Insincerity is the worse kind of hypocrisy ?

dumbpeople

McKesson improves patient outreach with new call center

http://www.drugstorenews.com/article/mckesson-improves-patient-outreach-new-call-center?utm_term=DSN204731&utm_source=MagnetMail&utm_medium=subject&utm_term=Weekend%20Update%3A%20Top%2010%20must-read%20stories%20on%20DSN&utm_content=DSN-NLE-WeekendUpdate-06-13-15

This is one of the three major drug wholesalers that control 80%+ of the prescription medication distribution market… who claims that they are using statistical analysis to make sure that community pharmacies have the controlled meds they need to meet their pt’s needs… but … pts and Pharmacists keep stating that people are being denied their medication because the three major wholesalers have rationed what they can purchased in a particular month. But here is a article about them expanding a service in improve pt compliance with their medications..  I wonder how many chronic pain pts or those with some other subjective disease states… they will be calling… of course,  if the pharmacies are not filling these Rxs because they can’t get the inventory… who is McKesson going to call to increase compliance ?..

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — McKesson Patient Relationship Solutions, a division of McKesson Corporation, on Tuesday announced the expansion of its patient engagement and support capabilities with a second Contact Center near Atlanta, Ga. The new location builds on the capabilities of MPRS’ existing Contact Center at its headquarters in Scottsdale, Ariz. 
 
The expansion is designed to accommodate significant growth in demand for its Behavioral Call Campaign offering, which leverages interactive behavioral conversations with patients to help increase engagement and improve medication adherence. The expansion also supports growth in MPRS’ core co-pay savings programs as well as new innovative platforms to further advance patient adherence.
 
“This expansion is a direct result of the increasing need for our pharmaceutical and medical device manufacturer clients to uniquely connect with their patients through both inbound and outbound conversations to support patient needs,” said Jennifer Richard, director of contact center operations at MPRS. “Our continued growth allows us to leverage our expertise to consistently deliver award-winning customer service to our existing clients. In addition, it supports the implementation of innovative new campaigns that incorporate proven and sustainable patient engagement tactics that deliver positive ROI.”
 
Traditional call centers have primarily provided responses to simple questions from patients about their medications; however, the ability to create lasting behavior change was limited. Recent research commissioned by MPRS showed that patients are less interested in receiving general information about their condition and more interested in personalized communications. Specifically, 86% of patients desired live agent phone support and 83% desired face-to-face pharmacist coaching and support. With dynamic, two-way conversations, McKesson’s Contact Center agents have successfully delivered personalized and targeted messaging that improved the patient experience, medication adherence, and ultimately health outcomes.
 
“The significant growth of our Contact Center capabilities this year demonstrates that pharmaceutical and medical device brands increasingly value a two-way dialogue that is integrated with their patient support strategy,” said Derek Rago, VP/general manager, MPRS. “Leveraging both our co-pay support programs and our proven behavioral coaching platform provides our clients with an integrated brand experience and allows us to support the patient holistically, addressing behavioral as well as cost-related barriers to adherence.”

We only TORTURE the prisoners of the war on drugs ?

http://stand-with-shona.action.drugpolicy.org/?source=1G6ZZZZMZZ7/#primary_form

30 years. That’s how long Shona Banda could spend in prison for her use of medical marijuana.

She’s about to turn herself in to authorities on Monday, and I’m writing to ask for your help.

Thousands of you signed a petition to support Shona last month after I wrote to you about her terrifying story. Shona lives in Kansas, and uses medical marijuana to treat her Crohn’s disease, a chronic condition that causes her debilitating pain. Medical marijuana is the only treatment that relieves her symptoms.

Shona_Banda

Her 11-year-old son was forced to sit through a Drug Abuse Resistance Education (D.A.R.E.) propaganda seminar in school, and was told marijuana had no medical benefit. He spoke up. He told the class his mother used marijuana to treat her debilitating condition, and marijuana helped her. The school called the police.

