Author Topic: Albany DA raids Fla. steroids center: a Mr. Olympia is involved?  (Read 5862 times)

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Albany DA raids Fla. steroids center: a Mr. Olympia is involved?
« on: February 27, 2007, 02:29:22 PM »
Anyone hear about this, they claimed that they were selling steroids.  To former mr olympias no less, any ideas on who?

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Albany DA raids Fla. steroids center: a Mr. Olympia is involved?
« Reply #1 on: February 27, 2007, 05:03:26 PM »
INTERESTING. Former Mr Olympia and other in the "Industry" are involved.



Albany DA raids Fla. steroids center
Yearlong investigation of Internet drug sales may expose use by pro athletes

ORLANDO, Fla. -- A downtown pharmacy was raided by a law enforcement task force on Tuesday, the climax of a large New York state grand jury investigation into Internet drug sales that could expose widespread illicit steroid use by professional athletes and thousands of people across the nation.

The unprecedented inquiry, led by Albany County's district attorney, has taken New York narcotics agents and an Orlando-based federal task force deep inside a maze of shadowy pharmacies and Web sites that have reaped millions of dollars in profit by allegedly exploiting federal and state prescription laws, according to court records.

More than two dozen doctors, pharmacists and business owners have been, or will be, arrested in the coming days in Alabama, Texas, Florida and New York on sealed indictments charging them with various felonies for unlawfully distributing steroids and other controlled substances, records show.

The Times Union has learned that investigators in the year-old case, which has been kept quiet until now, uncovered evidence that testosterone and other performance-enhancing drugs may have been fraudulently prescribed over the Internet to current and former Major League Baseball players, National Football League players, college athletes, high school coaches, a former Mr. Olympia champion and another leading contender in the bodybuilding competition.

The customers include Los Angeles Angels center fielder Gary Matthews Jr., according to sources with knowledge of the investigation.

Sources also said investigators from the New York Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement, which is part of the state Department of Health, recently interviewed a top physician for the Pittsburgh Steelers about his alleged purchase last year of roughly $150,000 of testosterone and human growth hormone.

In the past several years, Internet-based pharmacies have become the new drug delivery system for tens of thousands of customers nationwide, displacing smugglers, overseas mail-order companies and so-called ``gym rat'' dealers who sell steroids from the trunks of their cars, according to state and federal investigators.

Tuesday's raid of Signature Pharmacy, an Orlando business that collected an estimated $36 million in revenue last year, could expose a long list of sports figures, celebrities and others who have turned to Internet pharmacies for illegal drugs such as steroids, authorities said.

``I don't know the names of a lot of the athletes,'' Lt. Carl Metzger, commander of the Orlando Metropolitan Bureau of Enforcement, said during Tuesday's raid.

``This is a criminal investigation, not an administative investigation,'' Metzger told a gaggle of TV reporters at the scene. ``I think that some of their business was legitimate,'' he said, adding that ``much of it was illegal.''

In a press release, Orlando police said the raid targeted steroids and human growth hormone. ``People forget about the damage steroids can cause,'' Metzger said. ``It goes all the way down to the high school level.''
Albany County District Attorney David Soares said his office pursued the case, in part, because New York has some of the strictest prescription drug laws in the country. In addition, Signature Pharmacy last year did an estimated $10 million in business in New York, he said.

Soares said that his critics will probably question why a local New York prosecutor is pursuing the case. ``We're arresting young men on street corners every day for selling drugs,'' he said. ``Signature did $30 million last year ... $250,000 in Albany County.''

Corruption in the Internet pharmaceutical industry, which has received lax oversight from federal authorities, has been organized and systemic, prompting Congressional hearings on the issue and a crackdown in recent months by federal agencies.

Some companies have enlisted unethical doctors who blindly write prescriptions for as little as $25 each, giving pharmacies the authorization they need to dole out thousands of illegal prescriptions, according to court documents filed in Albany, Orlando and in a related federal case in Rhode Island.

Customers usually have to pay high retail prices for their drugs, in part because many purchasers avoid seeking reimbursement from insurance carriers to escape detection. Mostly, they use cash, checks and credit cards to pay for the drugs.

``It's a complete perversion of the medical system,'' said Christopher Baynes, an Albany County prosecutor assigned exclusively to the case for almost a year.

Some federal agents have complained that until recently the Drug Enforcement Agency and other federal agencies had rarely filed criminal charges in such cases. Instead, they were content to revoke the operating permits of pharmacies that have doled out controlled substances, including addictive painkillers, to customers who have not been properly evaluated by a physician.

