News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 18, 2007
Third
Pharmacy Burglar Pleads Guilty In Connection With Pharmacy Burglary
And Drug Distribution Scheme
Conspirators Broke into Pharmacies Throughout the Northwest and
West Coast
JAN 18 --
JEREMY SWANSON, 30, of Marysville, Washington, pleaded guilty today
in U.S. District Court in Seattle in connection with a scheme to burglarize
pharmacies and sell the prescription narcotics in the State of Washington
for thousands of dollars. SWANSON was part of a criminal ring in Snohomish
County responsible for burglarizing pharmacies in the Pacific Northwest
and on the West Coast from 2004 to the present.
According to court
documents, SWANSON admitted joining with other Snohomish County men
in an unlawful agreement to burglarize pharmacies. In furtherance of
this unlawful agreement, SWANSON participated in the burglary of pharmacies
in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho.
In particular, on
September 7, 2004, SWANSON and another individual burglarized a Bartell
Pharmacy in Silver Lake, located at 11012 19th Avenue SE, in Everett,
Washington. This burglary was similar to others committed by the group,
occurring during late evening hours after the pharmacy closed. SWANSON
severed telephone lines leading to the pharmacy in order to disable
the remote alarm, while another co-conspirator conducted watch outside
the pharmacy and maintained contact with SWANSON via cellular phone
to warn of detection and possible police presence. Controlled substances
belonging to the pharmacy inventory were located and collected, including
stocks of oxycodone, hydrocodone, morphine, fentanyl, and amphetamines,
among other Schedule II and Schedule III controlled substances. The
drugs were thereafter sold and distributed to others. The replacement
cost of the drugs to the pharmacy was approximately $13,851.74.
Additional burglaries
admitted by SWANSON as part of his activities with the group included
the March 19, 2004, burglary of a White Cross Pharmacy, in Sandpoint,
Idaho, during which $5,520.00 worth of controlled substances were taken,
and the August 7, 2004, burglary of a Pharmacy Express, in Cave Junction,
Oregon, during which $5,391.74 worth of controlled substances were
taken.
Selling the stolen
drugs can net a profit of up to $150,000 per burglary. High strength
oxycodone can sell for as much at $80 per pill, fentanyl patches (another
narcotic pain medication) can sell for $50 per patch. These drugs are
then consumed by addicts and others, without a valid prescription,
posing harm to themselves and society in general. Their non-prescribed
use has resulted in multiple emergency room visits by individuals at
local hospitals, between 2004 and the present.
Other individuals
who have already pleaded guilty to committing burglaries in furtherance
of the same scheme include Michael Hinkle, 39, and Ivan Stoutenburg,
31, both of Marysville, Washington. They are awaiting sentencing. Sentencing
for SWANSON was set for May 11, 2007, at 10 a.m. in United States District
Court before the Honorable Robert S. Lasnik.
Pharmacy Burglary,
and the distribution of pharmaceutical controlled substances, are felonies
under federal law punishable by up to 20 years in prison and up to
a $1 million fine.
As part of his plea
agreement, SWANSON agreed to pay restitution to the pharmacies for
damage done to the buildings during the burglaries and for the loss
sustained by the pharmacies and their insurers due to the drugs taken.
This was an Organized
Crime and Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) investigation, providing
supplemental federal funding to the federal and state agencies involved.
The case was investigated by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA);
Northwest High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (NW HIDTA); the Marysville,
Washington, Police Department; and the Monroe, Washington Police Department.
The case is being
prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Ronald J. Friedman.
For additional information
please contact Emily Langlie, Public Affairs Officer for the United
States Attorney’s Office, at (206) 553-4110. |