The police held and interrogated Shona’s son at school. Then they searched Shona’s house, seized her medicine, and took her son away.

Now as she fights to regain custody of her son, the state is bearing down on her with five potential felonies — all because she uses medical marijuana.

This is a horrifying case, and a clear example of drug war insanity. Thousands of people legally consume marijuana in neighboring Colorado every day — yet Shona could not only lose her son but spend 30 years locked up behind bars.

We are continuing to fight for the legal protections that Shona and millions of Americans like her need. But as Shona turns herself in to authorities next week, I’m asking you to stand with her.

Please, send a message of solidarity to Shona today. Let her know that she is not alone.

Stories that change by the day ?

I have known or encountered some healthcare professionals that seems to have stopped learning once they got their diploma and/or license. As if, they had learned everything that they would need to know while they were in school.. Unfortunately, what medical science knows is dwarfed by what it doesn’t know about how the human body functions.

In this particular example, the Rx dept staff either didn’t know about this relative new test that determines if a person is a faster than normal metabolizer of opiates… meaning that they may need higher doses or more frequent doses or BOTH to get the pain relief that a “normal metabolizer” would need… or they just don’t care !

BTW… the extra trip that the Pharmacist wanted this pt to travel to come back another day was 180 MILES round trip…. and seemingly didn’t care if the pt had to make this trip multiple times.

Is lying to a pt considered UNPROFESSIONAL CONDUCT… but the only way that a pt is going to prove being lied to is to video the interaction .. and to file a complaint with the state Board of Pharmacy.

Denial of care by health insurance using “technicalities” to protect their bottom line ?

https://www.change.org/p/connecticut-general-assembly-support-sb-418?utm_source=action_alert&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=327531&alert_id=tpGAUcHhXp_zVJTM9w8348KlVey%2F6C%2BKBx8hOBHgMgEf4EmbWN3bkI%3D
Change.org Trending petition

Steve – There’s a new petition taking off on Change.org, and we think you might be interested in signing it.

Petitioning Connecticut General Assembly
Support SB-418

Petition by Laurie Torres
West Hartford, Connecticut 1,555

Supporters

Sign Laurie’s petition
THE PROBLEM: Under existing Connecticut law, a health insurance company can deny coverage of a potentially life-saving treatment because the law regarding coverage of FDA-approved, off-label drugs is out of date. “Off label” means that a drug originally developed for treatment of one disease has been found to be useful in the treatment of other diseases. Scores of commonly-prescribed drugs are routinely used off label.

EXAMPLES: There are many examples of off-label treatments that are currently used in clinical practice. These are treatments for migraine headaches, multiple sclerosis, cancer, and pain, to name a few, as well as drugs used in patients who are not usually participants in clinical trials, such as children, pregnant women or the elderly. Sometimes these treatments can be approved on appeal to healthcare insurers at great time and effort on the part of physicians, but other times, the treatments are denied, impeding the practice of medicine and putting patients at risk. Did you know, for example, that Tamoxifen was originally developed as a hormone therapy drug but is now commonly used to treat breast cancer. A new version of rituximab, called ocrelizumab, is currently in clinical trials to treat multiple sclerosis, and yet rituximab is routinely denied by healthcare insurers when no other reasonable options exist for patients. Multiple sclerosis patients are also routinely denied access to drugs that are important to treat symptoms, including modafanil for fatigue or lidoderm patches for pain.

THE RESULT: When an insurer uses this obsolete law, they often deny coverage and patients suffer. Patients may end up hospitalized, have to leave employment and may spend much more on healthcare. We believe the best medical care is the most cost effective medical care.

THE SOLUTION: SB-418 will update the old law and close this loophole, allowing physicians, not healthcare insurers, to practice medicine in Connecticut.