In part, an agent said, the unwillingness to prosecute the cases criminally has been a result of federal prosecutors in certain areas of the country being reluctant to take on the complex and time-consuming investigations.

While cases involving heroin, cocaine and other addictive street drugs receive enormous federal resources, law enforcement has been slow to catch on to the Internet pharmacies practices, said the agent, who spoke on condition he not be identified.

In New York, investigators have interviewed numerous suspected steroids buyers, including physicians who prescribed or bought large quantities, an Albany narcotics detective, a top Mr. Olympia bodybuilder and the host of a popular cable television program, sources said.

Last month, a New York investigator who has been tracking suspicious purchases from Signature Pharmacy flew to Pittsburgh to interview a top physician for the NFL's Pittsburgh Steelers about why he allegedly used a personal credit card to purchase roughly $150,000 in testosterone and human growth hormone in 2006.
The physician, Richard A. Rydze, who won a silver medal in platform diving in the 1972 Olympics, told the investigator the drugs were for his private patients, according to a person briefed on the interview. Rydze is an internist at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. He also is a consulting physician for the FBI and the Federal Aviation Administration.

There are no allegations Rydze violated any laws. Many doctors are allowed under Pennsylvania rules to order and dispense prescription drugs. But investigators in New York said his orders of testosterone piqued their interest because of the large volume, his position with an NFL team and because he allegedly used a personal credit card.

``The doctors pretty much have reign to do anything they want,'' said Carmen Catizone, executive director of the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy.

But Catizone, who has served as an expert witness for the DEA and other law enforcement agencies in criminal trials, said the credit card purchases raised questions.

``I've never seen a doctor pull out his or her own credit card ... it just doesn't make sense,'' Catizone said. ``Unless you are trying to build frequent-flyer miles on a credit card, I'm not sure why they'd be using a personal credit card.''

Rydze and two spokesmen for the Steelers' organization declined repeated requests for comment over the past two weeks. Pennsylvania state medical board officials also declined to comment. NFL officials were taken by surprise as news of the case swept through the sports world on the Internet.

``We just became aware of this, and we will look into it.'' NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said. The retail value of the drugs allegedly purchased by Rydze, who tends to Steelers' players during their home and away games, is about $750,000, according to an investigator in the case.

In a related case in Mobile, Ala., two owners of Applied Pharmacy Services have been indicted by an Albany County grand jury. Their customer list allegedly includes former professional boxer and heavyweight champion Evander Holyfield, Los Angeles Angels centerfielder Gary Matthews Jr., and retired baseball star Jose Canseco, an admitted steroid user.

A law enforcement source involved in that investigation said authorities have not identified what types of products allegedly were ordered by Matthews or Holyfield, whom they said used the name ``Evan Fields'' when placing orders.

Matthews was informed of his name appearing in a Times Union news report before his spring training game Tuesday. ``There's nothing much to say. A name is mentioned. It's sketchy at best,'' said Los Angeles Angels Vice President of Communications Tim Mead.

``Certainly as we acquire more information, we'll look into it.'' Mead said.

Holyfield himself did not comment.

``Evander was asked about this by another member of the media and he said he never heard of the company,'' Donald Tremblay, public relations director at Main Events, a company promoting Holyfield's upcoming fight against Vinny Maddaline, said.
Still, Holyfield and other alleged high-profile customers represent just a fraction of pharmacies' business, which law enforcement authorities said is centered largely on dispensing performance-enhancing drugs.

The Orlando pharmacy is owned and operated by a Florida couple, Stan and Naomi Loomis, who are both licensed pharmacists. Both were arrested Tuesday on indictments from Albany and led in handcuffs from their business.

In 2002, their company reported revenue of about $500,000. Then, driven by a booming Internet prescription market, and the referral business Signature received from various Web sites, revenue topped $35 million last year, authorities in the case said.

Also arrested at Signature on Tuesday on Albany indictments were Kenneth Michael Loomis, also a pharmacist, and Kirk Calvert, Signature's marketing director.

Among Signature's customers was Jason Grimsley, the former Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher who left baseball last year after mail-order steroids were seized at his Scottsdale home by federal agents from San Francisco involved in an ongoing investigation targeting steroid use in professional sports. Grimsley has not been charged with any crimes, but federal agents said he told them about widespread use of performance-enhancing drugs by Major League Baseball players.

