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Pharmacy shootings up 80% since 2006

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News from The Associated Press
NEW YORK (AP) -- A wave of pharmacy robberies is sweeping the United States as desperate addicts and ruthless dealers turn to violence to feed the nation's growing hunger for narcotic painkillers.

From Redmond, Wash., to St. Augustine, Fla., criminals are holding pharmacists at gunpoint and escaping with thousands of powerfully addictive pills that can sell for as much as $80 apiece on the street.

In one of the most shocking crimes yet, a robber walked into a neighborhood drugstore Sunday on New York's Long Island and gunned down the pharmacist, a teenage store clerk and two customers before leaving with a backpack full of pills containing hydrocodone.

"It's an epidemic," said Michael Fox, a pharmacist on New York's Staten Island who has been stuck up twice in the last year. "These people are depraved. They'll kill you."

Armed robberies at pharmacies rose 81 percent between 2006 and 2010, from 380 to 686, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration says. The number of pills stolen went from 706,000 to 1.3 million. Thieves are overwhelmingly taking oxycodone painkillers like OxyContin or Roxicodone, or hydrocodone-based painkillers like Vicodin and Norco. Both narcotics are highly addictive.

(See: Officials: Man linked to DC-area shootings in 2010)

In New York state, the number of armed robberies rose from 2 in 2006 to 28 in 2010. In Florida, they increased nearly six-fold, from 11 to 65. California saw 61 robberies in 2010, Indiana had 45 and Tennessee had 38.

Most robbers don't hurt anyone, but authorities are worried the risk of bloodshed is increasing as assaults multiply. In September, a clerk was fatally shot in the chest and a pregnant woman wounded in the foot when a shootout broke out between a robber and an armed employee at a pharmacy in a suburb of Sacramento, Calif. In April, a gunman killed a pharmacist in Trenton, N.J., before stealing $10,000 in pills.

The robberies mirror a national rise in the abuse of narcotic painkillers, DEA spokeswoman Barbara Carreno said.

"Drug addicts are always seeking ways to get their drugs," Carreno said. "Whenever there's an increase in a problem, you'll see it manifested in ways like this."

Prescription painkillers are now the second most-abused drugs after marijuana, with 7 million Americans using them illegally in the past month, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services says. The number of patients treated in emergency rooms for prescription drug overdoses more than doubled between 2004 and 2008, from 144,644 to 305,885.

(See: UN: Sharp drops in opium, coca production in 2010)

Drug dealers may be turning to violence as authorities crack down on other ways of getting painkillers, Carreno said. Many states have launched introduced computer systems designed to prevent "doctor-shopping" by addicts, and federal investigations have shut down several shady Internet pharmacies.

That is believed to have spurred addicts to target small pharmacies like Haven Drugs in Medford, about 60 miles east of New York on Long Island.

Prosecutors say David Laffer, 33, walked into the drugstore on Sunday and opened fire without warning.

"He did not announce a robbery," Assistant District Attorney John Collins said. "He simply shot first after engaging the pharmacist in conversation."

Laffer shot 45-year-old pharmacist Raymond Ferguson once in the abdomen, then killed 17-year-old store clerk Jennifer Mejia before pumping two more shots into Ferguson, Collins said. Then he started pulling Norco and other hydrocodone drugs off the shelves, Collins said.

(See: NY official: Arrest made in pharmacy killings)

When customers Bryon Sheffield, 71, and Jamie Taccetta, 33, walked into the store, Laffer sneaked up behind them and shot them in the back of the head, Collins said.

Laffer is a former Army private who once worked as an intelligence analyst. He had recently lost his job as a warehouse worker. Both he and his wife, Melinda Brady, were high when they were arrested on Wednesday at their home about a mile and a half from the pharmacy, police said. Brady was charged with driving the getaway car; both have pleaded not guilty to the charges against them.

In posts on a wedding-related website, Brady said she had been taking different painkillers in the year before their January 2009 wedding because of several surgeries on her mouth. She added that it was taking a toll on her relationships.

It's a familiar pattern, said Andrew Kolodny, president of Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing, which advocates for more cautious use of narcotic painkillers. Many patients get addicted while taking a legitimate prescription and turn to crime after they lose their jobs and the insurance coverage that comes with them, he said.

"People with addiction who could be perfectly good people will do all sorts of horrible things to maintain their supply," Kolodny said.

Like Laffer, most pharmacy robbers are white males, said Richard Conklin, manager of RxPatrol.com, a website that tracks robberies. However, they come from all backgrounds and ages, he said.

