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DEA car seizure.

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  • #16
    Damn there is a lot of money there. Wow some really nice cars..

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    • #17
      agreed i would even drive the viper

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      • #18
        I would love to have any of them, although the viper would be getting dropped off at the paint shop before I got it home.
        "It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom - for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself."

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        • #19
          Originally posted by 78X View Post
          do want that cuda
          Tit's for sure on the Cuda..

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          • #20
            When is the police auction? Lambo for $500

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            • #21
              Some of the car's look familiar from the dale on Friday night.
              Two in the pink and one in the stink

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              • #22
                The part I wonder is how many legit people got drug down in this raid?

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                • #23
                  Gee I wonder how they got busted flaunting all that cash!

                  I agree, that viper with the skulls was ugly as hell! I would still take it, just would have to be dropped off at Maco on the way home.

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                  • #24
                    Originally posted by turbostang View Post
                    The part I wonder is how many legit people got drug down in this raid?
                    That's what I was thinking also.That's too many expensive cars for one person to have,unless he was just ballin out of control.
                    sigpic

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                    • #25
                      Originally posted by jetboat View Post
                      Some of the car's look familiar from the dale on Friday night.
                      No, they don't.
                      Originally posted by BradM
                      But, just like condoms and women's rights, I don't believe in them.
                      Originally posted by Leah
                      In other news: Brent's meat melts in your mouth.

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                      • #26
                        This maybe?

                        http://www.bizjournals.com/southflor...pill-mill.html


                        Six doctors arrested in pill mill crackdown
                        South Florida Business Journal - by Brian Bandell
                        Date: Wednesday, February 23, 2011, 6:27pm EST - Last Modified: Thursday, February 24, 2011, 9:23am EST
                        Related:Health Care, Legal Services
                        View photo gallery (4 photos)
                        Brian Bandell
                        Mark Trouville, special agent in charge of the DEA's Miami field office, talks about pill mill busts as U.S. Attorney Wilfredo Ferrer and Broward Sheriff Al Lamberti listen.

                        Dr. Jeffrey Lipman, of Midtown Miami Medical Group, was charged with illegally dispensing narcotics.

                        Brian Bandell
                        Some of the cars seized in the raids on pill mills.

                        Brian Bandell
                        Seized cars roll into the DEA's parking lot.

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                        Hundreds of federal, state and local law enforcement agents swooped into South Florida on Wednesday to bust clinics that were illegally prescribing narcotics, resulting in charges against 18 people, including six doctors.

                        While South Florida suffered under an epidemic of pill mills that attracted addicts and drug traffickers from around the nation to obtain pain killers, more than a dozen agencies have quietly conducted Operation Pill Nation since 2009. More than 340 undercover officers obtained narcotics from over 60 doctors at over 40 pain clinics in Florida. Wilfredo Ferrer, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Florida, said the arrests announced Wednesday were the first wave in the ongoing investigation.

                        Nearly 90 percent of the OxyContin ordered by physicians in the first half of 2010 came to Florida, and the biggest bust made it clear who was benefiting from that while seven Florida residents die from the drug each day.

                        The federal indictment against Davie resident Vincent Colangelo, allegedly the primary owner and manager of seven pain clinics and a pharmacy that were illegally distributing narcotics without medical justification, seeks forfeiture of more than $22 million in cash and assets. Colangelo’s operation made a profit of $150,000 a day, said Mark Trouville, special agent in charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration’s Miami field office.

                        Officials seized more than 46 vehicles as part of the investigation. The Dodge Vipers, Lamborghinis, Bentley and Rolls-Royce lined up outside the DEA office in Weston made it look like an exotic car show. Agents also seized a trailer park in Okeechobee and a home in Davie’s Imagination Farms.

                        Charged along with Colangelo as employees in the clinics were Nicholaus Thomas, of Fort Lauderdale; Rachel Bass, of Pompano Beach; Michael Plesak, of Plantation; Jeremiah Flowers, of Fort Myers; and Wayne Richards, of Lighthouse Point. All but Flowers had been arrested. The charges also include money laundering.

