Petitioner: DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, BOARD OF PHARMACY
Respondent: GWYNETH GORDON, R.PH.
Judges: DANIEL MANRY
Agency: Department of Health
Locations: Fort Lauderdale, Florida
Filed: Jul. 29, 2002
Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Friday, January 10, 2003.
Latest Update: Jul. 06, 2004
Summary: The issues are whether Respondents committed the acts or omissions alleged in four administrative complaints, and, if so, what penalty should be imposed against Respondents' licenses.Internet pharmacy that dispensed excessive quantities of obesity drugs should pay fine of $24,000 and be placed on probation for one year.
Oe
\ - (0° OF
Final Order No. DOH-03-0343- FOF MOA
FILED DATE= i= Jos
STATE OF FLORIDA Department of Health /
BOARD OF PHARMACY a
By he 2 lens
Deputy Agency Clerk
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH,
Petitioner,
vs. DOAH CASE NOS. 2002-2976
2002-2977
= Division of Administrative Hearings
RX NETWORK OF SOUTH
FLORIDA, LLC.,
Respondent.
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, 9
Petitioner, ; ‘
vs. DOAH CASE NOS. 2002-2978PL
2002-2980PL
GWYNETH GORDON, R. PH.,
Respondent. {VM
/
FINAL ORDER
These consolidated cases came on to be heard before the
Florida Board of Pharmacy (Board) at its scheduled meeting in
Orlando, Florida on March 6, 2003 and at its teleconference
meeting on March 31, 2003. At those meetings, the Board reviewed
the Recommended Order entered by ALJ Daniel Manry on January 10,
2003. The Board also addressed the Exceptions to that Order
filed by the Petitioner, Department of Health, (Department) and
the Joint Response thereto filed by the Respondents, Rx Network
of South Florida, LLC (Rx Network), and Gwyneth Gordon, R. PH.
(Gordon) .?
In addition, the Board ruled on the Department’s written
Motion to file Amended Exceptions and its oral motion for leave
to file second amended exceptions. Finally, the Board ruled on
the Department’s Motion to Assess Costs in Accordance with
Section 456.072(4) and Rx Network’s and Gordon’s Objections
thereto
PRELIMINARY MATTERS
1. The Department’s Motion for Leave to File Amended
Exceptions is GRANTED without objection. However, the oral
motion for leave to file second amended exceptions is DENIED. ?
THE EXCEPTIONS
2. The Department has filed two interrelated exceptions to
the ALJ’s proposed conclusions of law.? The gravamen of the
s The Board has reviewed the entire record and heard
arguments of counsel.
*The proposed Second Amended Exceptions included a requested
increased penalty for Rx Network and a suggested modification of
the statutory provision which Rx Network was found by the ALJ to
have violated.
*The Department has also included in its exceptions what it terms
the “Pleading Issue” (Amended Exceptions at 24-25). In the
exceptions and at the hearing, the Department has recognized
that the matters raised in the “Pleading Issue” are not
“...conclusions of law over which [the Board] has substantive
jurisdiction...” (Section 120.57(1) (1), Fla. Stat.,) and as such
the ALJ’s conclusions on the matters raised in the “Pleading
Issue” cannot be “reject{ed] or modif[ied]” by the Board,
Barfield v. Department of Health, 805 So.2d 1008, 1010-1011(Fla.
18* DCA 2001), Deep Lagoon Boat Club, Ltd. v. Sheridan, 784 So.2d
Department’s exceptions is that the ALJ failed to find that
Gordon’s activities failed to meet the standard of practice
required of a prescription department manager.‘ The Department
argues (Amended Exceptions at 10-20) that Gordon, as the
prescription department manager for Rx Network’s pharmacy, was
responsible for the violations of law found by the ALJ and
attributed to Rx Network. The Department cites to Section
465.018, Fla. Stat., to a Board rule (Rule 64B16-27.104(5), Fla.
Admin. Code), and to the record as support for its position.°
3. Rx Network and Gordon respond in three ways. First, and
most tellingly, they note that Gordon was never charged with
violating Section 465.018 or Rule 64B16-27.104(5). Second, they
assert that 465.018 imposes no standard of practice upon
pharmacists but is directed only to pharmacy permittees.