In an affidavit from a federal agent who questioned Grimsley, the agent said Grimsley claimed another player, later identified in an ESPN report as former Baltimore Orioles first baseman David Segui, had advised Grimsley on how to obtain human growth hormone from a ``wellness center'' in Florida.

But authorities said they believe Signature's steroid and human growth hormone customers extend beyond baseball to other sports.

During surveillance of the pharmacy last year, investigators said they saw a Philadelphia Eagles football player enter the pharmacy, though they are not certain why he was there. They also identified a member of the Washington Redskins as being a Signature customer, according to an agent in the case.

The pharmacy is located in a two-story, $3.2 million facility on Kuhl Avenue in the heart of Orlando. It contains a small retail store that sells mostly bodybuilding supplements, a high-tech drug-manufacturing laboratory and executive offices on the second floor. A mix of federal and state agents spent Tuesday removing computers and records from Signature's offices.

In the past year, investigators have closely monitored the business through wiretaps. An Orlando investigator also has sifted through the pharmacy's discarded records, removing customer lists and other records, sources in the case said.

People expected to be arrested Tuesday were to be arraigned on sealed felony indictments in New York. They will face extradition hearings over the next several days unless they waive those hearings and agree to appear in Albany on the charges, authorities said.
Brendan J. Lyons can be reached at 454-5547 or by e-mail at blyons@timesunion.com.

Times Union Sports Writers Pete Iorizzo and Hank Domin contributed to this report.




http://timesunion.com/AspStories/story.asp?storyID=566985&category=&BCCode=HOME&newsdate=2/27/2007&TextPage=1

Max_Rep

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Re: INTERESTING. Former Mr Olympia and other in the "Industry" are involved.
« Reply #2 on: February 27, 2007, 05:21:43 PM »
Well technically it didn't say former Mr. Olympia... it said "top Mr. Olympia bodybuilder." The way the press confuses things I think they were trying to say top Mr. Olympia "competitor", not an actual title winner.

I know potato -- potato. 
and keep moving!

ribonucleic

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Re: INTERESTING. Former Mr Olympia and other in the "Industry" are involved.
« Reply #3 on: February 27, 2007, 05:24:36 PM »
You mean a top Mr. Olympia competitor took steroids?!

This could call the integrity of the entire sport into question.  :(

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Re: Albany DA raids Fla. steroids center: a Mr. Olympia is involved?
« Reply #4 on: February 27, 2007, 07:41:49 PM »
and this is a shock to anyone?there are users/abusers in every walk of life,every gym ,sport .

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Re: Albany DA raids Fla. steroids center: a Mr. Olympia is involved?
« Reply #5 on: February 27, 2007, 08:01:34 PM »
i hope this makes them happy. its smart they are going after steriods instead of crack meth and coccaine. america is winning the war on drugs ::)..another athlete is off of the street.
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Re: INTERESTING. Former Mr Olympia and other in the "Industry" are involved.
« Reply #6 on: February 27, 2007, 08:48:24 PM »
You mean a top Mr. Olympia competitor took steroids?!

This could call the integrity of the entire sport into question.  :(

Hahahahaha!!! ROFL

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Steriod Raid identifies former Mr.Olympia and other top bodybuilder
« Reply #7 on: February 27, 2007, 08:54:25 PM »
The feds just keep on digging................. ...............

Steroid Raid Exposes Celebrities, Athletes

CBNNews.com -- ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -- A New York prosecutor said athletes and celebrities were involved as customers of an illicit steroid sales network that produced arrests of four company officials on Tuesday.

However, Albany County District Attorney P. David Soares declined to name any consumers. He said his office was not investigating patients, but alleged producers and distributors, including doctors and pharmacists.

"I understand that the involvement of athletes and celebrities makes this a sexy story, but I assure you we are not, at this point, we are not concerned with the celebrity factor," Soares said. "Our focus here is to shut down distribution channels."

Soares was in Florida on Tuesday for two pharmacy raids conducted by federal and state agents at two Signature Pharmacy stores. Four company officials, including a married couple who are both pharmacists, were arrested. They were charged with criminal diversion of prescription medications and prescriptions, criminal sale of a controlled substance and insurance fraud.

Soares refused to answer most questions about the case, which involves sealed indictments.

"I cannot elaborate any more and I cannot provide you with any more details without compromising an investigation which even at this point is at a very sensitive stage," he said.

