Applied Pharmacy Services steroid "kingpin" sentenced to 10 years prison

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President of Mobile (Ala.) pharmacy gets 10 years in prison for steroids conspiracy | al.com


MOBILE, Ala. — To defense attorneys, A. Samuel Kelley II was as a self-made entrepreneur who had started a number of businesses but who made mistakes navigating the complex regulations governing the pharmaceutical industry.

To prosecutors, he was a “kingpin” who sat atop a nationwide conspiracy, involving doctors and health clinics in several states, that was responsible for the sale of 2,465,701 dosage units of anabolic steroids from March 2003 until a federal raid on his business in August 2006.

Both sides agreed that Kelley, as president, chief executive officer and principal owner of Applied Pharmacy Services, reaped the largest share of the millions of dollars that flowed into the Mobile-based compounding pharmacy.

For U.S. District Judge Ginny Granade, that was enough to justify a 10-year sentence — by far, the longest handed down to any of the defendants so far. Earlier this month, she sentenced the chief pharmacist at Applied Pharmacy to four years in prison.

“The scope of the distribution of steroids outside the course of professional practice is just mind-boggling in this case,” Granade said Thursday.

Federal marshals handcuffed Kelley and hauled him off to prison immediately after the hearing as friends and relatives sobbed.

In addition to the prison sentence, the judge also fined Kelley $35,000 and ordered him to pay a $100 fee for each of the 130 counts that the jury found him guilty on in February, for a total of $13,000.

Defense attorney Richard Jaffe said his client would appeal but otherwise declined to comment.

Since the trial, Kelley and his wife have lived in Lucedale, Miss., and have worked at a medical supply company that the defendant started in Mobile in 2007, according to court records.

Financial records maintained by Applied Pharmacy indicated that the company grossed $2.64 million from the steroids sales during period reviewed by federal investigators. Granade ordered Kelley — along with the other defendants — to pay that amount to the government.

Authorities have indicated the intend to go after a real estate leasing company that Kelley owns and the family’s home on Westchester Lane South in west Mobile to help satisfy the forfeiture order.

The business made Kelley a wealthy man, according to documents submitted this week by Assistant U.S. Attorney Donna Dobbins showing that he earned $353,840 in salary from March 2003 until August 2006 and another $1.2 million in dividends.

Court records indicate that the steroids produced at Applied Pharmacy’s laboratory on International Drive near Bel Air Mall ended up in the hands of thousands of customers from all over the country. Dobbins cited, but did not name, 24 who were professional athletes.

They represented sports ranging from baseball to bodybuilding to professional wrestling to mixed martial arts.

“Sam Kelley ran the business,” Dobbins said. “He was responsible for every vial, every pill, every capsule that left there.”

Kelley said he made mistakes but never intended to break the law.

“I started Applied Pharmacy with the best of intentions,” he said.
 
this is extremely disgraceful...APS has literally helped me and many other very sick people survive one or more deadly diseases...AIDS wasting in my and many other cases, cachexia, major injuries etc.,
 
this is extremely disgraceful...APS has literally helped me and many other very sick people survive one or more deadly diseases...AIDS wasting in my and many other cases, cachexia, major injuries etc.,

Jeton, this is what is missed in practically all coverage of this case. I suspect that a sizable majority of the 2,465,701 dosage units of anabolic steroids that were used to justify the 10 year prison sentence WERE LEGAL AND VALID PRESCRIPTIONS for INDIVIDUALS WITH LEGITIMATE THERAPEUTIC NEEDS!

Government prosecutors have made no distinction or allowance for the fact that anabolic steroids have a legitimate role in medicine. They are, in effect, demonizing not only steroids but ALL users.

To make matters worse, the government prosecutors has chosen to release the names of some of the clients of APS. They chose fit to make moral judgments on private individuals (who are not subject to drug testing in their sport) who have presumably valid and legal prescriptions for steroids that were filled by a pharmacy. The government does not respect the prescription privacy of private citizens when it comes to their moralizing over steroids. By releasing customers names to the media, it serves to further demonize steroids and all steroid users, medical and non-medical alike, in the governments witch-hunt.

I know most people would be quite upset if the government decided to publicly identify individuals who had prescriptions for viagra or levitra (for importence) or prescriptions for acyclovir (for gential herpes) or prescriptions for protease inhibitors (for HIV/AIDS).