Finally, they claim that to make Gordon responsible for acts
1140(Fla. 2°? DcA 2001). The Board therefore expresses no opinion
on this matter.
“The Department has filed no exceptions that challenge the ALJ’s
proposed findings of fact.
°465.018 Community pharmacies; permits.-
Any person desiring a permit to operate a community pharmacy
shall apply to the department. If the board office certifies
that the application complies with the laws of the state and the
rules of the board governing pharmacies, the department shall
issue the permit. No permit shall be issued unless a licensed
pharmacist is designated as the prescription department manager
responsible for maintaining all drug records, providing for the
security of the prescription department, and following such
other rules as relate to the practice of the profession of
pharmacy. The permittee and the newly designated prescription
other than those which evidenced “personal misconduct by the
licensee” would be an improper imposition of “vicarious
liability” upon her, citing to Pic N' Save Cent. Florida, Inc.
v. Department of Business Regulation, Div. of Alcoholic
Beverages and Tobacco, 601 So.2d 245, 250 (Fla. 1°* DCA 1992).
4. The Board agrees with the first of Rx Network’s and
Gordon’s contentions. While pleadings in administrative
proceedings may not be subject to the strictures of criminal
pleadings, it is plain that due process requires that a licensee
subject to a penal proceeding wherein which her license is at
risk must be put on notice of the provisions of law or rule
which she is charged with violating. Here the Department
essentially seeks to find Gordon in violation of a statute and
rule which were never charged in the various administrative
complaints, which were not mentioned in the prehearing
stipulation, and which were not discussed in the Department’s
proposed recommended order. While the Board largely agrees with
the Department’s analysis of the standard of practice placed
upon a prescription department manager and also agrees that the
facts as found by the ALJ seem to make a strong prima facie case
that Gordon failed to live up to those standards, it cannot find
Gordon in violation of a charge not plead.
department manager shall notify the department within 10 days of
any change in prescription department manager.
5. That being said, however, the Board rejects Rx Network’s
and Gordon’s remaining arguments. The Board has long held that
Section 465.018 (and its predecessors) impose special duties
upon pharmacists designated as prescription department managers.
6. For example, in Board of Pharmacy v Bowers, DOAH Case #
79-682, Final Order, 2 FALR 44-A (1979) the Board revoked a
pharmacist for violating the requirements of Section 465.21,
Fla. Stat., (1979) (the predecessor to Section 465.018).
Similarly, in Department of Health v Williams, DOAH Case # 00-
315, Final Order, 23 FALR 3939(2001) the Board adopted a
recommended order which found as a matter of fact that
prescription department managers are “responsible for compliance
by all...employees,...with Florida Statutes, administrative
rules, and federal regulations governing pharmacy...in the
operation of a community pharmacy business....”
7. Indeed, Section 465.018 not only requires a permittee to
hame a pharmacist as prescription department manager but
delineates the responsibilities of the manager. For the
legislature to have required the naming of a person who would
have overall responsibility for the professional practice of
pharmacy in a community pharmacy and then preclude any
discipline being imposed upon a pharmacist who fails to live up
to those responsibilities would be absurd.°®
8. The Board also rejects Rx Network’s and Gordon's
assertion that to hold the pharmacist designated as prescription
department manager responsible for violations of pharmacy rules
and statutes would make that pharmacist “vicariously liable” for
the acts of others. A prescription department manager is
statutorily “responsible” for maintaining drug records,
providing for security of the prescription department and
following other relevant rules relating to the practice of
pharmacy in the prescription department of the permittee. As
such, the prescription department manager has overall
supervisory authority and thus concomitant responsibility over
the activities of all of the professional and other employees in
the prescription department. Failure to competently exercise
that authority breaches the prescription department manager’s
statutory duty and subjects her to discipline.
9. However, in light of the fact that the Department did
not charge Gordon with violating the statute or rule governing
®In the same vein, the Board is unable to understand the legal
basis for the ALJ’s factual finding (Finding of Fact #56) of the
existence of “managers” other than Gordon. Section 465.018
requires a community pharmacy to name a prescription department
manager and to notify the Board of any change within 10 days.
Since there was evidently no such notice to the Board from Rx
Network or Gordon throughout the time frames at issue in these
the practice of a prescription department manager, the Board
rejects the Department’s exceptions.
