By Frank York
© 2000 WorldNetDaily.com
A West Virginia physician isn't sure he can ever obtain justice in his
state.
After federal Drug Enforcement Administration agents invaded his
office, terrorized his family and patients, arrested him on phony charges
-- charges so bogus a judge threw them out in disgust -- and after having
spent more than $300,000 to defend himself, Dr. Danny Westmoreland still
can't obtain justice.
On the morning of June 23, 1995, Westmoreland's Mason, West Virginia
home and office were invaded by a contingent of 17 Drug Enforcement
Administration agents and local sheriffs. With DEA agent Mike Mounts
leading the attack, his team assaulted the reception area with guns drawn
and forced more than a dozen patients to put their hands against the wall.
Westmoreland first learned of the attack when his daughter came
screaming into the house to tell him his office was being robbed. When he
and his wife ran outside to find the police already on the scene, they
were relieved -- but their relief quickly turned to horror as they
realized that it was the police who were attacking the medical
clinic.
While Westmoreland and his wife were still outside, DEA agents inside
his home had cornered his housekeeper and his nine-year-old son and held
guns to their heads. His son was weeping and shaking uncontrollably from
fear. Other agents searched the house for medical records.
As Westmoreland tells it, he yelled at one of the leaders, whom he
later learned was Randy Rine, a local DEA agent.
"What are you doing?" he yelled.
"You know exactly what we're doing," said Rine.
"But I don't know who you are," said Westmoreland. No agent
would tell him why his clinic was being raided by the S.W.A.T. team. He
demanded to be shown a search warrant, but was refused.
Then, for eight hours he sat in his kitchen as the DEA ransacked his
home. They took his computers, medical files and even a couple of
two-dollar bills that his dying father had given to his son and daughter.
After several hours, said Westmoreland, one of the DEA agents gave him
some advice.
"Listen," the agent said, according to Westmoreland,
"you need to understand something. My sister was once accused of
something she didn't do. You need to get out and tell your side of the
story before the news makes up their own side." Westmoreland didn't
know what to say because he still didn't know why his home office was
being ransacked. The agent recommended he seek legal counsel from local
attorney Mike Carey.
After meeting with Carey the following week, Westmoreland learned that
he was being charged with money laundering, Medicaid fraud, and
prescribing unnecessary pain medications.
Trumped-up charges
It took two agonizing years before Westmoreland finally learned the truth
about what had happened to him. The attack on his home had been a setup,
he found out, orchestrated by two former disgruntled employees who had
conspired with a local DEA agent to teach Westmoreland a lesson.
As he faced the bogus charges against him, government lawyers offered
him a deal: If Westmoreland would confess to minor offenses, they would
fine him one dollar and walk away from the case. Westmoreland, however,
was outraged at the injustice done to him and to his wife and children as
well as his patients during the raid. He insisted on going to trial to
prove his innocence.
It was two years before Westmoreland's case came to trial. The
government's case against Westmoreland was so weak and filled with so many
lies that Judge Joseph R. Goodwin would not even allow the jury to render
a verdict. After reviewing the evidence, Goodwin dismissed all charges
against Westmoreland.
The transcripts of the court proceedings held on Sept. 24, 1997, and
Oct. 20, 1997, reveal that DEA agents were willing to lie under oath to
protect themselves from being held liable for their actions.
The judge was outraged at the DEA for its invasion of Westmoreland's
office and how they terrorized his patients.
"I am appalled," said Goodwin, "I am shocked. And it is
something this Court will not tolerate. I intend to review this evidence
very carefully. It is one of the most outrageous things I've ever heard
of. ... And if I have to call for an investigation from Washington ... I
will do that because that will not happen in this district ever again.
There is not justification for it."
The judge issued this opinion on Oct. 20, 1997. All counts against
Westmoreland were dropped for insufficient evidence. In rendering his
verdict, the judge told the jury, "In our system of justice, it's a
rare occasion when a Court is required to enter a judgment of acquittal
without allowing the jury to make its own decision. ... I believe that no
reasonable jury person could conclude that this defendant was guilty of
each and every element of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt, then
[because of these facts] I take the case from you and grant the defendant
acquittal on each count."
Westmoreland was relieved to be acquitted, but it had cost him more
than $300,000 to defend himself against the false charges.
