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Summary: NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 20a0521n.06 No. 19-5673 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, FILED ) Sep 04, 2020 Plaintiff-Appellee, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) v. ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED KIMBERLY JONES, ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR ) THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF Defendant-Appellant. ) KENTUCKY ) Before: BATCHELDER, STRANCH, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges. ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge. A jury convicted Kimberly Jones, a registered pharmacist
Summary: NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 20a0521n.06 No. 19-5673 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, FILED ) Sep 04, 2020 Plaintiff-Appellee, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) v. ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED KIMBERLY JONES, ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR ) THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF Defendant-Appellant. ) KENTUCKY ) Before: BATCHELDER, STRANCH, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges. ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge. A jury convicted Kimberly Jones, a registered pharmacist,..
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NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
File Name: 20a0521n.06
No. 19-5673
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, FILED
) Sep 04, 2020
Plaintiff-Appellee, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
)
v. )
) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
KIMBERLY JONES, ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
) THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF
Defendant-Appellant. ) KENTUCKY
)
Before: BATCHELDER, STRANCH, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.
ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge. A jury convicted Kimberly Jones, a
registered pharmacist, of knowingly dispensing Schedule II controlled substances outside the
scope of professional practice and not for a legitimate medical purpose in violation of 21 U.S.C.
§ 841(a)(1). Jones appeals her conviction, arguing that there was insufficient evidence to support
it and that the district court erred by allowing an unqualified expert named Taylor Carr to testify
for the government. Both claims are meritless, and we therefore AFFIRM.
I.
Jones owned and operated Kim’s Hometown Pharmacy (KHP) in Williamsburg, Kentucky.
In 2017, the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) learned that KHP had filled large quantities of
prescriptions for controlled substances from several out-of-state doctors who had been investigated
and indicted on criminal charges based on their medical practices. The DEA conducted an audit
1
No. 19-5673, United States v. Jones
of KHP’s inventory for the period between December 31, 2015 and August 3, 2017: 869
oxycodone 30mg pills and 1,882 hydrocodone 10mg pills were unaccounted for.
The DEA’s subsequent investigation revealed that KHP had filled thousands of out-of-state
prescriptions from numerous different doctors for large quantities of Schedule II controlled
substances such as oxycodone, oxymorphone, and hydrocodone. See 21 U.S.C. §§ 802(6), 812.
It appeared that KHP had developed a regular clientele with the same customers filling multiple
out-of-state prescriptions every year. One of KHP’s regulars, Leslie Meadows, received varying
dosages of oxycodone and oxymorphone between 2010 and 2017, which had been prescribed by
twenty-eight different doctors in fifteen cities across five states.
Despite these unusual patterns, Jones had failed to regularly use Kentucky’s All Schedule
Prescription Electronic Reporting (KASPER) system, a database that allows prescribers and
pharmacists to monitor patients’ prescription histories. Pharmacists are not legally required to use
KASPER; it is an optional tool to help pharmacists combat “doctor shopping” and
“overprescribing.” R. 109, PageID: 1111, 1114. Nonetheless, Jones never ran a KASPER report
on Meadows. In fact, from 2014 to 2018, Jones generated reports on only about nine KHP
customers. Moreover, some KHP customers reported that Jones never asked them about their
medical histories, even though they paid hundreds of dollars in cash for their out-of-state
prescriptions. Indeed, KHP had a reputation among opioid addicts as a “convenient” place to fill
out-of-state prescriptions. R. 108, PageID: 843–44.
DEA investigators also found that Jones had “loaned” pills to customers without valid
prescriptions. “Pill loaning” is a three-step process: (1) a customer runs out of pills early; (2) the
pharmacist loans the number of pills necessary for the customer to reach his next refill date; and
(3) the pharmacist subtracts the number of loaned pills from the customer’s prescription refill.
DEA investigators recovered handwritten and electronic notes from KHP’s records that referenced
2
No. 19-5673, United States v. Jones
pill loaning. And a second audit of KHP’s inventory from December 2015 to March 2018 revealed
an even higher number of missing controlled substances than had been found in the first audit.