ORDER ON THE ALJ’S RECOMMENDED
FINDINGS OF FACTS AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
10. The Board hereby accepts the ALJ’s recommended Findings
of Fact insofar as they are supported by competent substantial
evidence. The Board also accepts the ALJ’s recommended
Conclusions of Law with the following exceptions and comments.
ll. The Board rejects the ALJ’s discussion (Conclusions of
Law #s 211-216) to the extent that the Recommended Order implies
that the Board of Pharmacy is without authority to implement
standards governing internet pharmacy practice. Since the Board
was not a party to the proceedings at DOAH, any implication that
the Board’s rulemaking ability does not extend to enacting such
a rule is mere dicta and, in the Board opinion, erroneous.
12. Indeed, much of the ALJ’s discussion is directed to his
conclusion that the Department failed at hearing to
“demonstrate” that an unwritten Board Statement and proposed
rule satisfies the elements of Sections 120.57(1) (e)2a-g, Fla.
Stat., so as to allow its use at hearing to prove violations on
proceedings, it is plain that none of these other pharmacists
was the prescription department manager for Rx Network.
the part of Rx Network and Gordon. While the Board does not
dispute the ALJ’s conclusions on the Department’s proofs at
hearing, it must note that any failures of proof or persuasion
by the Department in endeavoring to meet the burdens placed upon
it by Sections 120.57(1)(e)2a-g, Fla. Stat, are failures of the
Department in this hearing and can have no impact upon any
present or future rulemaking on the part of the Board.
13. The Board agrees with the ALJ (Conclusions of Law
#217-219) that the Board Statement and subsequent proposed rule
in and of themselves did not provide adequate notice to Rx
Network and Gordon of any general standard of professional or
business practice for pharmacies and pharmacists filling
prescriptions over the internet.
14. The Board also accepts the ALJ’s determination
(Findings of Fact # 55) that the evidence presented was less
than clear and convincing that Gordon personally dispensed the
medications at issue. When, as it must be, the inquiry is
limited only to the testimony and exhibits presented at the
hearing, this finding is based upon competent substantial
evidence.
15. However, as provided in Rule 64Bi6-28.140(3) (d), Fla.
Admin. Code, all pharmacists are required to sign a daily log of
dispensed medications, which must be generated within 72 hours
of the date in question. Each pharmacist who dispensed drugs on
that date must sign the log within seven days of the dispensing
act. The signature is verification of the data contained
therein, including the name of the pharmacist who dispensed each
medication, and reflects that pharmacist’s professional act of
dispensing.
16. It is the Board’s position that the clear meaning of
Rule 64B16-28.140(3) (d) is that the existence of a dispensing
log signed by a pharmacist constitutes prima facie evidence of
that pharmacist’s professional acts of dispensing on the date in
question. Absent some credible and compelling explanation by the
pharmacist to the contrary, the log itself is clear and
convincing evidence of a pharmacist’s personal responsibility
for the dispensing of a particular prescription.
17. Lastly, the Board must respond to the ALJ’s various
findings (for example, Findings of Fact #s 9, 39) and
conclusions (for example, Conclusions of Law #s 191-3, 201, 220)
relating to the interrelationship of the practice of pharmacy
and the rules and statutes governing the practice of other
health care providers. While it is self-evident that rules and
statutes governing the practice of medicine, osteopathic
medicine, nursing and other heaith care professions do not
govern the activities of pharmacists practicing pharmacy, it is
an overbroad conclusion to hold or even intimate that those
regulations do not impact upon pharmacy practice.
18. Pharmacists are charged by the provisions of
Chapter 465 to dispense medications only upon presentation of a
valid prescription and after a determination that the dispensing
act is in accordance with the professional norms and standards
and is in the best interests of the patient. As such,
pharmacists must be aware of the regulations governing those
health care practitioners who prescribe drugs so that a
pharmacist can make a reasoned decision as to whether the
professional standards for legitimate dispensing have been met;
see, for example, Rule 64B8-9.012, Standards for the
Prescription of Obesity Drugs, and Rule 64B15-14.004, Standards
for the Prescription of Obesity Drugs.