The Times Union of Albany, N.Y., first disclosed the steroid investigation in a report citing unidentified sources. The newspaper said investigators found evidence that testosterone and other performance-enhancing drugs may have been fraudulently prescribed over the Internet to current and former Major League Baseball and NFL players, college athletes, high school coaches, a former Mr. Olympia champion and another top contender in the bodybuilding competition.

Customers include Angels outfielder Gary Matthews Jr., according to the Times Union, which cited unidentified sources with knowledge of the investigation.

Angels spokesman Tim Mead told The Associated Press the team was aware of the story, adding, "That's the only information we have."

Mead said manager Mike Scioscia told Matthews about it, and that general manager Bill Stoneman and Mead spoke to Matthews.

"We strongly recommended that Gary inform his agent and make sure he's aware as well," Mead said. "The information is sketchy at best."

The paper said a New York investigator flew to Pittsburgh last month to interview a physician for the Pittsburgh Steelers about why he allegedly used a personal credit card to purchase roughly $150,000 in testosterone and human growth hormone in 2006.

The physician, Richard A. Rydze, told the investigator the drugs were for his private patients, the paper said, citing an unidentified person briefed on the interview.

There are no allegations Rydze violated any laws.

Steelers spokesman Dave Lockett told the AP that Rydze works for the club mostly on game days. He is listed among the seven doctors under the "medical staff" designation on the official team employment roster.

"We can't comment any further because we are still gathering information," Lockett said.

A message was left seeking comment from Rydze.

Arrested on Tuesday were Stan and Naomi Loomis, who own the Signature Pharmacy in downtown Orlando, Stan's brother Mike Loomis and Kirk Calvert, Signature's marketing director. Soares' office identified Signature as a "producer" of the illegally distributed drugs.

Also arrested as a result of the New York investigation were three people Soares' office described as "distributors" from a Sugarland, Texas, company called Cellular Nucleonic Advantage.

Before the investigation is complete, Soares' office said, up to 24 people could face charges, including six doctors and three pharmacists.

The Loomis' downtown pharmacy contains a small retail store that sells bodybuilding supplements, a drug laboratory and executive offices.

Investigators loaded boxes into a truck and seized drugs, including anabolic steroids and human growth hormone, said Carl Metzger, narcotics commander for Orlando's Metropolitan Bureau of Investigation.

"I can't tell you what percentage of their business was legal and how much involved stacking steroids, but there was a mix," Metzger said.

Metzger said the search revealed a "raid card" at numerous Signature Pharmacy employees' desks with contact information for lawyers. The top of the documents identified it as a Food and Drug Administration/Drug Enforcement Agency telephone list, but only lawyers were on the card, Metzger said.

"We found that to be somewhat interesting," Metzger said. "Why would you need to have something entitled a phone call list for the DEA and FDA with lawyers' names if you have nothing to hide?"

Soares' office alleges that Signature filled prescriptions, in some cases from unlicensed doctors, knowing they had not met patients. The office said at least $250,000 in illegal and controlled substances were sold directly into Albany County, and New York state sales exceeded $10 million.

Soares said his investigation began after an Albany doctor was arrested for allegedly trafficking in narcotics online.



http://www.cbn.com/CBNnews/111171.aspx
Truly STOP WHINING

donrhummy

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Re: INTERESTING. Former Mr Olympia and other in the "Industry" are involved.
« Reply #8 on: February 27, 2007, 08:55:31 PM »
Well technically it didn't say former Mr. Olympia... it said "top Mr. Olympia bodybuilder." The way the press confuses things I think they were trying to say top Mr. Olympia "competitor", not an actual title winner.

I know potato -- potato. 


Actually, it does. Paragraph 4:
Quote
The Times Union has learned that investigators in the year-old case, which has been kept quiet until now, uncovered evidence that testosterone and other performance-enhancing drugs may have been fraudulently prescribed over the Internet to current and former Major League Baseball players, National Football League players, college athletes, high school coaches, a former Mr. Olympia champion and another leading contender in the bodybuilding competition.

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Re: Steriod Raid identifies former Mr.Olympia and other top bodybuilder
« Reply #9 on: February 27, 2007, 08:58:50 PM »
That sucks, the Angels just aquired Matthews this year!

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Re: Albany DA raids Fla. steroids center: a Mr. Olympia is involved?
« Reply #10 on: February 27, 2007, 09:15:41 PM »
People outside the circle of bodybuilding generally assume any professional bodybuilder was Mr. Olympia. Heck, I remember reading an old Guinness Book entry on their site that listed Ferrigno as the tallest Mr. Olympia ever. Then there's the matter of Puma referring to Kamali as a top tier bodybuilder. Non-bodybuilders don't seem to look in very far when it comes to people like us.

