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Published Friday, July 25, 2008 in Local

Around 3,700 pills confiscated

By Amy Lott

The Times-Herald

Almost 3,700 pills -- generally prescribed for everything from pain and insomnia to obesity and depression -- were seized from a local woman's residence Thursday after Newnan police discovered the ex-corrections officer was selling medication for profit.

"It's one of the largest amounts we've run into," said Detective Sgt. Danny McDonald, head of the department's recently-formed City Drug Unit. Authorities said more than 50 bottles of pills were confiscated from 35-year-old Karen Suzanne McDowell's Pinewood Villas apartment, located near the Coweta County Sheriff's Office on Greison Trail.

An additional 42 pill bottles were left behind when McDowell insisted she needed them on a daily basis for medical issues, while almost 350 empty containers were found stacked in cabinets inside the house. Drug varieties ranged from Hydrocodone and Soma to Adipex and Wellbutrin, to name a few.

According to Investigator Jody Stanford, an informant tip led to McDowell's arrest for selling schedule II narcotics. A calendar found on the scene showed the suspect had been making several appointments with different doctors each day for months.

Stanford said a duffel bag full of medication was found on the couch beside the offender at the time a search warrant was executed. McDowell -- reportedly a notary public and certified substitute teacher with a bachelor's degree in criminology -- was currently on disability leave from work, he said.

McDowell's 15-year-old daughter, the only other occupant of the home, is now with family members, according to police.

The City Drug Unit is still looking into the case, McDonald said, and an agent from the Georgia Drugs & Narcotics Agency -- an organization that oversees doctors and pharmacists -- is expected to investigate sometime next week.

The new unit, which formed at the end of May, primarily handles street-level drug arrests, according to Newnan Police Chief Douglas L. "Buster" Meadows. Since its inception, the group of four city officers has made 31 arrests, 90 percent of which were felony drug busts.

Meadows said the City Drug Unit works in conjunction with the Crime Suppression Unit, which is a joint effort between city and county officers aimed at eliminating upper-echelon suppliers. "We're trying to attack the problem from both ends," he said. "We're going to be aggressive with these dealers. Most crimes relate back to drugs."

Anyone with any information on drug-related activity may contact the City Drug Unit on the newly-established tip line at 770-254-2350. Callers may remain anonymous.

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Centralized Drug System

7/26/2008

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There needs to be a way to track these 'seekers'. People like this 'doctor shop' all the time and complain of vague symptoms such as back pain, chest pain, insomnia, anxiety, etc. in order to get more and more prescriptions. Each new doctor they see usually does not know they have already been treated and prescribed medications by another physician. How would they if the patient does not tell them?? Sometimes there are red flags that indicate there is something fishy going on but not always. If a patient comes in and requests/demands certain meds or claims to be 'allergic' to all the less potent meds, then you start to wonder. But if there are no red flags, the new doc will examine the patient and write a prescription, if indicated. The seeker almost always takes each new prescription to a different pharmacy so as not to be identified as a potential abuser. I believe if there were some sort of computer tracking system in place through each pharmacy, then they would possibly be able to detect potential abusers and notify the physicians and, if necessary, law enforcement. I don't know if this would violate HIPAA laws or doctor/patient confidentiality. I also realize these seekers sometimes use aliases so that might also pose some problems. However, I think a tracking system would be beneficial regardless. It really makes me furious that people like this make it nearly impossible for people like me, who have severe, chronic pain, to get proper treatment for our pain. We often suffer for days on end because doctors are afraid to write for these medications. Not because they don't think we need them but because they are nervous about how they will be scrutinized. It is a very sad situation and there seems to be no end in sight, no matter what kind of drug unit/task force they have in place. I hope and pray they will be successful. I also pray this woman wakes up and realizes what she is doing to her life and the life of her daughter.

Posted by ~Addyson~ at 2:36 PM

proof

7/26/2008

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they are accusing her of sellng them but do they really have pure evidence of this? if the pills that were taken to the jailhouse were not in one of mrs mcdowells bottles they realy cnt say she did it.

Posted by hilary at 2:23 PM

Drug Unit

7/26/2008

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I think any drug bust is good. As we all know drugs are the main cause behind most crimes. I think as Newnan continues to grow "Buster" and the rest of law enforcement in Coweta County see a need to stop it at its source. Thanks

Posted by Donald O'Neal at 1:42 PM

42 Bottles Were For Personal Use?!!!

7/26/2008

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I would say that makes it quite clear who started this problem with the drug use!! Doctors are the biggest drug pushers in this country today and the drugs they are pushing are far more deadly than the ones they have given us in the past namely LSD, PCP, Ecstasy, Cocaine, etc.

Posted by Dr. Ann Blake-Tracy at 9:13 AM

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