19. The Board has therefore adopted rules that reflect
positions taken by the Boards of Medicine and Osteopathic
Medicine as to what standards are to be used in determining
whether certain prescriptions have been written for a legitimate
medical purpose (see Rule 64B16-27.831, Fla. Admin. Code) and
has applied those standards to pharmacy practice. Other
provisions of law, see Sections 893.02(20) and 893.04, Fla.
Stat., place similar demands upon pharmacists. In addition, a
pharmacist is statutorily charged with the duty of reporting a
physician to the Department who the pharmacist knows has
violated the physician’s practice act, Section 465.016(1) (0),
Fla. Stat.
20. Thus, to the extent that the ALJ’s Recommended Order
implies that pharmacists need not be aware of or take into
consideration the rules and regulations governing those health
care providers authorized to prescribe medicinal drugs when
engaging in the professional act of dispensing, such an
implication is in error.
PENALTY
21. The Board therefore accepts the ALJ’s Recommendation
that Rx Network be found in violation of Section 465.016(1) (i)
for 24 instances of dispensing excessive quantities of
controlled substances. The Board further accepts the ALJ’s
recommendation that the evidence adduced at the hearing results
in a finding that Gordon is not guilty of the charges levied in
the two administrative complaints against her.
22. Pursuant to the ALJ’s recommendation, the Board places
Rx Network on PROBATION for a period of ONE (1) YEAR under the
following terms and conditions:
A. Rx Network shall not violate any of the law and
rules governing pharmacy permittees.
B. In order that the ALJ’s recommended condition of
probation be carried out, the Board imposes upon Rx
Network the requirement that its prescription
department manager must attend 12 hours of continuing
education on pharmacy laws and rules. In addition Rx
Network will be subjected to quarterly inspections by
a pharmacy inspector approved by the Executive
Director and board member, James B. Powers, R.Ph., and
such inspections shall be at the expense of Rx
Network.
Finally, Rx Network’s Chief Executive Officer or
president shall perform FIFTY (50) HOURS of community
service.
23. The Board, however, finds that the monetary fine
recommended by the ALJ ($24,000.00) is insufficient and is not
in conformity with similar penalties imposed upon permittees who
have evidenced multiple instances of improper dispensing. The
ALJ, after properly noting that Rx Network on 24 instances had
violated the applicable provision of Chapter 465,F.S. then
imposed the minimum fine for each instance. In the past the
Board has imposed a larger fine than the $1000.00 minimum if
multiple instances of violations have been proven, see
Department of Health v Meister, DOH Case #s 01-19170, 01-11797,
Department of Health v. Correction Corporation of America, DOH
Case # 97-04496. A FINE of $2,000.00 per instance ($48,000.00
total) is therefore warranted. The fine is due and owing within
THIRTY (30) DAYS of the entry of this Order.
costs
24, The Board has reviewed the Department’s motion to
assess costs as provided in Section 456.072(4), Fla. Stat., the
attachments to the motion, and the objections thereto, and has
heard arguments of counsel. The Board GRANTS the motion limited
to the Department’s costs incurred in prosecuting the violations
found against Rx Network which amount to $43,718.85.
25. The Board determines that, despite the ALJ’s
recommendation that the costs to Rx Network be limited only to
the that portion “directly related to that part of the
investigation and prosecution required to prove that Rx (sic)
dispensed excessive quantities of controlled substances,” such
an apportionment is not possible here. The costs involved in
prosecuting the violation against Rx Network found by the ALJ to
be proven are inextricably intertwined with any putative costs
relating to other charges brought in this case and thus are
incapable of reasoned apportionment. The COSTS of $43,718.85 are
due and owing within THIRTY (30) DAYS of the entry of this
Order.
This Order shall become effective upon filing with the Clerk of
the Department.
St ay
DONE and ORDERED this | day of Wi oxo , 2003.