DEA investigators met with Jones several times throughout the investigation. During
questioning about the pill shortage, her story changed several times. After denying that she had
ever loaned pills, Jones said she could not remember which customers had borrowed pills from
KHP. But Jones later identified some customers who had borrowed pills, admitting that she would
loan pills “if she knew the doctor was going to write a refill or if the prescription was going to fall
on a Saturday” and “she wanted to provide pills for the patient for the weekend.” R. 108, PageID:
924.
Jones also told DEA investigators that she suspected her former employee, Jeff Holmes, of
stealing pills. At the time of the DEA’s investigation, Holmes worked at another pharmacy. Jones
told investigators that she had spoken to Holmes’s supervisor who reported that several pills were
stolen. Investigators later learned that Jones had called Holmes’s supervisor in the fall of 2017.
Jones had asked the supervisor if he suspected Holmes of stealing any drugs; the supervisor had
responded in the negative.1
A federal grand jury charged Jones with thirty-five counts of knowingly and intentionally
distributing Schedule II controlled substances outside the scope of professional practice and not
for a legitimate medical purpose in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). After an eight-day trial, a
jury convicted her of seven counts of unlawfully dispensing Schedule II controlled substances.2
Counts 5 and 6 were based on two prescriptions that Jones filled for Leslie Meadows; Counts 30–
35 were based on pill loaning. After the district court denied Jones’s Rule 29 motion for judgment
1
Jones accused another employee, Gary McPherson, of stealing pills in May 2018. The government
investigated, and McPherson was subsequently convicted of stealing from KHP.
2
The remaining counts charged Jones with maintaining a drug-involved premises in violation of 21 U.S.C.
§ 856(a)(1), and health-care fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1347. The jury acquitted her of these charges.
3
No. 19-5673, United States v. Jones
of acquittal, Jones appealed, arguing that the evidence was insufficient to support her conviction
and that the district court erred by allowing an unqualified expert to testify.
II.
Jones argues that the government failed to introduce sufficient evidence to sustain her
convictions under 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). In reviewing sufficiency-of-the-evidence challenges,
“the relevant question is whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond
a reasonable doubt.” Jackson v. Virginia,
443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979). It is the jury’s responsibility,
not ours, to “resolve conflicts in the testimony, to weigh the evidence, and to draw reasonable
inferences from basic facts to ultimate facts.”
Id.
The Controlled Substances Act (CSA) makes it unlawful for any unauthorized person to
knowingly3 distribute or dispense Schedule II controlled substances, such as oxycodone,
oxymorphone, and hydrocodone. See 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). Pharmacists are protected from
liability so long as they dispense controlled substances pursuant to the CSA’s implementing
regulation, which provides:
A prescription for a controlled substance to be effective must be issued for a
legitimate medical purpose by an individual practitioner acting in the usual course
of his professional practice. The responsibility for the proper prescribing and
dispensing of controlled substances is upon the prescribing practitioner, but a
corresponding responsibility rests with the pharmacist who fills the
prescription. An order purporting to be a prescription issued not in the usual course
of professional treatment or in legitimate and authorized research is not a
prescription within the meaning and intent of section 309 of the Act (21 U.S.C.
829) and the person knowingly filling such a purported prescription, as well as the
person issuing it, shall be subject to the penalties provided for violations of the
provisions of law relating to controlled substances.
3
The mens-rea requirement is “knowingly or intentionally.” § 841(a). But the term “intentionally” is often
omitted from the list of elements. See Sixth Cir. Crim. Pattern Jury Instr. 14.02A (updated as of July 1, 2019),
https://www.ca6.uscourts.gov/sites/ca6/files/documents/pattern_jury/pdf/crmpattjur_full.pdf.