But yet it's perfectly ok to publicly identify law-abiding citizens who have prescriptions for anabolic steroids. This is wrong.
 
Jeton, this is what is missed in practically all coverage of this case. I suspect that a sizable majority of the 2,465,701 dosage units of anabolic steroids that were used to justify the 10 year prison sentence WERE LEGAL AND VALID PRESCRIPTIONS for INDIVIDUALS WITH LEGITIMATE THERAPEUTIC NEEDS!

Government prosecutors have made no distinction or allowance for the fact that anabolic steroids have a legitimate role in medicine. They are, in effect, demonizing not only steroids but ALL users.

To make matters worse, the government prosecutors has chosen to release the names of some of the clients of APS. They chose fit to make moral judgments on private individuals (who are not subject to drug testing in their sport) who have presumably valid and legal prescriptions for steroids that were filled by a pharmacy. The government does not respect the prescription privacy of private citizens when it comes to their moralizing over steroids. By releasing customers names to the media, it serves to further demonize steroids and all steroid users, medical and non-medical alike, in the governments witch-hunt.

I know most people would be quite upset if the government decided to publicly identify individuals who had prescriptions for viagra or levitra (for importence) or prescriptions for acyclovir (for gential herpes) or prescriptions for protease inhibitors (for HIV/AIDS).

But yet it's perfectly ok to publicly identify law-abiding citizens who have prescriptions for anabolic steroids. This is wrong.

it's disgusting, easy demagoguery. we gotta figure out a way to start shaping coverage, sick people r getting slammed by news organizations as well as their sports-coverage divisions...i can't recall a SINGLE mention of valid medical usage of steroids until i became sick with full-blown AIDS myself, lost almost 30 pounds (down to almost 130lbs at 5'10"!!) and had to research means of weight recovery!

the worst part is that coverage is so skewed that many PATIENTS are afraid of using anabolic therapies when they really need them...let alone their doctors, and the bosses of those doctors. i have seen the anxiety at all of these levels, ALL of it based on misinformation.

years ago when i had first become a client of Gay Men's Health Crisis, i sat in a presentation from their nutritionist about putting on weight. this benighted woman proceeded to suggest an exercise regimen that essentially amounted to aerobics for a group that was replete with people as skinny and wasted as i had been, along with "increasing ur protein intake to as much as 1 gram per kilo of bodyweight'!!.

luckily by then i was a few years into my illness and had started anabolic therapies and real resistance training, and i excoriated her in front of the group. she still gives me mean looks.

the self-interested demagogues that have gained some popularity via the steroid issue r completely controlling coverage right now. "Bigger, Stronger, Faster" was a good step, but more major-media outreach and debate is needed.
 
Jeton, this is what is missed in practically all coverage of this case. I suspect that a sizable majority of the 2,465,701 dosage units of anabolic steroids that were used to justify the 10 year prison sentence WERE LEGAL AND VALID PRESCRIPTIONS for INDIVIDUALS WITH LEGITIMATE THERAPEUTIC NEEDS!

Government prosecutors have made no distinction or allowance for the fact that anabolic steroids have a legitimate role in medicine. They are, in effect, demonizing not only steroids but ALL users.

To make matters worse, the government prosecutors has chosen to release the names of . This is wrong.
i agree good post
 
Oh that's the government in action..no second thoughts no nothing. Maybe if we throw the bums out we'd get better people...but not holding my breath.
 
By releasing customers names to the media, it serves to further demonize steroids and all steroid users, medical and non-medical alike, in the governments witch-hunt.

I know most people would be quite upset if the government decided to publicly identify individuals who had prescriptions for viagra or levitra (for importence) or prescriptions for acyclovir (for gential herpes) or prescriptions for protease inhibitors (for HIV/AIDS).

But yet it's perfectly ok to publicly identify law-abiding citizens who have prescriptions for anabolic steroids. This is wrong.
I was contacted back in the fall of '08 by the state attorney of Florida, to grant permission to release my personal information. I declined, and wonder why anyone would grant such a request.

I have no idea what happened in that case. The pharmacy was the target, and my scripts were legit.

There are two sides to every story, but they're trying to legislate bodily function, which is essentially the same argument made in Roe vs. Wade.

I'm a libertarian, so you can guess what I think about this.
 
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