DETAILED INFORMATION on SB-418 is available here:
http://www.mstreatmentcenters.org/SupportSB418.pdf

 

We can’t be wrong and you can’t be right

BOME June 2015 Result 2  <— click on link to read the ENTIRE 52 PAGES

What is a licensing Medical Board to do when they have had a “witch hunt” for over 2 yrs against a doctor who had a complaint lodged against him by a former disgruntled employee for excessive opiate prescribing and there has been no pt’s deaths and no real evidence of such a complaint ?  The DEA had investigated the complaint and found no issues… but the Medical Licensing Board and its attorney apparently was interested in making an example of this particular prescriber..

This prescriber had the audacity to accept into his practice pts that had been in another practice that had been “taken out” by the bureaucrats .. and who that prescriber was recently cleared of all accusations…

As has been the case with many bureaucrats.. when they get an opinion about something… they can’t ever admit that they are wrong… often is the case that “saving face” is more important than the truth.

This “witch hunting” attorney… brought forth witnesses in this case.. that were also all licensed by the same bureaucracy and even at least one that was a competitor of the prescriber.  Normally in such situations, experts are from and licensed in other states.. so that there is no chance of being intimidated by the same licensing board asking the questions… that could come after the witness .. if they don’t say what the licensing board wanted to be said… after all… what attorney do you know that hates to lose a case ?

In this particular case, the bureaucrats determined that this prescriber’s medical records on pts were ILLEGIBLE   … they couldn’t read them.. it didn’t matter that the prescriber could read them. You can read the terms of the SIX MONTHS PROBATION given to this prescriber for basically failing to use some commas, dot some “i’s” and cross some “t’s”..

Congratulation to Dr Mark Ibsen for standing up to these self serving bureaucrats and having to deal with some Pharmacists in his community that have been actively denying his pts their needed medications and basically practicing medicine without a license..

How does a pt prove a HIPAA violation without a video ?

A HIPAA violation, a $1.8 million verdict, and three takeaways

http://drugtopics.modernmedicine.com/drug-topics/news/hipaa-violation-18-million-verdict-and-three-takeaways

The second tenet of the APhA Code of Ethics states, “A pharmacist promotes the good of every patient in a caring, compassionate, and confidential manner.” It sounds easy. It evokes an immediate response from each pharmacist and pharmacy technician: “I wouldn’t violate that, no matter what.”

But a pharmacist in Indiana admitted that that’s what she did, when she obtained access to a patient’s confidential information. The records the pharmacist opened were those of the former girlfriend of the pharmacist’s husband. The former girlfriend had a child. She claimed that the pharmacist’s husband was the father. and she was demanding that he pay child support. The pharmacist denied that she gave her husband the patient records, but apparently he knew their contents, as evidenced by e-mails he sent to the former girlfriend.1

The former girlfriend sued the pharmacist and the pharmacy chain. After a jury trial, a verdict for the former girlfriend was entered for $1.8 million. The jury found that the pharmacy chain and the pharmacist were jointly responsible for 80% of the verdict, and the pharmacist’s husband was responsible for the remaining 20%.

Lawsuit and verdict

The pharmacy chain appealed to the Indiana Court of Appeals, saying that it should not be held responsible. The pharmacy’s argument amounted to a demand that the pharmacist alone should be responsible for $1.44 million.

Normally, a company is responsible for the acts of its employees under the legal doctrine of “Respondeat superior” (“Let the master answer”), meaning that the master is responsible for injuries caused by the servant. There are exceptions, however, and these were the basis of the pharmacy chain’s appeal. The pharmacist, the pharmacy argued, was doing something she was forbidden to do by law and company rules.1

The Court of Appeals did not agree with the pharmacy’s argument and upheld the lower court verdict against both the pharmacist and the pharmacy jointly.1 The pharmacy can appeal to the Indiana Supreme Court to reverse this judgment, and we may see a new final chapter.

Lessons to consider

Even before the Indiana Supreme Court gives a final verdict, there are three lessons we should consider.

The first is obvious. Pharmacists and pharmacy technicians are professionals, sworn to uphold their legal and ethical duties. Regardless of external factors and personal need, the patient’s rights must remain paramount. Legally and ethically, a patient’s records may be used only for the benefit of the patient.