4
No. 19-5673, United States v. Jones
21 C.F.R. § 1306.04(a) (emphasis added).
The regulation’s “corresponding responsibility” language prohibits pharmacists from
filling prescriptions if they have reason to know that the prescriptions were not issued for
legitimate medical purposes. See United States v. Veal,
23 F.3d 985, 988 (6th Cir. 1994) (per
curiam); United States v. Hughes,
895 F.2d 1135, 1143 n.11 (6th Cir. 1990). Reasonable measures
include “paying attention to the ‘number of prescriptions issued, the number of dosage units
prescribed, the duration and pattern of the alleged treatment,’ the number of doctors writing
prescriptions and whether the drugs prescribed have a high rate of abuse.” Med. Shoppe-
Jonesborough v. Drug Enf’t Admin., 300 F. App’x 409, 412 (6th Cir. 2008) (quoting Ralph J.
Bertolino Pharmacy, Inc., 55 Fed. Reg. 4,729, 4,730 (Feb. 9, 1990)).
Accordingly, to have convicted Jones under § 841(a)(1), the jury must have found that
Jones filled prescriptions for Schedule II substances knowing that the prescriptions were outside
the scope of professional practice and that they were not for a legitimate medical purpose. See
Veal, 23 F.3d at 987–88. “To prove the requisite knowledge, the government [is] required to show,
at a minimum, that the defendant deliberately closed [her] eyes to wrongdoing that should have
been obvious to [her].”
Id. So, for Counts 5 and 6–the invalid-prescription counts—the
government must have sufficiently shown that Jones knowingly filled prescriptions for Leslie
Meadows that were not being used for a legitimate medical purpose. And for Counts 30–35—the
pill-loaning counts—the government must have sufficiently shown that pill loaning falls below the
professional standard of pharmaceutical practice and that Jones knowingly loaned pills to
customers without prescriptions.
A. Jones knowingly filled invalid prescriptions for Meadows.
The government showed that Jones knowingly filled invalid prescriptions for Leslie
Meadows. Two expert pharmacists—Katie Busroe and Paula York—testified regarding the
5
No. 19-5673, United States v. Jones
professional standard of pharmaceutical practice. They testified that there are common “red flags”
that indicate prescription-drug abuse, including out-of-state prescriptions, frequent changes of
prescribers, long-term use of certain combinations of pills, and payment in large sums of cash. See
R. 109, PageID: 1173; R. 111, PageID: 1500–14. Busroe and York opined that Jones failed in her
professional responsibility by repeatedly ignoring red flags raised by Leslie Meadows’s
prescription history.
Jones contends that she filled Meadows’s prescriptions in good faith. She says that a
deviation from the professional standard of care cannot alone establish a knowing mens rea,
arguing that the evidence “leaves open the possibility that [Jones] made an error in judgment or
[that she] simply committed negligence.” Appellant Br. at 13. A pharmacist’s claim of good-faith
compliance with proper pharmaceutical practice is judged by an objective standard, see, e.g.,
Veal,
23 F.3d at 988, which asks “whether a reasonable [pharmacist] under the circumstances could have
believed, albeit mistakenly, that [s]he had acted within the scope of ordinary professional medical
practice for a legitimate medical purpose,” see United States v. Godofsky,
943 F.3d 1011, 1026
(6th Cir. 2019).
The volume of Schedule II painkillers dispensed by KHP to Meadows over the course of
seven years—roughly 12,000 pills in varying quantities prescribed by twenty-eight out-of-state
doctors—belies Jones’s claim of good-faith compliance with professional standards. Expert
testimony asserted that any reasonable pharmacist would have been suspicious of Meadows’s long
pharmaceutical history, which included out-of-state prescriptions for oxycodone and
oxymorphone—a highly addictive combination of pills typically prescribed for short-term use after
a traumatic accident or for end-of-life care. See R. 110, PageID: 1252 (explaining that Schedule
II drugs “are the most misused, most abused, most addictive legal drugs that we have in the United
States”). Despite these patterns, Jones failed to take basic precautionary measures to confirm the
6
No. 19-5673, United States v. Jones
validity of Meadows’s prescriptions, such as running KASPER reports. A reasonable juror could
easily conclude that Jones failed to act in good faith compliance with the regulations when she
filled his prescriptions.