Targeted for harassment
A local law enforcement agent told Westmoreland he had been targeted for
harassment by his former office secretary Sheila Russell Murphy, his
former partner Dr. Ronald Chattin and DEA agent Randy Rine. Court
documents provide evidence of collusion between Murphy, Chattin and Rine.
Murphy's 1997 testimony under oath revealed that she and her good
friend Dr. Chattin had decided to work together with the government
against Westmoreland. They were attempting to find evidence to prove the
physician was guilty of Medicaid fraud or of illegally dispensing drugs.
Murphy's motivation appeared to be her anger that Westmoreland had
denied her an extra, unearned week of paid vacation. Chattin was angry
that Westmoreland had fired him for failing to generate an adequate income
for the business. According to court records, Chattin encouraged Murphy to
contact DEA agent Rine about Westmoreland.
Murphy then offered her services to Rine as an undercover informant for
the DEA in Westmoreland's office. She claimed the physician was
overbilling Medicaid patients and was prescribing illegal drugs. Neither
of the claims were true. She also helped Rine in an attempted sting
operation by introducing a female DEA agent to Westmoreland as one of her
relatives who needed drugs. The sting failed when Westmoreland refused to
prescribe the drugs.
However, Murphy herself was eventually prosecuted for forging
Westmoreland's signature on prescription drug order sheets. She confessed
to obtaining drugs for her husband who was in prison in Wisconsin.
DEA agent apologizes
Just a few months after Goodwin dropped all charges against Westmoreland,
DEA agent Mike Mounts came to the physician's home for a brief visit. He
apologized for what had happened during the raid and said he knew
something was wrong with the operation from the beginning. He said when he
arrived at the staging area, he and his agents were told to "do it
hard" when they attacked the home office. He also told Westmoreland
that his tactical team had watched videos of the assault on the David
Koresh compound at Waco for guidance on how to take the office.
According to Westmoreland, Mounts' supervisors had him removed from the
area quickly in 1995 to avoid having him testify in court. Mounts
indicated he would have told the truth about what happened. He also said
he had protested the DEA operation to higher authorities, but was made the
scapegoat for the incident. Court documents indicate he was fired from the
DEA in 1996.
Mounts told Westmoreland his supervisors had nailed him on a phony
"morals charge" -- specifically he had been accused of violating
DEA policy when he shipped some of his finance's furniture with his own
when he was moving to a new location.
WND attempted to contact Mounts for his perspective on this case, but
our repeated phone calls were not returned. Mounts is currently working as
a private investigator in Charleston, West Virginia.
Justice delayed is justice denied
Although the law and the facts are on his side, Westmoreland is frustrated
by his own lawyers' apparent unwillingness to take on the DEA. He is
currently suing Dr. Ronald Chattin for causing financial damage to his
business, but expects to receive only a vague apology.
"He's offered to pay some legal fees and give me a formal
apology," said Westmoreland, "but he won't admit he's done
anything. The apology would be for anything that may have given a
disheartening picture of myself or the clinic."
Westmoreland is also currently suing West Virginia's Medicaid Fraud
Unit and several DEA agents on behalf of his children for the violation of
their civil rights. But he is concerned that the statute of limitations
may have run out.
After firing his first two lawyers for refusing to properly represent
his interests, his next two lawyers helped him through his brief trial,
but dropped out when he decided to sue one of their local lawyer friends.
Today, his fifth lawyer, Jack Kessler, is still dragging his feet in
filing a civil rights lawsuit against DEA agents and a former employee who
was involved in a conspiracy to destroy his business and reputation, said
Westmoreland.
Westmoreland is convinced that because of the cozy relationships
between law firms in West Virginia -- and because of their desire to
obtain federal appointments -- few local lawyers are willing to sue the
federal government. While Kessler is willing to sue individual DEA agents,
he refuses to sue the DEA for its attack on Westmoreland's home office. As
a result, Westmoreland has been denied justice for five years.
As it stands, Westmoreland has lost more than $300,000 in legal fees,
he has had his reputation damaged in the community even though he was
proven innocent of all charges -- and so far, his DEA victimizers have
simply walked away.
Frank York is a
free-lance journalist living in Nashville, Tennessee.