Mishandling Your Prescription Drugs Can Be Criminal and Even Deadly

Published on: 8/23/2012

On the surface, it may seem pretty harmless. A guy we’ll call Joe decides to help out his girlfriend, Vicki, who is suffering from some lower back pain. Joe goes to his medicine chest and gives her some Vicodin or Oxycontin to help her relieve the pain until she can see her doctor.

There are now two big problems in play. First, Joe has now delivered a controlled substance which is a felony. And second, Vicky is now in possession of a narcotic which is also a felony. You might have entirely honorable intentions to help a friend but you have only added to a problem we are seeing at an alarmingly increasing rate, not only in the Waukesha County court system but all over the country. 

The consequences of playing fast and free with your own prescription medications can not only lead to criminal charges, they can be deadly. We have seen an absolute explosion of drug overdoses resulting in death, usually from opiate drugs.

Generally, it happens when legally prescribed medications are no longer available. Perhaps the doctor discontinues a prescription because he suspects the patient may have an addiction. The patient, in turn, tries to obtain the drug illegally.

So, where do people go for these drugs? They can get illegally transferred opiates from people who actually have the intention of selling these controlled substances illegally. If that supply runs dry, the buyer turns to street drug opiates with heroin being the most obvious choice. This is where we’ve seen the overdose explosion because people don’t know what they’re doing in terms of the content of the drug. Many times they will mix heroin with other controlled substances.

The reality is, if someone delivers or gives a controlled substance and the delivery becomes a substantial factor in causing the death of another, we’re now talking reckless homicide.

In Waukesha County, the Medical Examiner’s office has reported five fatal heroin overdoses in 2010, three in 2009 and seven in 2008. But that’s only part of the story because many other cases are still under investigation and awaiting toxicology results.

If you are taking these kinds of drugs with legal prescriptions, here are some Dos and Don’ts:

  • Use only the medications that have been prescribed to you with the advice and consent of your doctor for the drug’s intended purpose.
  • Keep your prescriptions up to date.
  • Don’t self-diagnose and self-medicate.
  • Get rid of old prescription drugs you are no longer using. There are plenty of opportunities to dispose of prescription drugs. Check out the DFC (Drug Free Communities) collection schedule in your area.

You never want to give access to these drugs for others to use in an improper manner. Old meds lying around the house can also be tempting for younger kids and their friends. Rummaging through grandma or grandpa’s medicine chest is a popular activity with kids using these drugs or selling them.

Again, use these prescription drugs as minimally as possible and only under the guidance of your physician. Never give or take a prescription medication from someone other than a legally prescribed drug from a pharmacist

Aside from the health risks, always remember that misusing prescription drugs has harsh criminal implications. Distributing controlled substances is a felony with punishment depending on how much of the drug is involved. If someone dies as a result of your actions, it’s reckless homicide. Being in possession of a schedule 1 or schedule II narcotic without a valid prescription is a felony. 

Prescription drug abuse is very serious business. All-too-often, it’s literally a matter of life or death.