South Florida doctor sentenced to eight years in prison for conspiring to illegally distribute oxycodone
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  • South Florida doctor sentenced to eight years in prison for conspiring to illegally distribute oxycodone

South Florida doctor sentenced to eight years in prison for conspiring to illegally distribute oxycodone

Diciembre 17, 2019
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For Immediate Release
Contact:
Phone Number: (571) 362-3364 - Option 5

MIAMI - Dr. Rodolfo Gonzalez Garcia, 65, of Weston, Florida, was sentenced yesterday to eight years in prison, after previously pleading guilty to conspiring to dispense a controlled substance, Oxycodone. 

According to the court record, including the agreed upon factual proffers in support of the defendants’ guilty pleas, from November 2016, through and including September 2018, Dr. Rodolfo Gonzalez Garcia, his wife Arlene Gonzalez, 59, also of Weston; Annie Suarez- Gonzalez, 35, of Chicago, Illinois; and Fidel Marrero-Castellanos, 57, of Hialeah, Florida; and others, used West Medical Office, Inc. located in Hialeah (later named West Pines Medical Office) for illicit purposes (Case No. 19cr20055).  During this time period, the defendants agreed to prescribe purported patients that had been brought to the office by patient recruiters, prescriptions for Oxycodone.  They also agreed that patient recruiters could merely bring lists containing the names of purported patients directly to West Medical Office, instead of requiring the patients’ presence. 

In either scenario, the defendants agreed that the patient or patient recruiters would pay West Medical Office a certain cash amount per patient present in the office or per patient name on a list, in exchange for an Oxycodone prescription. Sometimes, these agreements—money for prescriptions—were directly with the purported patient.  The defendants knew that these patients were Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries, and that filling those prescriptions at pharmacies would result in the submission of claims to Medicare and Medicaid for payment of those prescriptions. 

The defendants played various roles in the conspiracy. Marrero-Castellanos acted as a patient recruiter, bringing lists and paying cash in exchange for a prescription for the names on his list.  Marrero-Castellanos took the patients with their prescriptions to pharmacies, including Medicare Part D participating pharmacies, to fill the aforementioned prescriptions.  When he got the prescriptions based on just a patient list, he provided the aforementioned prescriptions to pharmacies, including Medicare Part D participating pharmacies.  Sometimes, the patients went to the pharmacies on their own. 

All of the recruited patients gave Marrero-Castellanos their Oxycodone pills.  Marrero-Castellanos sold those pills to others.   Suarez-Gonzalez and Arlene Gonzalez facilitated the exchange of cash for prescriptions and filled out prescriptions. At times, Arlene Gonzalez wore a white lab coat and patients referred to her as a doctor, which she was not.  She would bring pre-signed prescriptions to the clinic, and later signed prescriptions for oxycodone in her husband’s name, along with other staff members.  These activities occurred even when Dr. Gonzalez Garcia was not in the office.

To facilitate the conspiracy, Dr. Gonzalez Garcia provided prescriptions for Oxycodone, even though he did not provide patients with a meaningful consultation or examination commensurate with prescribing oxycodone according to national standards and norms, nor those of the State of Florida, for such prescriptions.  Dr. Gonzalez Garcia referred to himself as “El Chapo of Oxycodone." As a result of the conspiracy, Dr. Gonzalez Garcia unlawfully distributed Oxycodone.  

Co-defendants Arlene Gonzalez and Suarez-Gonzalez pled guilty to conspiracy to pay and receive health care kickbacks and were sentenced to 4 months in prison and 1 year of probation, respectively. Co-defendant Marrero-Castellanos pled guilty to conspiracy to pay and receive health care kickbacks and conspiracy to distribute controlled substances and was sentenced to 13 months in prison.  The co-defendants were ordered to collectively pay $26,306 in restitution. 

This case was investigated by the Drug Enforcement Administration Miami Division, the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General Miami Regional Office, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation Miami Field Office.  It was prosecuted by the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Florida.   

Related court documents and information may be found on the website of the District Court for the Southern District of Florida or at http://pacer.flsd.uscourts.gov.

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Oxycodone
US Department of Justice - Drug Enforcement Administration

Drug Enforcement Administration

Deanne L. Reuter Special Agent in Charge - Miami
@deamiamidiv
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