The Commercial Appeal

Memphis psychiatri­st sentenced to 4 years

- Corinne S Kennedy Memphis Commercial Appeal USA TODAY NETWORK – TENNESSEE

A Memphis psychiatri­st was sentenced to four years in prison and three years of supervised release for unlawfully distributi­ng opioids.

Richard Farmer, 83, was found guilty earlier this year for three counts of distributi­on of controlled substances outside the scope of profession­al practice and without a legitimate medical purpose.

U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Tennessee D. Michael Dunavant's office announced the sentencing Friday and Dunavant called opioid abuse "an insidious epidemic created in large part by the over-prescribin­g and diversion of potent opioids."

“This sentence demonstrat­es our ability and resolve to aggressive­ly prosecute and hold accountabl­e any medical personnel who misuse their positions of trust to exploit the very people coming to them for help," he said in a news release.

Farmer, who had a practice in East Memphis, was charged in 2019 as part of the first Appalachia­n Regional Prescripti­on Opioid Strike Force Takedown. His conviction was the first guilty trial verdict for the strike force.

Evidence presented at his trial showed that between July 2016 and January 2019, Farmer prescribed over 1,200 pills to three sisters he had ongoing sexual contact with. Farmer kept limited patient files for the three women also prescribed opioids to friends of the three women without requiring medical evaluation­s.

Special Agent in Charge Todd Scott of the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion's Louisville Division said the DEA was committed to prosecutin­g doctors who "exploit the week and put greed above patient care."

“Doctors who prey on those who suffer from the disease of addiction are no better than street-corner drug dealers,” he said.

Acting Assistant Attorney General Brian Rabbitt of the Justice Department's Criminal Division said the department was "committed to ensuring that physicians who abuse their power to promote and prolong drug addiction for their own benefit are punished accordingl­y."

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