Jones points to testimony from Rebecca Meadows, Leslie Meadows’s wife, who testified
that she was “good friends” with Jones. R. 110, PageID: 1300, 1310. Mrs. Meadows admitted
that her husband was addicted to painkillers but said that Leslie had “real pain issues” and “still”
experienced pain at the time of Jones’s trial.
Id. at 1307. Jones argues that, given her friendship
with Mrs. Meadows, it follows that Jones “would be aware of Leslie’s medical problems causing
him to need Schedule II drugs.” Appellant Br. at 14. But a juror could also conclude from these
facts that Jones was aware of Leslie Meadows’s addiction to painkillers. That inference, in
addition to Meadows’s long prescription history, is sufficient for reasonable jurors to find the
requisite mens rea: “that [Jones] deliberately closed [her] eyes to wrongdoing that should have
been obvious to [her].” See
Veal, 23 F.3d at 988
B. Jones knowingly loaned pills to customers without prescriptions.
Jones concedes that she loaned Schedule II drugs to five customers without prescriptions.
But she says that the government failed to show that she knowingly loaned pills for illegitimate
purposes. Again, the question is whether any reasonable juror could have found that Jones failed
to make an objective, good-faith attempt to comply with professional pharmaceutical practice. See
Godofsky, 943 F.3d at 1026.
The CSA provides that no Schedule II controlled substances “may be dispensed without
the written prescription of a [prescriber].” 21 U.S.C. § 829(a). The government presented ample
evidence regarding the professional standard of care regarding pill loaning. Busroe and York
explained that loaning pills was not a matter of pharmaceutical discretion and “that a prescription
has to be presented before it can be filled for a controlled substance.” R. 111, PageID: 1495; see
7
No. 19-5673, United States v. Jones
R. 109, PageID: 1165. Another pharmacist, Samuel Moore, agreed with the experts’ assessment,
testifying that pharmacists should “never” loan Schedule II controlled substances to customers
without prescriptions. R. 109, PageID: 1125. A former pharmacy technician at KHP—April
Bryant—said that even non-pharmacist employees know that “you’re not supposed to give out
medications without a prescription.”
Id. at 1071. The jury also heard testimony about KHP’s pill
shortages, Jones’s notes referencing pill loaning, and Jones’s attempt to mislead investigators by
blaming the missing pills on Jeff Holmes, her former employee. A juror could reasonably conclude
from the evidence presented that Jones knowingly violated professional standards by loaning pills
to customers without prescriptions.
Jones contends that Busroe’s and York’s expert opinions are “not probative of [Jones’s]
actual mental state at the time of pill loaning” and that the “net effect of the expert testimony”
amounted to a “strict liability criminal standard of a practice that occurs in pharmacies every day.”
Appellant Br. at 16. This argument fails for several reasons. First, Busroe’s and York’s testimony
was not the only evidence of a knowing mens rea; a reasonable juror could have inferred
knowledge through the other evidence presented. Second, Jones has not challenged the district
court’s jury instructions regarding § 841(a)(1)’s knowledge requirement. Nor has she developed
any argument regarding the inadmissibility of Busroe’s and York’s expert testimony. Her strict-
liability argument is therefore meritless. In any event, Busroe and York testified about “the
requirements of federal regulations and what the routine practices of pharmacists should be
according to the regulations.” See United States v. Seelig,
622 F.2d 207, 213 (6th Cir. 1980). They
did not opine on whether Jones did or did not have the requisite mens rea to violate § 841(a)(1).
See Fed. R. Evid. 704(b).
8
No. 19-5673, United States v. Jones
The government provided sufficient evidence to support the jury’s convictions on both the
invalid-prescription counts and the pill-loaning counts. Jones’s sufficiency-of-evidence claims
therefore fail.
III.
Jones claims that the district court erred by allowing Taylor Carr, a former pharmacy
technician at KHP, to offer an expert opinion in violation of Federal Rule of Evidence 701. At the
time of Jones’s trial, Carr was a first-year pharmacy student at the University of Kentucky; Jones
complains that some of his testimony amounted to unqualified expert testimony.