In May, a 51-year-old man in a suit and tie approached a pharmacy counter in Boise, Idaho, and told the clerk he had something in his briefcase that he could "light the place up with" if the store didn't give him OxyContin. He left with hundreds of pills.

In Lynchburg, Va., a 27-year-old man used a 3-foot-long samurai sword to rob a pharmacy in March.

Fox said he had two customers in his drugstore in Eltingville, a middle-class neighborhood of Staten Island, when a man broke in a rear door and forced him to the floor at gunpoint in April 2010.

"He put the gun to my head, and I thought it was over for me," Fox said. The robber made off with about $4,000 of oxycodone.

In April 2010, another robber struck. Claiming he had a gun in his jacket pocket, he demanded bottles of oxycodone.

Fox handed over two bottles. The robber opened them to check the pills, then demanded more.

"I took a chance: I told him that was all I had," Fox said. The robber left without harming anyone, he said.

Robbers have also hit the nearby Annadale Family Pharmacy. A sign in the window there now says, "We do not stock oxycodone or Roxicodone."

Along with armed robberies, pharmacy associations say they are also seeing an increase in burglaries.

Keith Hodges, a pharmacist in Gloucester, Va., said his store has been broken into at least six times in recent years. One thief came through the roof by squeezing into an air conditioning shaft. Another used an electric saw to cut the knob off a steel door.

In April, a woman was caught in Billings, Mont., trying to smash in the bulletproof drive-through window of a Walgreens with a crowbar. Police said she had shards of glass on her clothing, a fresh cut on her head and her fingertips wrapped in bandages.

Rxpatrol.com, sponsored by OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma of Stamford, Conn., says it has tracked 1,258 pharmacy burglaries since 2002.

"I get nervous at night," Hodges said. "I stay late a lot, and you worry about what could happen."

Hodges said he's installed security cameras and alarms that are activated by the sound of someone breaking in. His employees wear wireless "panic buttons" that they can push to alert police.

The National Community Pharmacists' Association, which represents 23,000 independent drugstores, is distributing "height signs" to help employees record the height of robbers as they flee stores.

The Walgreens pharmacy chain is experimenting with medicine safes that delay several minutes before opening, in hopes that robbers won't have the patience to wait.

Some pharmacies are even considering installing bullet-proof windows like those found in many banks.

But Hodges, the Virginia pharmacist, worries that the security precautions are harming legitimate customers by lengthening the wait to fill prescriptions and eroding the relationship between pharmacists and patients.

If pharmacists are forced to work behind bulletproof glass, it will discourage customers from asking questions about their treatments, he said.

"The more a patient knows, the healthier they're going to be in the long run," Hodges said. "They need to have access to their pharmacist."
 
Legalize oxycontin! Let's sell it at the 7-11 check-out line.

We have to stop this violence. Didn't we lose the war on drugs?
 
Legalize oxycontin! Let's sell it at the 7-11 check-out line.

We have to stop this violence. Didn't we lose the war on drugs?

i think it should be legalized, if for no other reason than it should be a personal right to take an oxy if you want to take an oxy.
alternative is herion, or shooting up a pharmy, or robbing a paramedic.
 
i think it should be legalized, if for no other reason than it should be a personal right to take an oxy if you want to take an oxy.
alternative is herion, or shooting up a pharmy, or robbing a paramedic.

I'd agree with you, but I don't want to pay for someone else's choice to use Oxy's 24/7. Take away that concern, and I literally would support putting them in the 7/11 check-out lines.
 
i think it should be legalized, if for no other reason than it should be a personal right to take an oxy if you want to take an oxy.
alternative is herion, or shooting up a pharmy, or robbing a paramedic.
Personally, I agree with the legalization angle. That said, it's always a hard time figuring out where the proverbial line is. Do we also legalize heroin?

My comment was primarily about my humble opinion of the over prescription of pain killers that starts the addition in the first place.
 
Personally, I agree with the legalization angle. That said, it's always a hard time figuring out where the proverbial line is. Do we also legalize heroin?

My comment was primarily about my humble opinion of the over prescription of pain killers that starts the addition in the first place.

Oxycontin is most definitely a gateway drug to heroin. They take oxys, then snort them and then shoot them. The only step from there for an even better high is straight to smack.
 
i think it should be legalized, if for no other reason than it should be a personal right to take an oxy if you want to take an oxy.
alternative is herion, or shooting up a pharmy, or robbing a paramedic.


Nah, we'll just jack up teh prices and make you dumbfucks mug your mom to pay for our shit.



