Lexington man allegedly paid six others to go with him on pill run to Fla. pain clinic
A Lexington man allegedly paid six people to go to a Jacksonville, Florida pain clinic, and he even offered them a cut of the profits he made after selling the drugs that they were prescribed, according to Williamsburg police.
After their vehicle was stopped near Williamsburg Thursday afternoon on the way back from Florida, police seized nearly 900 pills with a street value of nearly $20,000, according to Williamsburg Public Affairs Officer Shawn Jackson.
"On Thursday, April 15th, the Williamsburg Police Department continued their fight against the transportation of narcotics back into Kentucky from Florida pain clinics via I-75, better known, as of late, as the ‘Pill Pipeline," Jackson said in a press release.
"Through the investigation, it was determined that the group had been to a Florida pain clinic, and was on the way back to Lexington. The investigation also revealed that the trip had in fact been sponsored by the driver of the vehicle in exchange for half of each person’s narcotics. It is believed that the pills were being brought back to Kentucky to be sold on the street."
Jackson charged Daniel Comley, 45, of Lexington, with operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol/drugs and first-degree trafficking in a controlled substance.
Jackson also charged the following six people with public intoxication, including: Virgil L. Creech, 42, and Evelyn M. Creech, 47, both of Nicholasville; Terry R. Burton, 53, Mary Jane Burton, 50, Tina Gain Henson, 34, and Tanya Renee Edwards, 30, all of Lexington.
About 4 p.m. Thursday, Jackson received information that several subjects were inside Hometown BP off Exit 11 and appeared to be highly under the influence.
Prior to police arriving, the caller told Jackson that the subjects had left the parking lot heading north on I-75.
Jackson relayed the information to officers working criminal interdiction on I-75, and Commercial Vehicle Enforcement K-9 Officer Landry Collett spotted the vehicle going north and observed it driving carelessly before conducting a traffic stop, according to the press release.
Collett stopped the 1993 green Chevrolet van near mile marker 15 about 4 p.m., and by 4:20 p.m. seven occupants in the vehicle had been arrested.
Six of seven passengers failed field sobriety tests and had taken Oxycodone and Xanax, Jackson wrote on arrest citations.
An eighth occupant was a disabled female, who Williamsburg police took to the homeless shelter, Jackson said.
Comley also failed field sobriety tests and told police that he had smoked marijuana and had been taking Oxycodone, according to his arrest citation.
Police determined through the investigation that Comley allegedly paid the others to go to Florida, including all their medical costs, such as doctor’s visits and the cost of medication, Jackson wrote on the arrest citation.
He also allegedly agreed to split part of the profits after he sold the drugs in Lexington, according to the arrest citation.
All seven were arrested without incident, and lodged in the Whitley County Detention Center.
Jackson is continuing the investigation, and said information has been forward to the DEA, which has already taken one similar case and could adopt this one also.
Other officers assisted with the investigation including: Chief Wayne Bird, K-9 Officer Brandon Prewitt, and Kentucky State Police K-9 Officers Jason Denny and Jason McCowan.
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I think if they tear your car apart and find nothing, they should have to apologize and pack the car back. If you are nice enough to let them search, they should be nice enough not to leave a mess for you to clean up. Would they leave everything there if you were arrested? No, they would want to confiscate every last piece.
When the police come and ask to search your vehicle it is your right as a free citizen to tell them HELL NO! This is America not a police state. Make them get a warrant if they want to snoop around so bad.
The pipe line that the officers are referring to is a problem but it is also a problem for the drivers from ky who r not involved with this. I recently went on vacation and was stopped three times on my way to florida and back, once on the way down and twice on the way back. On two of the traffic stops they removed all my luggage and had the drug dog go through my car twice and nothing. Why did they have to take my stuff out when the dog made rounds and never pointed anything out. I think they should train the officers that they do not have to ruin ev eryones trip by tearing up ones car and guess what they never even offered to re-pack my car guyess who did that me. Maybe some of the dogs should train the officers they r at times smarter opr maybe we can get a drug free sticker like a handi-cap sticker and one can travel in peace. If you have a plate that reads KENTUCKY you had better stay home or drive to nebraqska and rent a car to drive south of the ky border. Give us a break u do not have to stop every car that has ky tags. This happened in tenn. and ga. I made through corbin ok guess i was home free with the disney bags they poured unto the side of I-75. GET SOME FREAKIN TRAINING AND COMMON SENSE south of the border. We are still a free country i think, not so sure anymore????
Williamsburg is a cesspool of drugs and continues to get worse because the so called “police officers” are involved in drug trafficking themselves. Until the feds clean up the police departments, it will continue to get worse.
Until the feds crack down on these pain clinics Wburg vice can arrest ppl until they are blue in the face and it wont make no difference.