Second, a HIPAA violation may amount to malpractice. A violation can be as dangerous and as costly as a misfilled prescription. Under federal law, patients cannot directly sue under HIPAA. There is no “right of private action” by the law. HIPAA can, however, be evidence of the pharmacist’s standard of practice. A violation of HIPAA is negligence and may be used to establish duty. Violation of duty along, with an injury caused by that violation, may amount to malpractice.

Third, if the pharmacy chain prevails on the question of the exception to the employer’s vicarious liability, the pharmacist will owe the entire amount of the verdict. An individual professional liability policy, which is always secondary to the employer’s insurance, may make the difference between a paid judgment and bankruptcy for any pharmacist or technician involved. An individual policy is often called a “just-in-case policy” for a reason.

Could a EPIDEMIC actually be a PANDEMIC of denial of care ?

HHS Secretary: 259 Million Opioid Prescriptions in U.S. in 2012 Outnumbered American Adults

http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/melanie-hunter/hhs-secretary-259-million-opioid-prescriptions-us-2012-outnumbered

Isn’t it amazing how LARGE NUMBERS makes things sound BAD.. but when you break down the numbers.. the picture is much different …

259 million Rxs.. let’s presume that 25% are for acute or intermittent pain. Leaving 195 million Rxs for chronic pain pts.. Proper protocol for treating chronic pain is one long acting and one short acting for breakthru. Then most people will get a 30 days supply at a time. That means that abt 8 million chronic pain pts could get proper pain management using these numbers… There is a estimated 106 million chronic pain pts..  So this GROSS NUMBER OF 259 million would suggest that <10% of chronic pain pts.. get proper pain management therapy with oral opiates. So the epidemic… would seem to be a PANDEMIC of DENIAL OF CARE for chronic pain pts.

(CNSNews.com) – Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Burwell told Congress Wednesday that there were more than 250 million prescriptions for opioid drugs in 2012 – more than the number of adults in the U.S.

“In the year 2012, there were 259 million prescriptions for opioids. That’s more than one for every adult in the country,” Burwell told the House Ways and Means Committee during a hearing about her department’s fiscal year 2016 budget request.

Burwell was responding to Rep. Richard Neal’s (D-Mass.) question regarding opioid addiction.

“The opioid addiction issue is pronounced now across my congressional district, and there are all sorts of stories now that indicate a nationwide trend, and curious about the response of your department, the agencies that you oversee and also to ask specifically about prescription drug misuse, the evidence that you’re coming across on that basis,” Neal said.

“Over 250 million prescriptions in 2012 for opioids,” said Burwell. “So that’s how many prescriptions there were, so that’s more than the number of adults in our country. So that was one prescription for every adult in the country in terms of where we are and the magnitude of the problem.”

In fact, she said, “Opioid and overdose deaths have exceeded the number of deaths from car accidents or any other accidental death,” she said.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “Drug overdose was the leading cause of injury death in 2013. Among people 25 to 64 years old, drug overdose caused more deaths than motor vehicle traffic crashes.”

“There were 43,982 drug overdose deaths in the United States in 2013. Of these, 22,767 (51.8%) were related to prescription drugs. Of the 22,767 deaths relating to prescription drug overdose in 2013, 16,235 (71.3%) involved opioid painkillers,” the CDC said on its website.

Burwell offered three solutions to the problem of opioid overdose. The first solution, she said, is prescribing. Burwell proposed providing new prescribing guidelines for pain and pain medication and the use of “prescription drug monitoring plans,” which exist in almost all 50 states.

Prescription drug monitoring plans “are the means by which a physician has the opportunity to look up and see that a controlled substance was already given to you and control it that way – same thing with pharmacists,” said Burwell.

“Number two is the use of naloxone, which is a very important drug that actually stops death when there is overdose and making sure that first responders have access. That is a very important part of that picture,” she said.

