'Endangerment to pharmacies': Victim of fraud calls, break-in speaks out on rapper's charges


1 photo
Save Story
Leer en español

Estimated read time: 3-4 minutes

LOGAN — A Cache County pharmacist said he feels safer now that someone is in jail on drug charges relating to fraudulent prescription schemes.

Last week, Kentrell DeSean Gaulden, better known as rapper NBA YoungBoy, was arrested in what investigators call a large-scale prescription fraud ring.

He's in the Cache County Jail facing several felony charges. Investigators said the rapper worked with other people to illegally obtain prescription drugs from pharmacies across Utah.

Cache Valley Pharmacy owner Phil Cowley said his business was likely a target of both fraud calls and a break-in last September.

Pretending to be a doctor

Cowley said the callers allegedly disguise their voice, pretending to be a doctor, to call in a prescription of promethazine with codeine.

"They're using it to make 'purple drank' — they have a couple of names for it," he said. "We all know what it is because it's always the fraud. They'll call this in with an antibiotic."

He said users typically mix the drug with vodka and soda. Cowley and arrest documents say the same group of first and last names of the "patient" is often used.

"It's like, every week you'll have new names on the database coming out in an email saying, 'Don't take a prescription from this person,'" Cowley said.

He said his pharmacy has stopped carrying promethazine, except for customers with whom he has a well-established and trustworthy relationship.

"It was so frequent that it became a point where I felt like my job was in danger because if I did dispense this medication to anybody, it was probably fraudulent. I was just trying to stay away from it because I didn't want fines and fees from the state."

Coming for a while

Cowley said he's been receiving the calls for the last 18 months.

"The fraud was continual and we were hoping something would happen because you knew there was a bad faction and you knew that there was something going on and no one was getting arrested," he said.

He said since his break-in and numerous others that happened since, it's been especially scary.

"Everything always escalates, that's the one thing," Cowley said. "What's the next escalation?"

Cowley said he didn't know who NBA YoungBoy was until his recent arrest.

"My kids know him pretty well," he said. "And then they were really angry because they don't like the fact that their dad could have been put in harm's way."

He said pharmacists across the state have been in contact with each other since the break-ins and alleged fraud calls became more widespread.

"How do you not feel violated when you have somebody continually doing fraud and taking from you and it doesn't seem like you have anybody who's going to get your back?" Cowley said. "So, I'm glad they caught him."

Investigators have not said if the pharmacy break-ins and the fraudulent prescription calls are connected.

"It seems hard for me to imagine that the pharmacy break-ins won't follow suit ... it seems to me they were all tied together," Cowley said.

Costly repairs

Cowley said damages stemming from the break-in cost him thousands of dollars, including $20,000 worth of medication that was stolen from his business.

"I'm really glad to see there's movement and that they take this seriously because drug cases haven't been something that have been worth chasing," he said. "But this isn't a drug case. This is endangerment to pharmacies."

The Cache County Sheriff's Office declined an interview, saying its investigation is ongoing.

Photos

Related stories

Most recent Utah stories

Related topics

UtahNorthern UtahPolice & Courts
Shelby Lofton

STAY IN THE KNOW

Get informative articles and interesting stories delivered to your inbox weekly. Subscribe to the KSL.com Trending 5.
By subscribing, you acknowledge and agree to KSL.com's Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

KSL Weather Forecast