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Bill seeks to curb illegal drug activity from out-of-state "pill mills"

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NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- The Senate and House Judiciary Committees approved legislation this week to attack a major source of illegal drug activity in Tennessee. The bill, Senate Bill 3027 by Senator Steve Southerland (R-Morristown) and Representative David Hawk (R-Greeneville), would stiffen penalties against those who get prescriptions in another state and return to distribute the drugs illegally in Tennessee.

Action on the bill follows a 96.6 percent increase in drug-related deaths according to a study conducted by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). Some Tennessee law enforcement officers attribute the increase to the misuse of prescription drugs by those who obtain them legally from out-of-state “pill mills.”

The most common drugs found are OxyContin, Darvon, and Vicodin, but drug busts in Tennessee also have included Xanax and Roxicodones.

The legislation would increase the penalties for the illegal trafficking of out-of-state drugs from a Class C misdemeanor, which carries a 30-day jail term and up to $50 in fines, to a Class D felony with a 2 to 12 years in prison sentence and up to $5,000 in fines.

The lawmakers filed the bill after law enforcement officials in their East Tennessee counties brought the matter to their attention. Tennessee law requires all entities that dispense medications to file information on controlled substance on a state database to monitor abuse. That law has helped curb prescription drug abuse by providing information to those prescribing and dispensing the drugs to alert them of potential abusers.

Although 40 states have laws establishing drug monitoring programs, Florida is among those which do not have a program. That state now has one of the highest concentrations of pain clinics in the U.S., including those housed in shopping centers. This has caused other states to pass laws cracking down on offenders who traffic these drugs within their boundaries.

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