                        The U.S. attorney charged that Colangelo owned the following clinics that dispensed more than 660,000 dosage units of oxycodone, most of it without a legitimate medical purpose:

                        Atlantic Medical Solutions, Pompano Beach
                        Seaside Pain Management/Commercial Medical Group, Fort Lauderdale
                        Broward Urgent Care, Fort Lauderdale
                        All Pain Management, Dania Beach
                        Friendly Urgent Care, Pembroke Park
                        VIP Pain Center, Miami
                        Urgent Care and Surgical Care Center of Fort Lauderdale/Integrated Medical Group
                        Friendly Pharmacy, Fort Lauderdale
                        The clinics were held in nominee names, according to the indictment.

                        New patients were charged between $250 and $350 a visit – $500 if they wanted to move to the head of the line, Ferrer said. In many cases, the staff would tell patients exactly what to say so they could prescribe them pain drugs.

                        When asked about the doctors involved in Colangelo’s clinics, Ferrer said they were not charged, but the investigation is ongoing. He expects charges to come against owners and employees at other clinics.

                        “We aren’t here to second guess medical judgment,” Ferrer said. “We are here to prosecute doctors and clinics who are really drug dealers hiding behind a medical license.”

                        Trouville said that seven doctors voluntarily gave up their DEA licenses Wednesday. He added that four pain medication distributors were shut down because they should have known the amount of drugs they were selling to doctors was not realistic.

                        At the same time, the Palm Beach County State Attorney’s Office filed charges against 11 people in connection to seven pain clinics. The charges include racketeering, trafficking in oxycodone and money laundering.

                        Six of those arrests were connected to North Palm Beach Pain Management in Lake Park: owners Anthony Laterza and Donna Palemire; Dr. Carlos Gonzalez Jr.; nurse Betsy Sanchez; and physician assistants Derrick Davis and Martine Lifleur. The allegations include that Gonzalez would pre-sign prescriptions so the staff could issue them to patients without him seeing them.

                        At Delray Pain Management, the Palm Beach County Sheriff arrested Dr. Zvi Harry Perper (son of Broward County Medical Examiner Joshua Perper), physician assistant Mitchell Arin Cohen and Kent Arthur Murry, the leaseholder of the building. Murry is accused of “doctor shopping” – visiting multiple physicians over a four-year period to obtain thousands of pain pills.

                        The Palm Beach County State Attorney’s Office also filed charges against Dr. Robert Eugene Elessar of 45th Street Medical in Lake Worth and Dr. Angelo Pace of West Palm Beach Medical.

                        Meanwhile, the Miami-Dade County State Attorney’s Office arrested Dr. Jeffrey Lipman, of Midtown Miami Medical Group, on charges of illegally dispensing narcotics. The complaint alleged that he ordered 288,560 dose units of oxycodone in the first seven months of 2010. That was 10 times the national average for a physician.

                        “If you are working in a pill mill, we have probably bought dope from you and we are probably coming to see you soon,” Trouville said, referring to the undercover operation



                        Read more: Six doctors arrested in pill mill crackdown | South Florida Business Journal

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                        • #27
                          Originally posted by 347Mike View Post
                          Anyone have any idea wherein Broward this took place?
                          more of a few of them used to be parked at the house where I posted pictures off atlantic blvd in pompano beach

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                          • #28
                            They have great taste for cars...

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                            • #29
                              Dont think they will be for sale in the US. I think they sale them only to out of country buyers. Cant be registered in the US. Not for sure on that. To bad if thats still the case.

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                              • #30
                                Originally posted by Black10thSVT View Post
                                Dont think they will be for sale in the US. I think they sale them only to out of country buyers. Cant be registered in the US. Not for sure on that. To bad if thats still the case.
                                LOL................WHere did you hear that doody?

                                I've bought many cars at a DEA auction in San Diego.
                                sigpic

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