The parties questioned Carr—a government witness—about his observations at KHP and
whether those observations were consistent with what he had learned at pharmacy school. Carr
testified that Jones frequently loaned pills to her regular customers. The government asked
whether Carr had been concerned about the pill loaning:
Q. [P]utting yourself in that situation as a pharmacy tech and just a person who
lives in the area and has reasonable common sense, at the time, was there anything
about [the pill loaning] that gave you concern?
A. I mean, maybe, but I . . . hadn’t been to pharmacy school, and this was my first
pharmacy job, so I was -- just assumed that ...
Q. Okay. Well, what about now?
A. Now, yes, I realize that you can’t do that.
Q. Well, just, again, kind of drawing from your life’s experience, if somebody
walks in, and they ran out a few days earlier, let’s say, of their hydrocodone, what’s
the big deal about giving them a new one?
A. Now I know that it’s a controlled substance, and you’re not allowed to dispense
a controlled substance like that. You have to be extra careful with them. And there
are specific laws . . . that deal with, like, the monitoring of controlled substances.
Q. But even then, back then as a pharmacy tech, if somebody ran out of their
medication early, did you have any concerns about what might have happened to
that medicine?
9
No. 19-5673, United States v. Jones
A. I can’t remember any specific instances where I was worried.
R. 108, PageID: 1020–21.
Later, the government asked Carr to “reflect” on his observations at KHP, but Jones’s
attorney objected, arguing that the government had impermissibly solicited expert testimony. The
government admitted that the question called for Carr’s opinion but contended that any participant
in a crime could “reflect” on his “life experiences” without giving an expert opinion. R. 108,
PageID: 1033. Although the district court sustained Jones’s objection, it instructed the government
to ask whether the process at KHP was “consistent with what [Carr had] learned in pharmacy
school.”
Id. After the colloquy with the court, however, the government decided to instead move
on and ask Carr a different question altogether.
During cross-examination, the following exchange took place between Carr and Jones’s
attorney:
Q: Did you ever know Ms. Jones to ever tell somebody, “I’m not going to give you
a prescription?”
A. I have seen that before, yes.
Q. Okay. Why wouldn’t she give them a prescription?
A. I can, just off the top of my head for, if for weren’t [sic], like, a customer there,
she’d refused customers before.
Q. Okay. Well, you’re a student, so let’s -- all right. I realize you’re in pharmacy
school, but, you know, that person’s got a prescription, some doctor wrote a
prescription, and she won’t give it to ’em? Did you ever ask her why not?
A. It was just my understanding that because they weren’t already a patient.
Q. Okay. Now, you were talking a little bit about that occasionally they would loan
people pills, correct?
A. Yes, sir.
10
No. 19-5673, United States v. Jones
Q. Okay. And let’s be clear: The people who would get those advance on pills or
loans on pills, they already had prescriptions, correct?
A. As far as I know, yes.
Q. And I just want to be clear, it wasn’t like somebody just came off the street and
said, Give me ten oxycodone, I have no prescription; that wouldn’t happen, would
it?
A. I don’t recall ever seeing that happen.
R. 108, PageID: 1040–41.
The prosecutor approached the bench before redirect and argued that the defense had
“opened the door” to Carr’s opinion testimony as a pharmacy student. In defense, Jones’s attorney
said the question “really went to the loaning issue, that [KHP wasn’t] just giving away pills.” R.
108, PageID: 1042. But the government sought the court’s permission to ask: “You’re in pharmacy
school. Is it enough just for a doctor [to write] a prescription?”
Id. at 1044. Jones’s attorney did
not object, and the government asked Carr whether Jones’s practice of pill loaning was consistent
with what he had learned in pharmacy school:
Q. You were asked a question as referenced to you being in pharmacy school, and
there was a question about, Well, a doctor writes a prescription, and that’s brought
to the pharmacy. So you’re in pharmacy school. Is it enough for a doctor to just
write a prescription?
A. No, sir.
Q. Is there any doubt about that in your mind?
A. Not from what I’ve been taught since I’ve been in pharmacy school.
R. 108, PageID: 1045.
Jones challenges the admission of Carr’s redirect testimony, arguing that Carr was not
qualified to opine on “whether it was legal to perform a certain pharmaceutical practice in a certain
way based on his limited training in pharmacy school.” Reply Br. at 10. And she contends that
11
No. 19-5673, United States v. Jones
Carr’s testimony was especially prejudicial because he opined on the scope of professional practice
while testifying as a fact witness who had worked at KHP.