:cow:
 
I'd agree with you, but I don't want to pay for someone else's choice to use Oxy's 24/7. Take away that concern, and I literally would support putting them in the 7/11 check-out lines.

yea and neither do i...and selling them at 7/11 is not what i had in mind i was thinking a state controlled store much like a state liquor store.
think about it you are paying with it bieng illegal feeding bloated pig pensions, high end policing technology (infared, swat teams etc...cops love all that shit and it keeps costing more and more and more with the increase in tech), and other various other expenses.
what a man/woman does with his/her body should be of zero concern to a gov agency, anything less IMO is against what the usa stands for.
 
what a man/woman does with his/her body should be of zero concern to a gov agency, anything less IMO is against what the usa stands for.

if you take that stance, than you can't have government subsidized health care and welfare without eventual bankruptcy. part of gov assistance means they get to tell you what to do so they aren't paying for you to become a complete piece of shit
 
if you take that stance, than you can't have government subsidized health care and welfare without eventual bankruptcy. part of gov assistance means they get to tell you what to do so they aren't paying for you to become a complete piece of shit

so maybe if you recieve either you forfeit your right to use certain substances.
i was reading the other day that more people die in the usa every year from peanuts than they do mdma/xtc.
i'm sick of fatasses telling us what we can and cannot do while they shove their pieholes full of mcds and trans fats, clearly both of which have killed more than all drugs combined.
i take major issues with a handfull of gov officals dictating what we can or cannot ingest.
stay outta my room and i stay outta yours is my mantra...
 
Nah, we'll just jack up teh prices and make you dumbfucks mug your mom to pay for our shit.



:cow:

and hire more cops which gives them union clout and creates more drug cases which creates more need for lawyers which creates more prisons and drug conserlour jobs...on and on and fucking on as the debt piles up and the small handfull of peeps feeds of the citizens.
uglyness man
 
I think eventually the government will be forced to put a system in to regulate how Doctors hand out painkillers. It will make it harder for addicts to get their pills and Heroin will make a come back in a big way.
 
I think eventually the government will be forced to put a system in to regulate how Doctors hand out painkillers. It will make it harder for addicts to get their pills and Heroin will make a come back in a big way.

my job won't accept medical marijuana...instead, you can have marinol, a pharma bases drug which mimics THC, perscribed to you.
lol how fuct is that? don't dare touch the evil weeds, but here you go have a pharma drug!!
the med community is responsible for much addiction in this country, i know of numerous bros who got their habits kick started by the noble docs handing out painkillers like candy.
 
my job won't accept medical marijuana...instead, you can have marinol, a pharma bases drug which mimics THC, perscribed to you.
lol how fuct is that? don't dare touch the evil weeds, but here you go have a pharma drug!!
the med community is responsible for much addiction in this country, i know of numerous bros who got their habits kick started by the noble docs handing out painkillers like candy.

I have seen people slowly die from it. This shooting magnified an issue I have been pretty vocal for awhile now. The US drugs it's own people for monetary gain creating a country of zombies who will steal and kill. And most likely not work!
 
don't understand the appeal of opioids. They make you sleepy and not want to do anything, and it's so easy to build a tolerance.

you feel a little warm and fuzzy for a couple of hours and that's it.
 
don't understand the appeal of opioids. They make you sleepy and not want to do anything, and it's so easy to build a tolerance.

you feel a little warm and fuzzy for a couple of hours and that's it.

yea that's how i feel too.
i've had vicodins and norcos sitting in my dresser for two years now leftover from a surgery.
never taken them once for rec purposes...they make me feel like shit.
but for those with chronic pain, i could see how easy it would be to become junkied out
 
so maybe if you recieve either you forfeit your right to use certain substances.
i was reading the other day that more people die in the usa every year from peanuts than they do mdma/xtc.
i'm sick of fatasses telling us what we can and cannot do while they shove their pieholes full of mcds and trans fats, clearly both of which have killed more than all drugs combined.
i take major issues with a handfull of gov officals dictating what we can or cannot ingest.
stay outta my room and i stay outta yours is my mantra...

i totally agree with everything you wrote, given the first sentence
 
don't understand the appeal of opioids. They make you sleepy and not want to do anything, and it's so easy to build a tolerance.

you feel a little warm and fuzzy for a couple of hours and that's it.

And then you feel a little funny the next day still too. I sweat a little bit, I guess that is the withdrawal feeling. People are such pussies if that is the reason they feel the need to take more.
 
don't understand the appeal of opioids. They make you sleepy and not want to do anything, and it's so easy to build a tolerance.

you feel a little warm and fuzzy for a couple of hours and that's it.


The one time I got IV morphine I was sick and puking for three hours. Not impressed.

Seems that some people have preferences towards certain drugs, similar to alcohol. *shrug*



:cow:
 
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