LAS VEGAS, Nev. – An indictment by a federal grand jury was
unsealed today charging an unlicensed advance nurse practitioner (APRN), two
doctors, and two others for conspiring to distribute buprenorphine, a Schedule
III Controlled Substance, announced United States Attorney Nicholas A.
Trutanich and Special Agent in Charge Aaron C. Rouse for the FBI’s Las Vegas
Division.
Michael Halprin, 68, an unlicensed APRN in Las Vegas,
Nevada; Chad Hall, D.O., 39, of Las Vegas; Ronald Smith, M.D., 50, of Las
Vegas; Janell Olson, 49, of Las Vegas; and Eghomware Igbinovia, a/k/a Jerry
Igbinovia, 44, of Las Vegas, are all charged with conspiracy to possess with
intent to distribute and with distributing buprenorphine, an opioid classified
as a Schedule III controlled substance. Halprin, Hall and Olson are also all
charged with distribution of Valium, a Schedule IV controlled substance. Halprin,
Hall, Smith and Olson are also charged with obtaining a controlled substance by
misrepresentation and Halprin and Hall are charged additionally with
maintaining a drug-involved premises.
“The U.S. Attorney's Office will target and prosecute
doctors who illegally dispenses addictive opioids, thus placing personal greed
above the health and safety of his or her patients,” said US Attorney
Trutanich. “Working in lockstep with our law enforcement partners, we will work
diligently to reduce, and then stamp out, the opioid crisis.”
Halprin and Olson were arrested and will make their initial
appearance in federal court in Melbourne, Florida today. Smith and Igbinovia
were arrested in Las Vegas, Nevada and are scheduled to make their initial
appearance before United States Magistrate Judge Nancy J. Koppe today. Hall is
expected to make his initial appearance in Reno, Nevada on June 21, 2019.
The maximum penalty for maintaining a drug-involved premises
is 20 years in custody and a fine of $500,000. The maximum penalty for
conspiracy to distribute and distributing buprenorphine is 10 years of
imprisonment and a fine of $500,000. The maximum penalty for distributing
Valium is five years imprisonment and a fine of $250,000. The maximum penalty
for obtaining a controlled substance by misrepresentation is four years and a
fine of $250,000.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
while increased therapeutic use of buprenorphine may help reduce prescription
opioid abuse and misuse, nontherapeutic or inappropriate use of buprenorphine
can cause serious and potentially life-threatening effects among children and
adults.
An indictment is merely an allegation and the defendants are
presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a
court of law.
The joint investigation was conducted by the FBI; DEA; and
Nevada State Board of Pharmacy. In 2017, the Department of Justice funded a
dedicated opioid prosecutor to the United States Attorney’s Office for the
District of Nevada. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States
Attorney Nadia Ahmed.
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