News
Release
Date: August 27, 2009
Contact: Melissa Bell
Number: 202-616-4740
Former
Mercer County Sheriff Pleads Guilty to
Federal
Drug Charge
 |
Danny
Ray Wills |
AUG
27 -- BECKLEY, WV – The
former Sheriff of Mercer County pleaded
guilty today before United States District
Judge Thomas E. Johnston to a one-count
Information charging him with fraudulently
obtaining and possessing hydrocodone. Danny
Ray Wills, 63, of Bluefield, WV, is also
a medical doctor. According to court documents
and at the plea hearing, Wills admitted
that, during his tenure as sheriff, he
ordered and obtained 4,500 hydrocodone
pills from General Injections and Vaccines
(GIV) located in Bastien, Virginia, and
paid for them with proceeds from the Mercer
County Concealed Weapons Permit Fund. Wills
had the pills shipped to the sheriff’s
office in Princeton, WV. The hydrocodone
was to be dispensed to “patients.”
On
May 5, 2009, a DEA Administrative Inspection
Warrant was served on Wills at his sheriff’s
office seeking records required to be kept
by dispensing physicians and a count of the
hydrocodone on hand. Agents located a total
of 173 hydrocodone tablets in a locked cabinet
and in Wills’ possession. Wills admitted
to agents that he had been taking up to 4-6
of the hydrocodone pills daily for about
two years. Wills further stated that he had
practiced medicine in his sheriff’s
office, and that he had dispensed hydrocodone
to his patients. Agents seized 86 patient
files from Wills pursuant to the DEA warrant.
The files revealed that a total of only 31
hydrocodone pills had been dispensed to three
patients. Further, correspondence between
GIV and Wills in January 2009 indicated that
GIV had questioned Wills about his excess/atypical
hydrocodone orders. In response, Wills assured
GIV that he was acquiring the hydrocodone
to dispense to his patients. Wills did not
advise GIV that he was taking any of the
hydrocodone himself. Wills also admitted
to agents that he had written prescriptions
for alprazolam, also known as Xanax, a schedule
IV controlled substance, in the names of
his wife and his son, but that he had actually
intended to, and did in fact, obtain and
use the Xanax himself. Information obtained
from the West Virginia Prescription Monitoring
Program indicated that prescriptions for
1,400 alprazolam pills were issued by Wills
in his son’s name.
“Prescription
drug abuse is a serious concern in West Virginia
and across the country,” stated Drug
Enforcement Administration Special Agent
in Charge Ava Cooper-Davis. “DEA is
committed to bringing all those, like former
Sheriff Wills, who violate the law and public
trust to justice. We will not tolerate anyone
poisoning our communities, whether it be
doctors, pharmacists, a street dealer or
even law enforcement.”
It
is a Federal crime even for medical doctors
to obtain prescription drugs by misrepresentation,
fraud, deception and subterfuge. United States
Attorney Charles T. Miller stated, “Law
enforcement officers take an oath to uphold
the law. Sheriff Wills committed this crime
from the sheriff’s office and dishonored
his oath. This conviction should send a clear
message that no one is above the law.”
Wills
faces up to four years in prison and a $250,000
fine when he is sentenced on December 14,
2009. The investigation was conducted by
the Drug Enforcement Administration, West
Virginia State Police, Bureau of Criminal
Investigation, and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation. Assistant United States Attorney
Monica K. Schwartz is handling the prosecution.
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