Pinellas County Doctor Shopping Attorney
Prescription fraud charges move fast in Florida. When law enforcement suspects someone of obtaining controlled substances from multiple providers without disclosure, an investigation is often already underway before the person being investigated realizes anything is wrong. Doctor shopping is prosecuted seriously in Pinellas County, and the consequences extend well beyond a fine or probation. A conviction can affect professional licenses, firearm rights, immigration status, and your permanent record. Omar Abdelghany of OA Law Firm has handled drug-related charges across the Tampa Bay region, including Pinellas County, and understands how these cases are built and where they can be challenged.
What Florida Law Actually Criminalizes Under the Doctor Shopping Statute
Florida Statute Section 893.13 and the more specific prescription fraud provisions under Section 893.02 and 893.05 work together to target what prosecutors describe as doctor shopping. The core allegation is that a person obtained, or attempted to obtain, a controlled substance or a prescription by misrepresenting or failing to disclose existing prescriptions or recent treatment from other practitioners. The state does not require proof that you intended to sell or distribute what you obtained. The charge can arise from purely personal use, which surprises many people.
Florida operates a Prescription Drug Monitoring Program, known as PDMP or E-FORCSE, which allows physicians, pharmacists, and law enforcement to query a statewide database of dispensed controlled substances. When investigators pull that data for a particular individual and find overlapping prescriptions from separate prescribers within a short window, that report often becomes the foundation for a criminal referral. What follows is typically a records subpoena to the treating physicians and pharmacies, followed by interviews, and in some cases a formal arrest. The PDMP database query is not infallible and is not always read in proper context, and that is one of several areas where a defense attorney can introduce doubt about what the data actually shows.
Controlled substances most commonly at issue in these cases include oxycodone, hydrocodone, benzodiazepines such as Xanax and Klonopin, and other Schedule II and Schedule III medications. The severity of the charge depends in part on which substance is involved and the total quantities obtained. A third-degree felony under Florida law carries up to five years in state prison and a $5,000 fine, and multiple prescription-related counts can be charged simultaneously, each carrying its own potential penalty.
How Pinellas County Prosecutors Build These Cases
The Pinellas County State Attorney’s Office handles prescription fraud cases through the same felony division responsible for other drug-related offenses. Investigators typically come from the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office or city police departments acting on tips from pharmacies, complaints from physicians, or pattern-based queries run through the PDMP system. Healthcare providers are often the first to flag a potential issue, and many are required under Florida law to report suspected prescription fraud to the Florida Department of Health or directly to law enforcement.
By the time a defendant learns that charges are being considered, investigators may have already gathered pharmacy dispensing records, physician office notes, signed prescription slips, and any documentation showing what the defendant disclosed, or failed to disclose, at each appointment. The prosecution will argue that the defendant knew about existing prescriptions and deliberately withheld that information from at least one provider. That knowledge element is critical. The state must prove that the omission was intentional, not a result of memory failure, physician communication breakdown, or legitimate multi-provider care.
Defendants who are healthcare professionals, nurses, pharmacists, or licensed practitioners face a compounded risk. A conviction triggers mandatory reporting obligations to Florida licensing boards, and the Department of Health often initiates its own parallel investigation. For these individuals, the criminal case and the professional licensure proceeding run on separate tracks, each requiring attention and legal response.
Where Defense Arguments Actually Gain Traction
The PDMP record is the prosecution’s most common starting point, but raw database data requires interpretation. Prescriptions that appear to overlap by date may reflect legitimate transitions between providers, a documented change in medication, or a treating physician who was already aware of concurrent prescriptions and approved the patient’s care plan. Medical records that show disclosure to at least one provider, or records showing that a prescriber had access to prior prescription history through the PDMP itself, directly undercut the “failure to disclose” element of the charge.
There are also constitutional dimensions to how law enforcement accessed the records in the first place. A subpoena for pharmacy or medical records must comply with applicable legal standards, and if investigators obtained records through methods that exceeded those standards, a challenge to the admissibility of that evidence may significantly narrow what the prosecution can present at trial. Omar Abdelghany routinely reviews the procedural history of evidence collection in drug and prescription cases, not just the underlying facts, because how evidence was obtained matters as much as what it shows.
