority over a district court in the Sixth Circuit. Judge Friedman rejected the burden-shifting argument. So the Burleys had to argue that the police officers named in their lawsuit violated their rights based only on a DEA report that the officers themselves claim was in error. Because the women themselves never saw faces, name tags or badge numbers, it was a hopeless fight. Friedman did at least let this trial go to the jury, but the jury acquitted, finding that the Burleys hadn’t proved that the agents named in their lawsuit were the agents who conducted the raid.

The Burleys appealed again. Last week — nearly nine years after the raid — a panel of Sixth Circuit appellate judges shot them down. Like Friedman, the panel rejected the burden-shifting argument. Here was their reasoning:

Under plaintiffs’ proposal, a law officer who raises an “I wasn’t there defense” can only avoid constitutional liability by mustering evidence of who was there instead, and by implication, who was responsible for the alleged excessive force. In other words, once a plaintiff has put forth some evidence of an officer being present at a raid in which a constitutional violation has allegedly occurred, that officer is presumed to be liable if he claims he was not there, unless he proves who was and who did it.

That’s a fair point. But the Burleys didn’t create this problem; the DEA did. In a criminal context, it makes sense to put the burden of proof on the prosecution. But this is a civil case, and the defendant is basically the government. These women were wrongly raided by federal cops. The women’s inability to name the federal cops involved is due to those agents concealing their identities after the raid, then what was either gross incompetence or — more likely — corruption and cover-up by those federal cops and/or the agency that employs them. The law requires the Burleys to identify the cops by name. The government refuses to do so. The panel is right that this presents a legal conundrum. Someone was going to get a raw deal in this ruling. But why should it be the Burleys?

It’s worth noting that there are some fictions at work here, too. The Burleys are required to identify the police officers individually, but it’s almost certain that if they were identified and found to have violated the Burleys’ constitutional rights, they’d be indemnified by the DEA. Any award would be paid by taxpayers. Treating the officers as individuals requires the plaintiff to find their identities and assign and prove each violation. You can’t simply sue the DEA or your local police agency after a botched raid and say, “My rights were violated by your officers.” It’s not an insignificant task, given that these raids are often done at night and are designed to confuse and disorient their targets. Yet in the rare event that a plaintiff wins, the officers are treated not as individuals, but as agents of the agency that employs them. (This does make it easier for plaintiffs to collect. But the dichotomy is interesting.)

The Sixth Circuit panel did express at least a little sympathy for the Burleys:

We do not condone the behavior of those individuals who perpetrated the alleged excessive force. We are cognizant of the fact that at this juncture our decision leaves plaintiffs without a remedy because all other defendants (state, county, and local) have been dismissed. However, at the second trial, plaintiffs had the opportunity to present evidence as to why they believed these federal defendants participated in the raid and committed excessive force. The jury simply did not credit their evidence when they found to the contrary.

But the reason the Burleys proceeded with those agents is because those were the only names they were given. Not only was time running out for them to find the real names, but there’s also no indication that the DEA would ever have produced them, no matter how long the statute of limitations. (This, of course, assumes that the agents named in the lawsuits were telling the truth about not participating in the raid — not at all a given.)

These kinds of raids are inherently violent, dangerous and volatile. The drug war also operates on dirty information — tips collected from informants, anonymous sources, even rival drug dealers. The rewards for drug cops who bust major drug operations can be significant — prestige, career advancement, seizure of money and property that goes back to the police department. Massive undertakings like Operation Eight Mile are particularly fraught with the potential for mistakes. When you’re conducting hundreds of raids at once, there’s less time to do the necessary follow-up, corroborating investigation and double-checking to make sure there’s probable cause for each raid and that each raid is carried out at the correct address.

It’s critical that there be some pushback to ensure quality control — to give police an incentive to go out of their way to make sure innocents aren’t subjected to these tactics. (I’d argue that these tactics are inappropriate for drug searches in general, but that’s another matter.) The Exclusionary Rule is a (somewhat weak) incentive to make sure that there’s real probable cause and that searches are conducted legally. But that rule doesn’t protect innocent people. The only policy protecting them is a civil rights lawsuit. You could make a good argument that this Sixth Circuit panel just gave police a pretty good template to avoid these sorts of lawsuits, at least in raids involving multiple police agencies: Conceal your identity from everyone, then create a bureaucratic morass that makes it nearly impossible for any potential litigants to figure out who you are.

 

The beef here isn’t only with the Sixth Circuit panel. (As if often the case, from my reading, the ruling was probably correct under the law, although one can envision a legally justifiable ruling for the Burleys as well.) What about the DEA? It’s been nine years now. Why hasn’t the DEA made an effort to identify the agents who raided the Burleys? Why is the agency ducking accountability and denying the Burleys a real day in court? Is the DEA’s official position here that the Burleys are lying about ever being raided? That’s certainly the implication — if none of the “Team 11″ agents admit to participating in the raid, then they’re basically claiming that the raid never happened. What about U.S. Attorney Barbara McQuade? Is she comfortable allowing the DEA to operate in her district this way?

As for the rest of us, are we really ready to just be okay with the idea that masked, heavily armed agents of the government can break down a door, terrify two innocent women, leave without presenting a warrant, their names, their badge numbers or revealing their faces … and get away with it?

The same year the Burleys were raided, the conservative pundit Michael Ledeen put up a short post on the Pajamas Media site that has always stuck with me. (The post is no longer up, but I excerpted it at the time.) A news agency had just released a series of photos about a drug bust in Tehran. Ledeen, who was agitating for war with Iran at the time, wrote:

Terrifying pictures, to be sure. For me, the most revealing thing about them is that the police feel obliged to wear masks while conducting a drug bust in the capital. tells you something about the relationship between the people and the state.

Yes. It certainly does.

Preventing the spread of infections while doing nothing about OD’s ?


Needle exchange coming to Clark County, Ind

http://www.whas11.com/news/local/needle-exchange-coming-to-clark-county-ind-/310897530

This story was covered on all four major TV networks last night in the Louisville, KY metro area.  The story concerns Clark Co Indiana which is south central Indiana on the Ohio river bordering Louisville, KY..   and it is connect to Scott County to the north where about 1.5 yrs ago there was a epidemic of 180+ HIV+, Hep B&C in a small 25,000 pop county Scott County Indiana and their opiate epidemic

True to Indiana’s opiophobic nature… this program is NOT BEING FUNDED BY THE STATE… it is stated in the news piece that it will depend on grant money and volunteers.

To be clear, I am in favor of  a clean needle programs. Of course, this program does nothing about these people suffering from the mental health disease of addictive personality disorder getting “clean opiates”.  There was reports just yesterday that Heroin – 100 miles away in Cincinnati, OH 174 heroin overdoses in 6 days in Cincinnati was being mixed with  carfentanyl which is 10,000 TIMES MORE POTENT THAN MORPHINE and legally used to sedate large animals.

Up until now, the Heroin mixture that has been killing so many has been mixed with acetyl fentanyl which is 25 to 50 times more potent than Morphine.

This clean needle program just may help put a halt to the spread of HIV + and HEP B&C, but will do little/nothing about those who are ODing on street drugs.  Of course, each person with HIV +, HEP B&C has a lifetime healthcare cost of upwards to $750,000 EACH.

Of course, all too many of these substance abuse people are unemployed and all of their medical care is provided by Medicaid…  guess who funds Medicaid ???  TAXPAYERS ???