“Number three is the issue of Medicaid-assisted treatment combined with behavior issues and making sure that we do treatment for those who are addicted,” Burwell concluded.

What is the appropriate dose of alcohol to control anxiety & pain in Seniors & disabled ?

Sedated We Stand: Medicare Paid for Nearly 40 Million Tranquilizer Prescriptions in 2013

http://flaglerlive.com/79813/benzodiazepines-medicare-epidemic/

In 2012, Medicare’s massive prescription drug program didn’t spend a penny on popular tranquilizers such as Valium, Xanax and Ativan.

The following year, it doled out more xanax than $377 million for the drugs.

While it might appear that an epidemic of anxiety swept the nation’s Medicare enrollees, the spike actually reflects a failed policy initiative by Congress.

More than a decade ago, when lawmakers created Medicare’s drug program, known as Part D, they decided not to pay for anti-anxiety medications. Some of these drugs, known as benzodiazepines, had been linked to abuse and an increased risk of falls and fractures among the elderly, who make up most of the Medicare population.

But doctors didn’t stop prescribing the drugs to Medicare enrollees. Patients just found other ways to pay for them. When Congress later reversed the payment policy under pressure from patient groups and medical societies,it swiftly became clear that a huge swath of Medicare’s patients were already using the drugs despite the lack of coverage.

In 2013, the year Medicare started covering benzodiazepines, it paid for nearly 40 million prescriptions, a ProPublica analysis of recently released federal data shows. Generic versions of the drugs—alprazolam (Xanax), lorazepam (Ativan) and clonazepam (Klonopin)—were among the top 32 most-prescribed medications in Medicare Part D that year.

Florida, and particularly Miami-Dade County, had more doctors who prescribed large amounts of benzodiazepines than anywhere else in the country. Some 144 Florida doctors wrote at least 2,000 prescriptions for them to Medicare patients, compared to 98 in Puerto Rico and 27 in Alabama, the next highest state.

And it appears these were not new prescriptions.

IMS Health, a healthcare analytics company that tracks drug sales nationwide, logged only a tiny increase in all benzodiazepine prescriptions, including those covered by Medicare, from 2012 to 2013. That probably means Medicare paid mostly for refills of existing prescriptions, not new ones, said Michael Kleinrock, director of research for the IMS Institute.

That millions of seniors are taking Xanax, Ativan and other tranquilizers represents a very real safety concern, said Dr. Brent Forester, a geriatric psychiatrist at Harvard-affiliated McLean Hospital in Belmont, Mass.

The drugs are popular because they are fast-acting—working quickly, for example, to quell debilitating panic attacks. But they can be habit-forming and disorienting and their effects last longer in older patients. For that reason, the American Geriatrics Society discourages their use in seniors for agitation, insomnia or delirium. The group says they may be appropriate to treat seizure disorders, severe anxiety, withdrawal and in end-of-life care.

Forester said he and others who specialize in geriatric psychiatry don’t use benzodiazepines as a “first-, second- or third-line treatment because we see more of the downside than the good side.”

Some of the Florida doctors who ranked among Medicare’s top prescribers of the drugs said any risks were outweighed by their benefits.

Miami psychiatrist Rigoberto Rodriguez ranked high among Medicare prescribers of benzodiazepines, writing 9,900 prescriptions in 2013, and most of his patients were seniors.

Many, he said, are Cuban immigrants who experienced traumas that left them with lingering anxiety, and they have been taking the drugs for years.

Rodriguez readily acknowledged the risks of the drugs for elderly users – recently, researchers found that the longer a person took benzodiazepines, the higher his or her risk of being diagnosed with Alzheimer’s Disease. The drugs’ labels say they are generally for short-term use but many patients take them for years

He said he has been working to reduce his benzodiazepine prescriptions in light of emerging research. He expects that when Medicare releases data for 2014 and 2015, his totals will be lower.

“This is fresh information coming out in the last couple years that are telling us that benzos are probably not good and you should try to avoid them,” Rodriguez said. “I totally agree with that.”