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Re: Albany DA raids Fla. steroids center: a Mr. Olympia is involved?
« Reply #11 on: February 28, 2007, 05:59:01 AM »
People outside the circle of bodybuilding generally assume any professional bodybuilder was Mr. Olympia. Heck, I remember reading an old Guinness Book entry on their site that listed Ferrigno as the tallest Mr. Olympia ever.

Mr Universe and Mr Olympia were often confused.

Lou won the Universe title.

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Re: Albany DA raids Fla. steroids center: a Mr. Olympia is involved?
« Reply #12 on: February 28, 2007, 06:08:13 AM »
Levrone used to claim "WINNER OF FOUR MR OLYMPIA RUNNER UP TITLES" on his website.

DK II

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Re: Albany DA raids Fla. steroids center: a Mr. Olympia is involved?
« Reply #13 on: February 28, 2007, 06:09:44 AM »
Has gh15 posted lately?  ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D

bigbalddaddy

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Re: Albany DA raids Fla. steroids center: a Mr. Olympia is involved?
« Reply #14 on: February 28, 2007, 06:13:38 AM »
This is bogus!  Past Mr. Olympias were all natural!  Come on, they test these guys!  It couldn't be Ronnie, he got swole off NoXplode... ::)

DK II

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Re: Albany DA raids Fla. steroids center: a Mr. Olympia is involved?
« Reply #15 on: February 28, 2007, 06:14:56 AM »
This is bogus!  Past Mr. Olympias were all natural!  Come on, they test these guys!  It couldn't be Ronnie, he got swole off NoXplode... ::)

and broccoli.

I read it in FLEX.

bigbalddaddy

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Re: Albany DA raids Fla. steroids center: a Mr. Olympia is involved?
« Reply #16 on: February 28, 2007, 06:16:25 AM »
and broccoli.

I read it in FLEX.

We forgot about ZMA too...

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Re: Albany DA raids Fla. steroids center: a Mr. Olympia is involved?
« Reply #17 on: February 28, 2007, 06:17:07 AM »
Has gh15 posted lately?  ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D

hahaha he's taking a little "vacation".  :D

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Re: Albany DA raids Fla. steroids center: a Mr. Olympia is involved?
« Reply #18 on: February 28, 2007, 06:17:19 AM »
Whoever that bodybuilder is, he must have spent big dollars. I wonder what NFL players were involved in that mess
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Re: Albany DA raids Fla. steroids center: a Mr. Olympia is involved?
« Reply #19 on: February 28, 2007, 06:17:50 AM »
Its probably Dexter Jackson, he is a Floridian Olympian ...
L

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Re: Albany DA raids Fla. steroids center: a Mr. Olympia is involved?
« Reply #20 on: February 28, 2007, 06:35:28 AM »
The paper said a New York investigator flew to Pittsburgh last month to interview a physician for the Pittsburgh Steelers about why he allegedly used a personal credit card to purchase roughly $150,000 in testosterone and human growth hormone in 2006.


that's a lot juices  ;D
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Re: Albany DA raids Fla. steroids center: a Mr. Olympia is involved?
« Reply #21 on: February 28, 2007, 06:37:40 AM »
All drugs

ribonucleic

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Re: Albany DA raids Fla. steroids center: a Mr. Olympia is involved?
« Reply #22 on: February 28, 2007, 06:48:48 AM »
Its probably Dexter Jackson, he is a Floridian Olympian ...

There was also that mysterious carjacking incident involving his wife...

A warning that he better not think of testifying in exchange for a plea bargain?  :o

AlliedPowers

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Re: Albany DA raids Fla. steroids center: a Mr. Olympia is involved?
« Reply #23 on: February 28, 2007, 06:56:43 AM »
Gonna be some interesting tales to tell on Dex down the road, i bet.

Too much shady stuff going on.  I wonder if quiet ol Dex might be the next bodybuilder to make some titus news.

ribonucleic

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Re: Albany DA raids Fla. steroids center: a Mr. Olympia is involved?
« Reply #24 on: February 28, 2007, 06:58:21 AM »
I wonder if quiet ol Dex might be the next bodybuilder to make some titus news.


Does his fleet of "rides" include a white Ford Bronco?  :-\