Doctor gets 18 months in prison for scheme that included Western Virginia clinics
From his medical practice in
For his services over several years, Randall was paid more than
A judge sentenced the former physician to 18 months in prison Tuesday during a hearing in
"This pain clinic was basically dealing drugs under the guise of a legitimate medical clinic," U.S. District Judge
Randall, 73, is one of about a half-dozen heath care professionals and executives charged in an investigation of
Federal authorities say profits were more important than patients at the centers, where many at-risk people were prescribed more opioid painkillers than they needed. Others who became hooked were given Suboxone, a controlled substance used to treat opioid addiction.
It was Randall's authorization to prescribe Suboxone, through a registration number issued by the DEA, that figured most prominently in his work for
Although he seldom visited the clinics or examined the patients, Randall allowed nurses and other non-authorized staffers to use his registration number to call in prescriptions to pharmacies.
That allowed patients to receive controlled substances with little medical oversight.
"These are vulnerable patients, very vulnerable patients, and he abrogated his role completely" as a physician responsible for their well-being, Dillon said in pronouncing Randall's sentence.
Assistant
Randall, who pleaded guilty last November, was allowed to remain free on bond after Tuesday's hearing. Dillon ordered him to report to a yet-designated federal prison by no sooner than
Meanwhile, Randall faces similar charges in
A federal indictment charges Randall and other unnamed co-conspirators at the pain management clinic, called the
Although Randall spent most of his time at the
Prosecutors pointed to text messages and other communications from Randall indicating that he wanted compensation for allowing staffers at the pain clinics to use his DEA authorization to issue prescriptions, known as "slots," for Suboxone.
Randall demanded payment, "often complaining about untimely payments or threatening to withhold the use of his slots if he was not paid more or more promptly," according to court records that detail a conspiracy that lasted from 2016 to at least
"There is not enough revenue for slots to hold my interest," Randall once wrote in a text to a co-worker, prosecutors said. But, Dillon noted, "apparently there was enough revenue for quite a long time, because he continued to do so."
Juhan said the absentee physician played a pivotal role in the operation of what he called a "sham medical practice."
The founder of
"Despite lab coats and doctor offices, this was, in essence, a drug conspiracy," Juhan wrote in a sentencing memorandum.
Defense attorney
Randall surrendered his medical license in
Woodward also said there was no evidence that any of Randall's patients were harmed by the drugs they received.
But Dillon said it was clear that Randall endangered the very people he was supposed to protect, through "his abrogation of any sense of responsibility." The judge also fined the defendant
Like many white-collar criminals, Randall was motivated by money and suffered few of the societal ills that can lead the underprivileged into the criminal justice system, Juhan argued.
"Here, Randall was not nudged to the cliff of criminality by dire circumstances," the prosecutor wrote in court records. "Rather, he took a running go and swan-dived off of it."
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