The Mercury News Weekend

Ex-doctor gets four years for involuntar­y manslaught­er

- By Jason Green jason.green@bayareanew­sgroup.com

SAN JOSE — A former doctor who ran a pain management clinic out of Los Gatos has been sentenced to four years in prison for operating a pill mill and the involuntar­y manslaught­er of a patient fresh out of rehab, according to the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office.

Jasna Mrdjen, 74, of Mountain View, pleaded no contest in September to nine counts of prescribin­g a controlled substance to persons without a legitimate medical purpose, two counts of dispensing a controlled substance to an addict, one count of conspiracy and one count of involuntar­y manslaught­er for the death of 29year-old Steven English.

Handed down late last week, the prison sentence caps what is believed to be the Bay Area’s first case in decades in which prosecutor­s were seeking to convict a physician of manslaught­er for prescribin­g narcotics to a struggling addict who overdosed and died.

Authoritie­s launched an investigat­ion in 2011 after a patient was arrested for selling drugs prescribed by Mrdjen.

The investigat­ion showed Mrdjen was writing excessive prescripti­ons for Oxycodone and Percocet, pros- ecutors said. In one case, she authorized high doses of drugs for an undercover officer posing as a patient with foot pain without even asking her to remove her shoe.

Other patients also were arrested for reselling drugs prescribed by Mrdjen for a profit, prosecutor­s said.

On Jan. 3, 2012, Mrdjen prescribed Oxycodone, Flexeril and Clonazepam to English, who had recently returned from rehab, prosecutor­s said. He was found dead by his parents two weeks later at their home in Truckee. The cause of death was ruled as “multiple drug ingestion.”

Mrdjen also altered English’s patient file and forged his signature after his death, prosecutor­s said.

“I hope this tragedy serves to warn others of the depth and danger of the prescripti­on drug abuse epidemic and reminds those who are tempted to overprescr­ibe powerful narcotics to value their patients’ lives over profits,” Deputy District Attorney Dana Veazey said.

Mrdjen’s lawyer, Guyton Jinkerson, said his client’s sentence was stayed. She was placed on conditiona­l release and given credit for time served while in jail from May 2012 to November 2012 and while she was on electronic monitoring from last September to May 19.

“She is not presently incarcerat­ed and will not be as long as she obeys all laws,” he said.

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