Dayton Daily News

Nurses face drug charges involve county patients

In unrelated cases, 3 accused of stealing opioids for own use.

- By Lawrence Budd Staff Writer

Three nurses indicted LEBANON — this week in Warren County are accused of stealing opioids from patients for their own use, according to authoritie­s.

Toni Martin, 34, of Middletown, Allyson Vazquez, 53, of Franklin, and Rose Leonhardt, 43, of Miamisburg, are all charged in Warren County Common Pleas Court with theft of drugs and illegal processing of drug documents.

“Unfortunat­ely, it’s not an uncommon situation,” Warren County Prosecutor David Fornshell said.

The cases are u nr e lated, although the product of investigat­ion by the same detective.

In each case, the nurses will face potential sanctions that could include the loss of their nursing licenses through the Ohio Board of Nursing. All three are accused of taking patients’ painkiller­s and using themselves, according to the prosecutor.

In Leonhardt’s case, “investigat­ors believe she was using and selling,” Fornshell said.

Alt h ough charged with fourth-degree felonies, none of them was in jail this week, and Fornshell said they were unlikely to go to prison.

Instead, Fornshell said nurses in such cases typically wind up in drug treatment programs, facing the potential end to their careers.

Martin, Vazquez and Leonhardt are scheduled for arraignmen­t on Dec. 7 in Warren County Common Pleas Court.

None had retained lawyers, according to court records. They could not be reached for comment.

The cases were all presented to the Warren County grand jury with evidence gathered by Susan Lloyd, a detective with the Warren County Drug Task Force assigned from the county sheriff ’s office and who specialize­s in “pharmaceut­ical diversion” cases.

None of the three charged was still working at the health care facilities where they were working at the time of the alleged thefts, according to the prosecutor.

Fornshell said Martin’s status was unknown. Vazquez resigned after being contacted about the missing drugs, while Leonhardt is alleged to have left work with records pertaining to her case.

“She left and she never came back,” Fornshell said.

Martin, while working as a nurse at the Cedarview Nursing Home in Lebanon, is accused of theft of Hydrocodon­e on Aug. 23.

“She was literally pocketing them,” Fornshell alleged.

Three counts of illegal processing of drug documents allege she falsely reported administer­ing the drugs.

“The patients didn’t get their medication­s,” the prosecutor said.

Video and questions about the documentat­ion are to be used as evidence in the case.

Also in August, Vazquez is alleged to have stolen Hydrocodon­e, Methadone and Oxycodone and falsified records while working as a nurse at the Carlisle Health Manor in Carlisle.

“She was doing it on a daily basis,” Fornshell said.

Vazquez faces 11 counts each of theft of drugs and illegal processing of drug documents. The charges involve eight victims, but the investigat­ion involved “a few dozen” patients and a longer time period, according to the prosecutor.

Vazquez allegedly documented “future applicatio­ns,” then took the drugs, Fornshell said.

Leonhardt was working at Hillspring health care facility in Springboro when she was allegedly spotted in September on video, taking packs of Oxycodone and Hydrocodon­e, according to Lloyd’s investigat­ion.

To cover up the thefts, Leonhardt is alleged to have taken the records of two patients.

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