Negotiated resolutions are also a realistic avenue in appropriate cases. Florida’s drug court programs and diversion options sometimes apply to prescription fraud cases, particularly for first-time offenders with documented substance dependency. Entry into a diversion program can result in charges being dropped upon successful completion, avoiding a felony conviction entirely. Whether that option is available in a particular Pinellas County case depends on the specific facts, the defendant’s history, and how the case is presented to the prosecutor’s office. An attorney who handles these cases regularly understands which arguments carry weight in that jurisdiction and which do not.
Answers to Questions Clients Ask About Prescription Fraud Cases in Pinellas County
Can I be charged with doctor shopping even if I had legitimate medical needs?
Yes. Florida’s prescription fraud statute does not require the prosecution to prove that your medical needs were fabricated. The charge focuses on whether you disclosed existing prescriptions to each provider, not on whether you actually needed the medication. A legitimate medical condition does not automatically provide a defense, though documented disclosure and medical history are relevant to the case.
What happens to my professional license if I’m convicted?
Florida requires healthcare professionals, teachers, and others holding state-issued licenses to report felony convictions to the relevant licensing board. A doctor shopping conviction, being a felony drug offense, will typically trigger a board investigation that can result in suspension or revocation of a license, even if the criminal case results in a minimal sentence. Addressing both the criminal case and the licensure risk simultaneously is important for anyone in a licensed profession.
Is diversion an option in Pinellas County for these charges?
Diversion options exist in Pinellas County, including drug court programs designed for individuals with substance dependency issues. Eligibility depends on the defendant’s prior record, the nature of the charges, and the prosecutor’s discretion. These programs are not guaranteed, and successfully advocating for diversion requires presenting the case in terms the state attorney’s office finds persuasive.
How does the PDMP database actually work, and can it be wrong?
Florida’s E-FORCSE system records prescriptions as they are dispensed by pharmacies and entered into the statewide database. The records show the prescribing provider, the dispensing pharmacy, the date, and the medication. Like any database, it can contain data entry errors, and it shows prescriptions filled rather than prescriptions that were knowingly obtained through fraud. What the database cannot capture is the full clinical context, including what a patient disclosed during an appointment or what a physician already knew from their own records.
Will this charge affect my ability to own a firearm?
A felony conviction in Florida results in the loss of the right to possess a firearm under both state and federal law. A doctor shopping charge filed as a felony, if it results in a conviction, carries that consequence. This is one of the reasons resolving the case favorably, whether through dismissal, diversion, or reduction to a misdemeanor, matters significantly beyond the immediate sentence.
What if the prescriptions were written by different doctors in the same medical practice?
This scenario often produces factual disputes. If the prescribing physicians share records systems or have documented access to each other’s charts, the argument that the patient deliberately concealed information becomes more difficult for the prosecution to sustain. The defense would focus on what information was accessible to each prescriber and whether the standard for knowing concealment is actually met on those specific facts.
How long does a prescription fraud investigation typically take before charges are filed?
Investigations can span months. Investigators often gather records from multiple pharmacies and providers before making contact with the subject of the investigation. In some cases, the first indication that someone is under investigation is a letter from a pharmacy board or a knock at the door from a detective. The length of the investigative window is one reason why speaking with an attorney as soon as any contact from law enforcement occurs is critical.
Defending Prescription Fraud Charges in Pinellas County
OA Law Firm focuses exclusively on criminal defense, and Omar Abdelghany personally handles every case that comes through the office. That means the attorney who evaluates your case is the same attorney who appears in Pinellas County court on your behalf. Clients facing prescription fraud allegations or doctor shopping charges in Clearwater, St. Petersburg, or anywhere else in Pinellas County can reach Omar directly. He reviews the evidence, explains what the state must prove and where that proof has weaknesses, and works toward the best achievable outcome, whether that means a negotiated resolution, diversion, or a full defense at trial. Contact OA Law Firm to discuss your situation and get a clear picture of where you stand.