LUCY C. GEE
ACTING EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that a true and correct copy of the
foregoing Final Order has been mailed to Sean M. Ellsworth,
Esq.,Dresnick, Ellsworth & Felder, SunTrust Plaza, Suite 701,
201 Alhambra Circle, Coral Gables, FL 33134-5108; Arthur J.
England, Jr., Esq., Greenberg Traurig, P.A.,1221 Bricknell
Avenue, Miami, FL 33131 and Deborah B. Loucks, Esquire,
Assistant General Counsel, Department of Health, Prosecution
Services Unit, 10 Bald Cypress Way, Bin C-64, Tallahassee,
Florida, this ja day of Ape if , 2003.
chan 5 Abo
Docket for Case No: 02-002980PL
Issue Date |
Proceedings |
Jul. 06, 2004 |
Final Order filed.
|
Jan. 31, 2003 |
Petitioner`s Motion for Leave to File Amended Exceptions to Recommended Order (filed via facsimile).
|
Jan. 31, 2003 |
Petitioner`s Amended Exceptions to Recommended Order (filed via facsimile).
|
Jan. 15, 2003 |
Letter to Judge Manry from Concerned Citzen enclosing what was discussed during conversation with Mr. Chhabra of Rx Network filed.
|
Jan. 13, 2003 |
Letter to J. Taylor from Judge Manry requesting correction of the recommended order issued on January 10, 2003 issued.
|
Jan. 10, 2003 |
Recommended Order issued (hearing held October 3, 2002) CASE CLOSED.
|
Jan. 10, 2003 |
Recommended Order cover letter identifying hearing record referred to the Agency sent out.
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Nov. 15, 2002 |
Recommended Order filed by Petitioner.
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Nov. 15, 2002 |
Respondent`s Proposed Recommended Order filed.
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Nov. 13, 2002 |
Notice of Voluntary Withdrawal of Motion for Extension of Time (filed by Petitioner via facsimile).
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Nov. 13, 2002 |
Motion for Extension of Time to File Proposed Recommended Order (filed by Petitioner via facsimile).
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Nov. 12, 2002 |
Order Granting Motion issued.
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Nov. 08, 2002 |
Motion for Extension of Page Limits (filed by M. Felder via facsimile).
|
Nov. 05, 2002 |
Hearing Exhibits filed. |
Nov. 05, 2002 |
Transcript (6 Volumes) filed. |
Sep. 30, 2002 |
CASE STATUS: Hearing Held; see case file for applicable time frames. |
Sep. 27, 2002 |
Petitioner`s Notice of Filing Supplemental Response to Respondent`s Request for Production (filed via facsimile).
|
Sep. 26, 2002 |
Deposition (of Wendell Locke) filed.
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Sep. 26, 2002 |
Oral Deposition (of Tracy Milam) filed.
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Sep. 26, 2002 |
Deposition (of James McKenna) filed.
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Sep. 26, 2002 |
Notice of Filing filed by Petitioner.
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Sep. 26, 2002 |
Deposition (of Shuman Lucas, Cesar Arias, Malcolm G. Jones, Laura Tepperburg, Anthony Spina, Alan Miller, Eugene Odin) (7) filed.
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Sep. 26, 2002 |
Deposition (of Paula Callahan) filed.
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Sep. 26, 2002 |
Deposition (of Carlos Eduardo Alvarado) filed.
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Sep. 26, 2002 |
Notice of Filing filed by Petitioner.
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Sep. 26, 2002 |
Petitioner`s Notice of Filing Responses to Respondent`s Request for Interrogatories (filed via facsimile).
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Sep. 26, 2002 |
Petitioner`s Notice of Filing Amended Responses to Respondent`s Request for Admissions (filed via facsimile).
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Sep. 25, 2002 |
Notice of Filing (filed by R. Catalano via facsimile).
|
Sep. 25, 2002 |
Petitioner`s Notice of Filing Supplemental Response to Respondent`s Request for Production (filed via facsimile).
|
Sep. 25, 2002 |
Petitioner`s Response to Respondent`s Request for Admissions (filed via facsimile).
|
Sep. 24, 2002 |
Respondent`s RxNetwork of South Florida, LLC Notice of Filing Supplemental Response to Request for Production (filed via facsimile).
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Sep. 24, 2002 |
(Joint) Prehearing Stipulation (filed via facsimile).
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Sep. 23, 2002 |
Motion to Quash Subpoena ad Testificandum filed by L. Jeroslow via facsimile.
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Sep. 19, 2002 |
Second Re-Notice of Taking Deposition, J. McKenna (filed via facsimile).
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Sep. 19, 2002 |
Respondent, RxNetwork of South Florida, LLC. Response to Request for Production (filed via facsimile).
