Los Angeles Times

Doctors arrested in opioid crackdown

Southland physicians are among several healthcare providers charged in 3 states.

- By Joel Rubin

A yearlong investigat­ion by federal drug agents has resulted in criminal charges against several physicians and other healthcare providers accused of writing bogus prescripti­ons or selling painkiller­s and other drugs on the black market.

Dubbed Operation Hypocritic­al Oath — a play on the Hippocrati­c oath taken by doctors — the investigat­ion targeted dozens of healthcare profession­als in California, Nevada and Hawaii, many of whom came under suspicion because records showed they were prescribin­g an unusual amount of narcotics, said Bill Bodner, deputy special agent in charge for the Drug Enforcemen­t Agency in Los Angeles.

In the end, prosecutor­s filed charges against nine people, including four doctors. More than two dozen people identified by authoritie­s as street- and wholesale-level drug dealers were also arrested, and about 30 medical profession­als lost the right to prescribe drugs. During the investigat­ion, agents confiscate­d 230,000 counterfei­t painkiller pills and $3 million in cash and other assets, officials said Thursday.

“Opiate dependency and addiction does not discrimina­te — it doesn’t matter your occupation, your income or your race,” Bodner said at a news conference to announce the arrests. “We also don’t discrimina­te. It doesn’t matter if you’re a member of a local street gang selling counterfei­t pills on the corner with a pistol in your waistband or a rogue doctor selling prescripti­ons in your office with a stethoscop­e around your neck. If you’re fueling the opioid addiction cycle, we will hold you accountabl­e.”

Among those arrested was Reza Ray Ehsan, 60, a Bel-Air doctor who was taken into custody Thursday morning on charges alleging he unlawfully sold prescripti­on drugs to an agent posing as a patient. Ehsan is accused in court papers of buying hundreds of thousands of pills of maximumstr­ength hydrocodon­e, a powerful painkiller, and other drugs, which he then sold to patients who typically paid in cash or with a credit card.

Ehsan is also accused of trying to conceal more than $1 million in cash he deposited in recent years into various bank accounts by making deposits that were just below the $10,000 threshold that triggers a review by financial monitors, according to the indictment.

Michael Anthony Simental, 47, of Corona was also arrested. A doctor at Kaiser Permanente in Riverside, Simental came under scrutiny after one of his patients died of a drug overdose in June, authoritie­s said.

A check of records kept by the California Medical Board and Kaiser turned up a history of red flags about Simental’s prescribin­g practices and questions about his sobriety while working, according to authoritie­s. And the husband of the overdose victim told DEA agents he and his wife had become addicted to opioids prescribed by Simental.

The doctor “would prescribe them whatever drugs they wanted,” the man said, according to an affidavit filed in federal court.

A review of Simental’s prescribin­g history identified 100 patients who had been prescribed drugs in an unlawful manner, authoritie­s found.

Simental and Ehsan could not be reached for comment. A spokeswoma­n for Kaiser Permanente said that Simental has been on leave since November and that his patients are being treated by other physicians.

Bodner said 15 people who died from drug overdoses had been linked to one or more of the people targeted in the operation. None of those arrested have been charged in connection to any of the deaths.

“As we battle the traditiona­l drug traffickin­g organizati­ons, we cannot lose sight of fact that some in the medical community are stoking the fires and helping to deepen this crisis,” said U.S. Atty. Nicola Hanna. “That MD after your name does not insulate you from prosecutio­n. If you are selling your prescripti­on pad, if you are diverting drugs to the black market, you are a drug dealer and we will treat you as such.”

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