We review for abuse of discretion a district court’s evidentiary rulings on witness
testimony. United States v. White,
492 F.3d 380, 398 (6th Cir. 2007).4 “A court abuses its
discretion when it ‘relies on clearly erroneous findings of fact, improperly applies the law, or
employs an erroneous legal standard,’ or when we are ‘firmly convinced’ that the trial court
‘committed a clear error of judgment.’” United States v. Kilpatrick,
798 F.3d 365, 378 (6th Cir.
2015) (quoting United States v. Miner,
774 F.3d 336, 348 (6th Cir. 2014)). Even if we find that
the district court abused its discretion, we reverse only if the erroneous admission of evidence
affected the substantial rights of the party.
Id.
A lay witness’s opinions are limited to those which are “(a) rationally based on the
witness’s perception; (b) helpful to clearly understanding the witness’s testimony or to determining
a fact in issue; and (c) not based on scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge within the
scope of Rule 702.” Fed. R. Evid. 701. Jones’s objection is based on the third limitation, which
serves to “eliminate the risk that the reliability requirements set forth in Rule 702 will be evaded
through the simple expedient of proffering an expert in lay witness clothing.” Fed. R. Evid. 701
advisory committee’s note (2000). To determine whether a lay witness impermissibly offered an
expert opinion we look to the witness’s reasoning: “lay testimony ‘results from a process of
reasoning familiar in everyday life,’ whereas ‘an expert’s testimony results from a process of
4
The government argues that we should review this claim for plain error because Jones did not reiterate her
objection to Carr’s testimony during redirect. But Jones’s attorney objected to the question during the government’s
direct examination. And before redirect, Jones’s attorney argued that he had not “opened the door” to Carr’s opinion
testimony. Under these circumstances, we find that Jones maintained a standing objection to Carr’s testimony and
decline to apply the plain-error standard of review. See United States v. Kilpatrick,
798 F.3d 365, 378 (6th Cir. 2015)
(declining to “parse out the challenged testimony that was not subject to objection at trial” because “the defendants
maintained a standing objection throughout the trial to virtually all of the [witnesses’] testimony”).
12
No. 19-5673, United States v. Jones
reasoning which can be mastered only by specialists in the field.’”
White, 492 F.3d at 401 (quoting
State v. Brown,
836 S.W.2d 530, 549 (Tenn. 1992)).
Here, the district court did not abuse its discretion by admitting Carr’s opinion testimony.
First, a reasonable juror could not have mistaken Carr for an expert—Carr testified that he had
completed only one semester of pharmacy school. We therefore cannot characterize Carr as “an
expert in lay witness clothing.” See Fed. R. Evid. 701 advisory committee’s note (2000). Second,
Carr reached his opinion using “a process of reasoning familiar in everyday life” rather than
“reasoning which can be mastered only by specialists in the field.” See
White, 492 F.3d at 401
(quoting
Brown, 836 S.W.2d at 549). He testified that his short time in pharmacy school only
confirmed what he “maybe” already knew as a pharmacy technician: that it is not “enough for a
doctor to just write a prescription.” R. 108, PageID: 1020, 1045. Carr might have impermissibly
veered into expert-opinion territory if, for example, he had defined an ambiguous term, cf. United
States v. Cruz,
363 F.3d 187, 195–97 (2d Cir. 2004), or explained a technical concept, cf.
White,
492 F.3d at 403–04. But we cannot say Carr’s testimony was based on anything beyond his
everyday life experience, such as “scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge.” See Fed.
R. Evid. 701(c). Indeed, another pharmacy technician at KHP—April Bryant—did not require a
semester of pharmacy school to understand that “you’re not supposed to give out medications
without a prescription.” R. 109, PageID: 1071. Jones’s claim therefore fails.
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM Jones’s convictions.
13