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Sep. 18, 2002 |
Letter to D. Herman from L. Dezell enclosing copy of aforementioned deposition (filed via facsimile).
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Sep. 18, 2002 |
Deposition (of John Taylor, R. PH.) filed.
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Sep. 18, 2002 |
Deposition (of Kenneth Rivera-Kolb, M.D.) filed.
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Sep. 18, 2002 |
Deposition (of Eric Rosenkrantz) filed.
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Sep. 18, 2002 |
Deposition (of Clarence Roderic Presnell) filed.
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Sep. 18, 2002 |
Deposition (of Gwyneth Gordon) filed.
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Sep. 18, 2002 |
Notice of Filing filed by Petitioner.
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Sep. 18, 2002 |
Deposition (of Terri Hanna) filed.
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Sep. 18, 2002 |
Deposition (of Frank Gene Martin) filed.
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Sep. 18, 2002 |
Deposition (of Robert Wilson) filed.
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Sep. 18, 2002 |
Letter to Judge Sartin from R. Catalano stating Joint Pre-Hearing Stipulation will be filed by September 23, 2002 (filed via facsimile).
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Sep. 18, 2002 |
Notice of Taking Telephonic Deposition, W. Locke (filed via facsimile).
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Sep. 13, 2002 |
Petitioner`s Request for Admissions (filed via facsimile).
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Sep. 13, 2002 |
Respondent, RxNetwork of South Florida, LLC. Response to Request for Admissions (filed via facsimile).
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Sep. 12, 2002 |
Gwyneth M. Gordon, R.PH.`s Objection to Petitioner`s Request for Admissions and Interrogatories (filed via facsimile).
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Sep. 12, 2002 |
Subpoena ad Testificandum L. Pinkoff filed.
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Sep. 12, 2002 |
Re-Notice of Taking Deposition, L. Pinkoff filed.
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Sep. 11, 2002 |
Re-Notice of Taking Deposition, J Kenna, A. Miller, S. Lucas, G. Jones, L. Tepperburg, A. Spina filed. (filed via facsimile).
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Sep. 09, 2002 |
Subpoena ad Testificandum, J. Rodiguez, G. Jones, G. Odin, L. Tepperburg, A. Spina, J. McKenna, S. Lucas, A. Miller, C. Arias filed.
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Sep. 09, 2002 |
Re-Notice of Taking Deposition Duces Tecum, J. Taylor filed.
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Sep. 09, 2002 |
Notice of Taking Deposition, J. Rodriguez, G. Jones, G. Odin, L. Tepperburg, A. Spina, J. McKenna, S. Lucas, A. Miller, C. Arias filed.
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Sep. 06, 2002 |
Letter to D. Herman from S. Ellsworth regarding documents that are reponsive to the Subpoena Duces Tecum served on Respondent (filed via facsimile).
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Sep. 06, 2002 |
Notice of Taking Deposition, T. M. (filed via facsimile).
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Aug. 29, 2002 |
Notice of Filing (deposition of T. Walker) filed.
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Aug. 29, 2002 |
Notice of Filing (deposition of S. Zimmerman) filed.
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Aug. 29, 2002 |
Deposition (of T. Walker) filed.
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Aug. 29, 2002 |
Deposition (of S. Zimmerman) filed.
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Aug. 28, 2002 |
Second Notice of Taking Deposition, G. Gordon, T. Hannah (filed via facsimile).
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Aug. 28, 2002 |
Notice of Taking Deposition, N. Chhabra, S. Faruqui (filed via facsimile).
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Aug. 27, 2002 |
Order Granting Motion to Compel issued.
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Aug. 27, 2002 |
Order Granting , in Part, Motion for Protective Order and Petitioner`s Motion to Compel issued.
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Aug. 27, 2002 |
Respondent Gordon`s Response to Motion to Compel (filed via facsimile)
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Aug. 27, 2002 |
Respondent`s Notice of Serving Interrogatories Upon Petitioner (filed via facsimile).
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Aug. 27, 2002 |
Respondent`s Request for Admissions to Petitioner (filed via facsimile).
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Aug. 26, 2002 |
Petitioner`s Response to Respondent`s Request for Production (filed via facsimile).
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Aug. 26, 2002 |
Petitioner`s Notice of Serving Answers to Respondent`s First Set of Interrogatories (filed via facsimile).
