Feel My Pain

A reporter goes after the online drug business and gets wasted

Editor's note: This story originally was published online at www.houstonpress.com on Wednesday, June 7. We ran the story earlier than we'd planned because of sudden interest on the part of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. This story was undertaken in part to show the lengths to which some chronic pain sufferers are driven to obtain adequate treatment and relief. Originally another component of our story was to have been to have the drugs tested for purity. Neither the reporter nor theHouston Press intended to be a subject of this report, but events, like our drugs, got away from us.

The pills came while I was out sick.

Sixty-one tablets of generic Vicodin, a prescription painkiller, came to the Houston Press office from a Florida pharmacy. It was my first successful buy in several weeks of investigating the online drug market. To see how easy it would be for prescription drugs to get into the wrong hands, I told a Costa Rican-based online referral service that I had back problems. That story -- meant to show how an addict or a minor could get these drugs -- came back to bite me in the ass. Not just a nibble. We're talking saber-toothed fucking tiger.

The morning of June 7, two agents of the Drug Enforcement Administration walked into the Houston Pressoffice and confiscated my drugs.

For weeks, I had tried to explain to various DEA offices that I was investigating the online prescription drug market. I called DEA offices across the country at every step of the way: before I bought drugs, after I bought drugs and when I intended to buy more drugs. This was the first time anyone with the DEA had expressed interest.

For the last few years, print and broadcast journalists have run investigations on these kinds of sites. Some shed insight, some have ignored part of the reason they exist in the first place: Study after medical study has shown that, in the United States, chronic pain is undertreated. The American Medical Association, the American Academy of Pain, the American Pain Institute and countless other medical organizations blame a large part of this on the Drug Enforcement Administration.

In January 2005 the National Association of Attorneys General sent an open letter to DEA Administrator Karen Tandy, requesting a visit to discuss the DEA's interest in doctors prescribing opiate-based painkillers. Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott did not sign the letter.

"We hope that together we can find ways to prevent abuse and diversion without infringing on the legitimate practice of medicine," the letter stated. It was signed by 31 attorneys general.

The letter addressed concern that doctors were reluctant to adequately treat patients with chronic pain out of fear of DEA interference. The DEA has arrested dozens of doctors in the past five years for what they say was illegal dispensing of pain medication prescriptions.

This of course leaves legitimate chronic pain sufferers in the lurch. Often immobilized by pain, they feel demonized by law enforcement and abandoned by the health care industry.

By 1999 technology had come to the rescue. Online companies offered help: For a fee, they could hook up a prospective patient with a physician for a telephone consultation. If the doctor believed there was a legitimate complaint, he or she would forward a prescription to a contracting pharmacy, and the meds would be delivered overnight.

Federal and state authorities took interest. Convinced that most of these sites were pill mills approving scrips for any life-form in possession of a credit card, the DEA ran sting operations to investigate where the drugs came from.

However, the sites vary wildly in their standards, as I found out when I undertook my own investigation in May. I wanted to see if it was really as easy as the DEA claimed to get narcotics, and if customers were really getting what they paid for.

I started by calling the DEA's national press office. I wanted to tell them that I was investigating the online drug market and would be making buys. I encountered a brisk woman who simply could not be bothered. She informed me that the national DEA press office was for major media, not local outfits. She told me to contact the local office.

So I did. I called the local public information officer in Houston, and was told they would only respond to questions in writing. I wanted to chat about the whole thing first, but the DEA does not chat. So I started my research.


First things first: While the DEA is concerned about so-called rogue pharmacies that ship drugs directly to the customer, these businesses are in the minority.

Searching for pharmacies, I found www.offshore-pharma.com. Without faxing any records or talking to a doctor on the phone, I ordered generic Xanax for $28 on May 12. My money went to a bank in Panama; I was told my drugs were coming from Pakistan. I have yet to receive them.

However, I did receive an anabolic steroid, Sustanon, from another pharmacy. That cost $46 with shipping, and showed up in my post office box straight from Greece.

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  • 09/28/2011 1:02:00 AM

    buy oxycontin online. Americans seem to believe that if you cant find a medication product for the right price in the United States that you will find it in another country. The thought of being able to purchase any medication not widely distributed in the United States became popular when senior citizens who could no longer afford their medication without health insurance programs like Medical, Medicaid, Medicare and many other government subsidized health programs began traveling to Tijuana , Mexico and British Columbia, Canada seeking out the lower priced and usually un-taxed medications. For a while it was safe to buy medication from Canadian distributors and Mexican pharmacies. When the popularity of Americans buying medication increased various criminal organizations became involved Canadian Russian crime Families as well as the Italian Mafia and Sinaloa Drug Cartels. the problem that arose from these cartels making medication is the fact that they were not genuine nor were they formulated with FDA approved ingredients, many were just made to look like the drug and had absolutely no pharmacological effects. read more at doctor griffith's blog http://goo.gl/bAfHR . ..

  • 08/19/2011 9:47:00 PM

    You ask if 80 mg of OxyContin (oxycodone) or similar pain medication for treatment of fibromyalgia is considered overprescribing by the medical community? oxycoten statistic references Iceking http://drugbuyersforum.org This is a very difficult question to answer since prescribing pain medication is much more of an art than a science. There are many factors that must be taken into account, all of which are more important than the actual disease the patient is suffering (in this case, fibromyalgia). For instance, it is more important to determine the level of pain experienced by the patient and to determine if the patient has any opiod tolerance. A good physician will utilize a well validated pain scale

  • Thomas 01/08/2010 9:44:00 AM

    Hi man, crazy article mate. Any followUp?

  • P 02/16/2008 8:38:00 AM

    Did that guy really site Geraldo? Hilarious. Excellent story, as proven by the DEA's reaction. If a story of this nature hadn't made waves, it probably wouldn't be credible (or at least not worth reading)...

  • bill 03/06/2007 5:28:00 PM

    you are a tool. what was the point of the article? yeah, your heart might be in the right place, but your head is completely up your ass. What did you accomplish throughout this saga, other than to embarass yourself with your desperate theatrics? Perhaps you were seeking to bring light to the deplorable situation regarding chronic pain patients. In doing so however, you made a mockery of individuals, businesses, our government, and the media. Way to go! Please step aside and leave the real "investigative journalism" to people more talented and insightful than yourself, like Geraldo. Now there's a paragon of cutting-edge journalism! i'm glad that screw-heads like you are confined to places like texas, where you can only bother other self-important, over-eager assholes.

 

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