Los Angeles Times

Woman is convicted in drug scheme

Physician assistant, 32, faces up to 140 years in federal prison for traffickin­g narcotics.

- By Hannah Fry hannah.fry@latimes.com Fry writes for Times Community News.

A physician assistant who worked at a Fountain Valley medical clinic has been convicted of federal drug traffickin­g charges for writing narcotics prescripti­ons without a medical purpose.

A federal jury on Monday found Kaitlyn Phuong Nguyen, 32, guilty of 10 felony counts related to illegal distributi­on of oxycodone, methadone and alprazolam.

During the trial, jurors heard evidence that four people died of drug overdoses after obtaining prescripti­ons from Nguyen, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.

Dr. Victor Boon Huat Siew, 66, who ran the clinic, was sentenced last week to nearly six years in prison after pleading guilty to two counts of illegal distributi­on of a controlled substance by a practition­er.

The doctor admitted to illegally prescribin­g oxycodone, methadone and alprazolam from his clinic from 2009 through 2015, prosecutor­s said.

Physician assistant Thanh Nha Pham, 31, who also worked at the clinic, pleaded guilty in January to conspiracy to distribute controlled substances. Pham is scheduled to be sentenced Jan. 29.

Prosecutor­s said Siew, Pham and Nguyen issued prescripti­ons without a medical purpose in exchange for cash and insurance payments, despite “red flags” in many of the patients’ files that indicated they were abusing pain medication.

Nguyen, who worked at the clinic in 2012, performed “cursory examinatio­ns” on patients before prescribin­g the drugs, prosecutor­s said.

She faces a maximum of 140 years in federal prison at her sentencing Jan. 22.

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