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Aug. 23, 2002 |
Second Notice of Taking Deposition, K. Rivera, E. Rosenkrantz filed.
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Aug. 22, 2002 |
Petitioner`s Response to Respondent`s Objection to Subpoena Duces Tecum Served Upon Rx Network and Motion to Compel filed via facsimile.
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Aug. 21, 2002 |
Petitioner`s Response to Respondent`s Objection to Subpoena Duces Tecum Served Upon Gwyneth Gordon (filed via facsimile).
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Aug. 20, 2002 |
Notice of Appearance (filed by Petitioner via facsimile).
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Aug. 20, 2002 |
Petitioner`s Motion to Compel (filed via facsimile)
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Aug. 19, 2002 |
Second Amended Notice of Taking Deposition, R. Presnell (filed via facsimile).
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Aug. 15, 2002 |
Second Notice of Taking Deposition, D. Lovins, V. Chhabra, J. Gallinal, D. Kerr (filed via facsimile).
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Aug. 15, 2002 |
Notice of Taking Deposition, R. Presnell (filed via facsimile).
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Aug. 15, 2002 |
Amended Notice of Taking Deposition, R. Presnell (filed via facsimile).
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Aug. 15, 2002 |
Objection to Subpoena Duces Tecum Served Upon RX Network (filed via facsimile).
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Aug. 14, 2002 |
Order Denying Respondent`s Motion for Expedited Hearing issued.
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Aug. 14, 2002 |
Objection to Subpoena Duces Tecum Served Upon Gwyneth Gordon (filed by Respondent via facsimile).
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Aug. 13, 2002 |
Order of Pre-hearing Instructions issued.
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Aug. 13, 2002 |
Notice of Hearing issued (hearing set for September 30 through October 4, 2002; 9:30 a.m.; Fort Lauderdale, FL).
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Aug. 12, 2002 |
Petitioner`s Response to Respondent`s Motion for Expedited Hearing (filed via facsimile).
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Aug. 12, 2002 |
Petitioner`s Response to Respondent`s Motion for Expedited Hearing (filed via facsimile).
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Aug. 12, 2002 |
Order of Consolidation issued. (consolidated cases are: 02-002976, 02-002977, 02-002978PL, 02-002980PL)
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Aug. 12, 2002 |
Notice of Taking Deposition, T. Walker, USA Prescription, Inc., E. Rosenkrantz, K. Rivera, S. Zimmerman, T. Hanna, P. Calabon, C. Alavarado (filed via facsimile).
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Aug. 09, 2002 |
Motion for Protective Order filed by Respondent.
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Aug. 08, 2002 |
Amended Notice of Taking Deposition, Rx Network of South Florida, LLC (filed via facsimile).
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Aug. 08, 2002 |
Notice of Serving Discovery (filed by Petitioner via facsimile).
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Aug. 07, 2002 |
Motion for Expedited Hearing (filed by Respondent via facsimile).
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Aug. 07, 2002 |
Notice of Taking Deposition, Rx Network of South Florida, LLC, G. Gordon, D. Lovins, D. Kerr, J. Gallinal, V. Chhabra (filed via facsimile).
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Aug. 06, 2002 |
Petitioner`s Motion to Consolidate (cases requested to be consolidated 02-2976, 022977, 022980, 02-2978) filed via facsimile.
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Aug. 06, 2002 |
Notice of Appearance (filed by Petitioner via facsimile).
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Aug. 06, 2002 |
Unilateral Response to Initial Order (filed by Respondent via facsimile).
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Aug. 05, 2002 |
Petitioner`s Response to Initial Order (filed via facsimile).
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Jul. 29, 2002 |
Initial Order issued.
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Jul. 26, 2002 |
Amended Administrative Complaint filed.
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Jul. 26, 2002 |
Request for Formal Hearing filed.
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Jul. 26, 2002 |
Agency referral filed.
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Orders for Case No: 02-002980PL
Issue Date |
Document |
Summary |
Mar. 31, 2003 |
Agency Final Order
|
|
Jan. 10, 2003 |
Recommended Order
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Internet pharmacy that dispensed excessive quantities of obesity drugs should pay fine of $24,000 and be placed on probation for one year.
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