Articles Tagged with prescriptions

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A woman who was allegedly using approximately 20 aliases is facing many charges after being accused of using the names and credentials of multiple people so she could illegally work jobs in the field of nursing.

On April 5, Pennsylvania State Police troopers performed a traffic stop on a vehicle that reportedly uncovered materials leading them to believe the driver was involved in a variety of criminal acts. According to reports, upon initially interacting with the woman and asking for identification, she provided them with what they learned were three false names. The suspect, who was found to have active warrants in four states, was taken into custody and booked into the Washington County Correctional Facility.

With their suspicions raised, the authorities were granted a warrant to search the woman’s automobile. It was reported that amongst pieces of medical equipment and what looked like medical documents, the driver had bottles of medication that had been prescribed to others, paraphernalia, and assorted IDs in the vehicle. Upon further investigation, they alleged that she fraudulently used the credentials and identity of multiple licensed nurses to work in at least nine facilities.

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A construction worker in Central Florida was accused of stealing personal items, including prescription medication, from a home he was hired to work on.

On March 21, several construction workers were on a property in Alachua that they were hired to work on. While they were there, one of the crew members reportedly asked the owner of the home if he could use the bathroom. The owner told the worker to go ahead and use the facilities.

It was reported that after the worker left the home, he realized he was missing his bandana. He thought he had left it in the house when he used the bathroom, so he asked the man if he could go back inside and check. Again, the owner told him it was okay to do so.

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A woman in New Jersey is facing charges for allegedly using a family member’s name to write prescriptions for patients while reportedly practicing medicine without a license.

Between March 2022 and June 2023, a 62-year-old woman from Toms River, New Jersey, was reportedly working as a physician out of an office at Shore Medical Associates in Ocean County.

According to reports, the woman was not legally licensed to practice medicine, but she allegedly did so during her time at Shores Medical. She was reportedly using the name and valid medical license number of one of her relatives so she could treat patients and write prescriptions during her time at the facility.

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One woman was arrested, and another is being sought in connection with an incident involving a man at a hotel being punched in the face and robbed.

Just before 1:30 AM on January 10, two females were in a room at the Red Roof Inn in LaGrange, Georgia.

According to reports, the women spoke to a man with whom they are familiar and told him to meet them at the hotel room. The man had his cell phone stolen recently by someone they know, and they told him they wanted to speak to him about it.

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An Iowa woman is facing several charges after she allegedly sold prescription drugs to an underage person in Illinois. 

30-year-old Kathy Chanton-Khemphomma is from Davenport, Iowa, which is approximately 50 miles from Kewanee, Illinois. 

On March 22, Chanton-Khemphomma was reportedly interacting with a teenager from Kewanee. 

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A reportedly lonely and intoxicated Waukesha man was incarcerated after

allegedly making several calls to the police department in a short period of time

and asking the dispatchers to get personally acquainted with him.

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An Orange County psychiatrist who has been suspected of authorizing prescriptions for narcotics to people who were allegedly not in need of them for health reasons has declared that he is innocent of the charges.

Westminster resident Dr. Robert Tinoco Perez is a 57-year-old psychiatrist with a practice that operates out of an office in Santa Ana.

After an investigation by the DEA and the Costa Mesa Police Department, Perez has been accused of using his the office that works out of as a way to profit off of selling prescriptions for opioids, amphetamines, and benzodiazepines.

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