Roberto Hernando, another Miami psychiatrist who wrote high numbers of benzodiazepine prescriptions in 2013, said he intends to review his prescribing after a reporter told him his totals.

“Some people may need it; some people may not,” he said. “You’re bringing to my attention something that I wasn’t even aware of.”

Some geriatric psychiatrists worry that doctors may have turned to the drugs in place of antipsychotic medications to sedate patients with conditions such as dementia. In the past several years, Medicare has pushed to reduce the use of antipsychotics, particularly in nursing homes, because of strong warnings about their risks.

In 2013, Medicare covered more prescriptions for benzodiazepines than for antipsychotics.

“At the end of the day,” Forester said, “in terms of risk, the risk with benzodiazepines seems so much worse to me….There’s significant danger and there’s no spotlight.”

A spokeswoman at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services declined to answer questions about Medicare’s suddenly soaring tab for benzodiazepines.

Psychiatrist Claude Curran of Fall River, Mass. wrote more than 11,700 prescriptions for benzodiazepines (including refills) in 2013, behind only four doctors in Puerto Rico.

He said the drugs worked well for his patients, many of whom are trying to kick addictions to narcotics but struggle with anxiety and depression.

“First of all, they’re reliable,” he said. “Second of all, they’re cheap because they’re all generic…They tickle the brain in the same way alcohol does.”

Without benzodiazepines, he added, patients in recovery often need higher doses of methadone, which carries significant risks of its own.

The vast majority of Curran’s Medicare patients were younger than 65 and qualified for coverage based on a disability. Disabled patients made up about a quarter of Part D’s 35 million enrollees in 2013, but used benzodiazepines disproportionately, accounting for about half of all prescriptions.

A worrisome aspect of the newly released data is that some doctors appear to be prescribing benzodiazepines and narcotic painkillers to the same patients, increasing the risk of misuse and overdose. The drugs, paired together, can depress breathing.

ProPublica also found that this pattern was most common in southeastern states, which struggle with opioid abuse and overdoses. In 2013, 158 doctors in Florida wrote at least 1,000 prescriptions each for opioids and for benzodiazepines, tops in the nation.

Alabama, Kentucky and Tennessee also had unusually high numbers of doctors who often prescribed both narcotics and benzodiazepines. The data does not indicate if the prescriptions were given to the same patients.

Dr. Leonard J. Paulozzi, a medical epidemiologist at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, co-authored an analysis showing that benzodiazepines were involved in about 30 percent of the fatal narcotic overdoses that occurred nationwide in 2010.

He expressed concern that doctors could be pairing these types of drugs because of their  “cumulative depressive effect.”

“It increases the possibility of overdoses,” he said.

When Congress created Medicare’s drug program in 2003, there wasn’t much discussion about whether it should cover benzodiazepines.

They were on a larger list of drugs excluded for coverage, along with barbiturates, fertility drugs, drugs for weight loss and cosmetic purposes. The list mirrored one from a law years earlier allowing states to voluntarily exclude certain drugs from Medicaid programs for the poor. (Medicare now also pays for barbiturates.)

Andrew Sperling, director of federal legislative advocacy for National Alliance on Mental Illness, said it’s unclear why Congress made the exclusions mandatory for Medicare when they had only been voluntary for Medicaid. He believes it was a drafting error.

IMS Health data suggests that while the Medicare ban was in effect, seniors and disabled patients paid for benzodiazepines in other ways. Many paid out of pocket for the relatively inexpensive drugs—some cost less than $10 for a 30-day supply. Some, particularly those with disabilities, qualified for Medicaid, which covers the drugs. Another set of patients chose Medicare Advantage plans that offered the drugs as an added benefit.

Dr. Michael Ong, an associate professor at UCLA, co-authored a 2012 paper concluding that many patients continued using benzodiazepines after Congress banned coverage in Medicare Part D and that some turned to more powerful psychiatric drugs.

