Walmart Will Not be Criminally Indicted for Prescribing Practices
Walmart Will Not be Criminally Indicted for Prescribing Practices
A prosecution team consisting of Joe Brown, the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Texas, Heather Ratton who had spent the majority of her career prosecuting drug cartels, and others, presented a case in Washington in October 2019 against Walmart pharmacies, claiming they had been dispensing opioids tied to prescriptions from known pill mills. They had done a thorough investigation of the chain's prescribing practices and thought they had enough to move in forward, revealing evidence they’d gathered to acting DEA administrator, Uttam Dhillon.The team found fatal overdoses had occurred in the state due to Walmart’s practices, and the pharmacists who dispensed those opioids had reported to corporate office they did not want to fill suspicious orders, yet nothing was done to stop it. Even as Kroger, Rite Aid, CVS, Walgreens and Target started to refuse the scripts, Walmart continued dispensing.Investigators touted physical records proving Walmart pharmacists all over the country were asking corporate to listen to concerns over prescribing practices without success. One Walmart employee said a Florida doctor had sent a “list of patients from Kentucky that have been visiting pharmacies in all of central Wisconsin.” The team discovered the physician had actually sent patients to thirty other states as well. And, yet, a compliance manager told an executive in an email, “Walmart’s focus should be on driving sales.”After the presentation, Dhillon reportedly responded by asking “Why aren’t we talking about this as a criminal case?” So, that’s what they tried to do.
Photo by Patrick Tomasso on Unsplash
Sources:
Trump Officials Blocked Walmart Criminal Indictment for Opioid Prescriptions, Report SaysWalmart Was Almost Charged Criminally Over Opioids. Trump Appointees Killed the Indictment.Trump asks Walmart, Target and other retail giants to help tackle the coronavirus crisis
About Sara E. Teller
Sara is a credited freelance writer, editor, contributor, and essayist, as well as a novelist and poet with nearly twenty years of experience. A seasoned publishing professional, she's worked for newspapers, magazines and book publishers in content digitization, editorial, acquisitions and intellectual property. Sara has been an invited speaker at a Careers in Publishing & Authorship event at Michigan State University and a Reading and Writing Instructor at Sylvan Learning Center. She has an MBA degree with a concentration in Marketing and an MA in Clinical Mental Health Counseling, graduating with a 4.2/4.0 GPA. She is also a member of Chi Sigma Iota and a 2020 recipient of the Donald D. Davis scholarship recognizing social responsibility. Sara is certified in children's book writing, HTML coding and social media marketing. Her fifth book, PTSD: Healing from the Inside Out, was released in September 2019 and is available on Amazon. You can find her others books there, too, including Narcissistic Abuse: A Survival Guide, released in December 2017.