Cop Block reader D. Thompson reports that he was approached by an Agent Schmidt (badge #1014) of the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s office while he was in a doctor’s office. Agent Schmidt told Mr. Thompson that he was investigating some sort of red flag in the state’s prescription drug monitoring system, and that apparently he’d visited the physicians of record, and had already swindled (or blackmailed?) them into disclosing what Mr. Thompson would think should be HIPAA-protected health records. Mr. Thompson doubts any warrant was issued for obtaining any records.

Agent Schmidt then purportedly offered to take a cash payment in exchange for telling his office that there was nothing to investigate and to (supposedly) make the case go away. Mr. Thompson advised the agent that he had no interest in paying him cash in exchange for his “service.” Schmidt then told Thompson that he was “an asshole” and that Thompson would be prosecuted for obtaining prescription medications from two providers at the same physician’s office.

In a time where the United States has the highest incarceration rate in the world, mostly over drugs, this is disturbing to say the least. There have already been numerous crackdowns on medical marijuana patients and dispensaries. People continue to have their lives senselessly inconvenienced or destroyed over the war on drugs, and now the police are seeking to crack down even on legal drugs.

The intrusion, or even worse, mutual partnership, of law enforcement with healthcare is utterly atrocious. This is not only a moral abomination – the entanglement of government officials, bureaucracy, and violent enforcement, with that of private medical decisions and healthcare essentially amounts to fascism. The reality is that although HIPAA purports to protect patient “privacy,” and warrants are “required” for certain investigations, there are various systems currently in place that record and compile data regarding people’s prescription medications, so that when certain parameters are met, or “red flags” are triggered such as in this case, law enforcement can either crack down on physicians, or their patients.  The DEA and various federal enforcement agencies pressure, or even force physicians to monitor, and essentially criminalize their own patients.

Drug addicts are jailed instead of rehabilitated. Women have had their children seized for eating poppy seed bagels and refusing certain surgical procedures. William Reddie was shot and killedover an incident wherein CPS tried to take his son away over a marijuana incident.

Anna and Alex Nikolayev of California recently had their infant seized by Child Protective Services, purportedly because they sought to obtain a second medical opinion on their son’s condition. The police showed up at their door and smacked Mr. Nikolayev to the ground. Mr. Nikolayev is originally from Russia, and noted that the ridiculous situation reminded him of a “communist regime.”

Such drastic and violent measures cannot even remotely be said to be in furtherance of anyone’s safety. Having no mother is not safer, or better for a child than having a mother who eats poppy seed bagels. Having no mother is not safer, or better, than having a mother who does not wish to preemptively consent to unnecessary medical procedures. Having a dead father is not safer, or better than having a father who smokes pot occasionally. Having no parents is not better than having parents who (god forbid) are frustrated with the level of care being provided, and wish to seek a second medical opinion.

The city police officer who was fired for mistakenly killing a fellow officer during a 2004 shootout will be eligible in June for a $36,000-a-year city pension, records show.

James A. Palange, 39, qualifies for the pension because he remained on paid suspension for six years while he appealed the firing, said Mayor Vaughn D. Spencer and Police Chief William M. Heim.

Officers need 12 years to be vested. Palange had 13, counting the suspension time.

Neither Heim nor Spencer would say what took so long, noting that it’s a personnel matter.

Palange had taken his 2005 firing to arbitration.

Heim would say only that the pension deal is not the result of arbitration, but the result of a June 2011 settlement following negotiations between the city and the Fraternal Order of Police. That settlement had not been previously disclosed.

Neither Palange nor the FOP was available for comment.

Palange has worked full time for Mohnton since 2007, even though he was on the city payroll until July 2011.

In mid-2010, he was getting about $100,000 a year in city salary and benefits such as health care insurance.

Heim said Palange will get the pension check, but not the health care benefits such as medical and prescription insurance that other police retirees get.

His check will be based on 18 years of service time: seven years working for the city; six years while on paid suspension during the appeal; and five years of so-called street time that retiring city officers are allowed to buy even though they hadn’t worked those years.

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