“Just mandating something and saying we’re not going to pay for the benzodiazepines is probably not the right type of policy solution to change the behaviors of both the providers who are providing these medications and also the patients who are using them,” Ong said.

Med error here… med error there.. overdose here… overdose there… cost of doing business ?

CVS pharmacy accused of improperly labeling prescription medication, leading to overdose

http://louisianarecord.com/news/269662-cvs-pharmacy-accused-of-improperly-labeling-prescription-medication-leading-to-overdose

GRETNA – A corporate pharmacy is being sued by a Jefferson Parish woman who claims she overdosed on medication that had the instructions on the bottle saying she should take four times the dose her doctor ordered.

Jacque Reeder filed suit against Louisiana CVS Pharmacy LLC, CVS Pharmacy Inc., Thao D. Hoang and Wade M. Gabourel in the 24th Judicial District Court on April 22.

Reeder alleges that on April 24, 2014 she provided a prescription for Lithium Carbonate 300 milligram tablets to the CVS Pharmacy located at 2105 Cleary Ave. in Metairie. The plaintiff contends that while the defendants filled the prescription they provided instructions on the bottle for her to take two pills twice a day for a total of 1200 milligrams per day while her orders from her doctor, Dr. Stephen R. Cochran, instructed her to only take one pill once a day at bedtime. Reeder asserts she followed the faulty instructions CVS provided on the pill bottle resulting in an overdose of Lithium Carbonate.

The plaintiff claims that as  a result of the overdose she has suffered physiological and neurological damage including involuntary body movements, spasms, twitches, dizziness, memory loss, disorientation, insomnia, bodily pain, blurred vision and eye pain.

The defendant is accused of negligence, improperly filling the prescription, improperly filling the dosage on the medicine bottle, failing to verify dosage instructions and improperly labeling the prescription.

An unspecified amount in damages is sought for medical bills, prescription medications, pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of wages and loss of earning capacity.

Reeder is represented by Brad P. Scott of Metairie-based Offner & Scott.

I guess that this DEA agent forgot that he had retired … continued fraudulent behaviors ?

https://youtu.be/dm6xexu_wJY?t=3m32s

Former DEA Agent Accused As Posing As FBI Agent, Fraud

http://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2015/06/12/former-dea-agent-indicted-on-federal-fraud-charges/

RIVERSIDE (CBSLA.com) — A former federal drug agent accused of conspiring with a La Quinta man who posed as a lawyer and ex-prosecutor to swindle victims out of hundreds of thousands of dollars faces federal fraud charges Friday.

David Garcia Herrera, 70, of Torrance was arrested Thursday night at Los Angeles International Airport and is scheduled to be arraigned Friday on charges included in a nine-count federal indictment, alleging wire fraud, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, making false statements on a passport application, aiding and abetting and criminal forfeiture.

His accomplice, Jerome Arthur Whittington, 65, of La Quinta, has been in custody since his indictment in a separate case in June 2014, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. He now faces additional charges stemming from the latest indictment.

In one of the schemes, Whittington posed as a lawyer, and Herrera, who was a real former special agent with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, posed as an FBI agent, prosecutors said. Whittington and Herrera promised the victim they could help him recover losses in fraudulent schemes related to two companies, Pacific Property Assets and Medical Capital Corporation. They claimed they could seize assets from the fraudulent firms if the victim first posted bonds that were purportedly required prior to seizing the assets, prosecutors said.

Whittington told the victim he had obtained a $4 million judgment, and was paid $290,000, some of which he split with Herrera and some of which he used to fund other fraud schemes, according to prosecutors.

In a separate scheme, Whittington allegedly posed as a former federal prosecutor and Herrera as an FBI investigator and offered to help with a victim’s wife’s immigration case. The men were allegedly paid $8,500 for help they never provided.

Whittington was indicted last year for allegedly posing as an attorney and fleecing two victims out of about $165,000 for investments in a phony real estate deal and tech company.

If convicted on the latest indictment, both men face up to 170 years in prison, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office