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Category:
Health/Science
Region:
USA
State:
New York
SCHENECTADY DOC GUILTY OF OPERATING MOBILE PHARMACY
Date: 17-Dec-2007
A Schenectady doctor, known for making house calls and arrested for operating what authorities labeled as a mobile pharmacy, has been found guilty illegally possessing and prescribing medications such as morphine and methadone.

David Hornick, 64, had originally been charged in June, 2006 with three felony counts of possession of controlled narcotics but prosecutors later downgraded those charges to three misdemeanors of failing to properly store and discard prescription drugs after the Schenectady County district attorney's office said it had been determined that Hornick was not using or selling the drugs.

A jury found him guilty Monday night of seven counts which included four misdemeanors and three violations of the Public Health.

He faces up to two years in jail when sentenced on Feb. 12.Authorities charged Hornick with carrying morphine, methadone and fentanyl in his car. Prosecutors alleged that he was taking prescription medications from his patients and allegedly selling them on the black market.

Hornick works out of his Niskayna home. He had also faced a misdemeanor count of possession of stolen property.

Police had said Hornick was skimming pills from current patients as well as patients who had died. Police said that they found nearly 2,000 pills in the trunk of his car when he was arrested outside the CVS Pharmacy on Eastern Ave., in Schenectady.

Hornick became under suspicion when one of his patients reported him for acting strangely. She also said that the pills he was giving her were not controlling her pain. Upon contacting the pharmacy that was handling her prescriptions, she learned that although there were a number of prescriptions in her name, she was not receiving them. Police said that the labels had been removed from the pill containers in Hornick's trunk so they could not be traced.

Hornick was listed as a staff physician at Homedical Associates of Niskayuna. Most of the patients he served were homebound and on Medicare.