Ohio prosecutors file charges against opioid distributor Miami-Luken

pharmafile | July 22, 2019 | News story | Sales and Marketing |  US, USA, West Virginia, criminal case, opioid crisis, opioids 

Federal prosecutors in Cincinnati have filed criminal charges against opioid distributor Miami-Luken, and four others, over the role they played in the opioid crisis in the United States.

Two former Miami-Luken executives and two pharmacists have been charged with fuelling the opioid crisis and flooding small towns in Appalachia with huge quantities of opioid drugs.

The charges comes as the second set of criminal charges against a wholesaler over the role it played in supplying  opioid painkillers and fuelling the opioid crisis which has killed hundreds of thousands in the US.

Advertisement

Former Miami-Luken President Anthony Rattini, former compliance officer James Barlay and two West Virginia pharmacists Samuel Ballengee and Devonna Miller-West were charged with conspiring to distribute controlled substances.

The use of criminal charges represents a shift in the way that those who participated in the opioid crisis are being held to account.

The case comes after Miami-Luken acknowledged they had sent 3.7 million hydrocodone pills to the town of Kermit, West Virginia between 2005 and 2011. Kermit has a population of around 380 people.

Miami-Luken supplied drugs to 200 pharmacies in Ohio, West Virginia, Indiana and Tennessee generating $173 million in sales each year.

Prosecutors say Miami-Luken executives ignored obvious signs of abuse as they distributed 2.3 million oxycodone pills and 2.6 million hydrocodone pills to Miller-West’s pharmacy in Oceana, West Virginia. According to the Guardian Miller West’s Westside pharmacy, which was willing to prescribe opioids to anyone willing to pay, brought in customers from hundreds of miles away.  

The Ohio-based firm also sent 6.4 million pills Samuel Ballengee’s Tug Valley Pharmacy in the West Virginia town of Williamson, even after being advised by the DEA of their responsibilities as a wholesaler to ensure the drugs were not being diverted.

Each defendant is charged with conspiring to illegally distribute controlled substances, a crime punishable by up to 20 years in prison.

Louis Goss

Related Content

Sharp invests $100m in US and EU manufacturing and packaging facilities

Sharp Services, a pharmaceutical packaging and sterile manufacturing specialist, has announced investments totalling $100m across …

clinical_trials_2

Moderna doses first US patient in phase 1 trial of mRNA-4106 for solid tumours

The START Center for Cancer Research has dosed the first US participant in Moderna’s phase …

handshake

Strategic alliance announced between Recipharm and Exela

Recipharm and Exela have announced that they have entered into an exclusive strategic alliance. The …

The Gateway to Local Adoption Series

Latest content