Los Angeles Times

Organized pharmacy thefts alleged

DEA investigat­es 177 cases of burglary or damage in L.A. area.

- By Kevin Rector

At least 177 pharmacies were burglarize­d or damaged during recent unrest in the Los Angeles area, disrupting some residents’ access to medication and raising concerns that the stolen drugs will be resold on the street.

Local and federal law enforcemen­t officials believe organized groups targeted the businesses because they stock prescripti­on drugs, which are easy to carry off in large amounts and can be resold for a high profit on the street. Officials said the

groups took advantage of the peaceful protests and were not connected to them.

The U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion totted up 177 pharmacies burglarize­d or damaged in Los Angeles and Riverside counties, agency officials said. Two pharmacies — one in Huntington Park and one in Van Nuys — were destroyed by fire.

The DEA also has received 54 reports from pharmacies in the two counties of more than $534,000 in thefts and damage. Many other pharmacies in the region “are still in the process of taking inventory and will report their losses in the future,” the DEA said.

Such reports are mandated when licensed pharmacies lose significan­t amounts of controlled substances, like prescripti­on opioids. Such medication­s have helped fuel the nation’s deadly opioid epidemic.

The DEA said it was working with the California State Board of Pharmacy and local law enforcemen­t agencies to investigat­e the thefts.

Los Angeles Police Chief Michel Moore said federal agents told him that the pharmacies were intentiona­lly targeted.

The Board of Pharmacy issued a statement this month advising pharmacies in “impacted areas” to board up their buildings to limit damage and “prevent drug losses,” and to move inventory and sensitive medical records to safer locations. It also advised them to “inventory all dangerous drugs and devices to identify any losses.”

The board also said pharmacies should carefully check drugs that were in areas that were broken into but were left behind by burglars to be sure they were not tampered with.

It noted that pharmacies were required to report losses to it and the DEA and said security videos should be saved for the police and the DEA.

As for patients whose pharmacies were closed as a result of the unrest, Department of Consumer Affairs spokeswoma­n Veronica Harms said the pharmacy board recommende­d that they reach out to have their prescripti­ons sent to another pharmacy to be filled or ask their provider whether they could receive their medicines another way.

As a rule, she said, patients should keep a list of their medical contacts and current medication­s in the event of an emergency.

CVS, a pharmacy chain with a large presence in the region, said it had at least 10 store closures in Los Angeles and some damage. Other stores were temporaril­y closed “as a precaution to keep our employees safe,” said Amy Thibault, a company spokeswoma­n.

Customers whose pharmacies were closed were temporaril­y rerouted to other stores nearby, Thibault said. As of this week, only one CVS store, in the 1300 block of South La Brea Avenue, remained closed. Reopening is expected next month after repairs are completed.

“Each closed pharmacy’s phone system has been rerouted to a nearby CVS Pharmacy that is open so all patients will continue to have access to pharmacy care,” Thibault said.

In 2015, nearly 30 pharmacies in Baltimore were broken into during unrest following the death of Freddie Gray from injuries suffered in police custody.

Law enforcemen­t in Baltimore also believed then that organized groups were responsibl­e and said the stolen drugs were eventually sold off in open-air drug markets in the city.

The DEA investigat­ed those incidents as well. It initially calculated 175,000 drug doses had been stolen but later upped that count to nearly 315,000 doses — more than 40% of which were powerful opioids including fentanyl, methadone and oxycodone.

Harms said pharmacies in Los Angeles would have to conduct their own audits to determine their losses individual­ly before reporting those figures to the DEA.

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? POLICE said organized groups not connected with protesters targeted pharmacies amid unrest because prescripti­on drugs are easily sold on the black market.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times POLICE said organized groups not connected with protesters targeted pharmacies amid unrest because prescripti­on drugs are easily sold on the black market.
 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? THE DEA has received 54 reports from L.A.-area pharmacies of more than $534,000 in thefts and damage.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times THE DEA has received 54 reports from L.A.-area pharmacies of more than $534,000 in thefts and damage.

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