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Old 12-04-2003, 04:03 PM   #1 (permalink)
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I can't believe I'm supporting Rush Limbaugh...

http://www.msnbc.com/news/1001269.asp?vts=120420031544

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla., Dec. 4 — Investigators who raided the offices of Rush Limbaugh’s doctors said in search warrants filed Thursday that the conservative radio commentator engaged in illegal drug use and “doctor shopping” for prescription painkillers.
THE WARRANTS SHOW investigators were looking for records including prescription disbursements, appointment schedules, receipts and a medical questionnaire.
“Mr. Limbaugh’s actions violate the letter, and spirit” of the law that relates to “doctor shopping,” stated one of warrants, signed by Asim Brown, a law enforcement agent assigned to the state attorney’s office anti-money laundering task force. Doctor shopping refers to looking for a doctor willing to prescribe drugs illegally.
The warrants — which name four doctors and several prescription drugs — show investigators were looking for records including prescription disbursements, appointment schedules, receipts and a medical questionnaire when they raided the offices Nov. 25.
Limbaugh denied any wrongdoing to listeners on his radio show earlier Thursday and accused prosecutors in Palm Beach County of going on a “fishing expedition.”
Reading from a statement prepared by his attorney Roy Black, Limbaugh denied any wrongdoing and said the medical records will clear him.
“What these records show is that Mr. Limbaugh suffered extreme pain and had legitimate reasons for taking pain medication,” Limbaugh said. “Unfortunately, because of Mr. Limbaugh’s prominence and well-known political opinions, he is being subjected to an invasion of privacy no citizen of this republic should endure.”
State Attorney Barry Krischer said in a statement that Limbaugh’s rights have been “scrupulously protected.”
“Whether Mr. Limbaugh is subject to prosecution for any crimes is still under investigation. Mr. Limbaugh is presumed innocent,” Krischer said.

RECORDS SUPPORT ALLEGATIONS
The search warrants were filed at Palm Beach County Circuit Court. One was executed at Palm Beach Ear, Nose and Throat Association in Palm Beach Gardens, where investigators seized five months of records from a Palm Beach pharmacy that they say support the doctor-shopping allegations.
Two warrants were executed at the offices of Jupiter Outpatient Surgery Center. Information on the fourth warrant wasn’t immediately available.
The records seized include prescriptions for Norco, Niacin, OxyContin, Xanax, Lorcet and other medications. The physicians named in the warrants are Dr. Nathaniel Drourr, Dr. Antonio De La Cruz, Dr. Lawrence Deziel and Dr. John Murray.
Drourr and officials at both centers declined comment, citing privacy laws. Murray did not return a phone call seeking comment, and the other doctors could not be immediately reached.
Limbaugh was absent from his show for five weeks recently while spending time at a drug rehabilitation program because of his addiction to prescription painkillers.
Previously, law enforcement sources in Palm Beach County, where Limbaugh owns a $24 million oceanfront mansion, confirmed that a criminal investigation into a prescription drug ring involved Limbaugh. His former maid, Wilma Cline, reported supplying him with OxyContin and other painkillers.
Last month, a law enforcement source who spoke on condition of anonymity said authorities also were investigating whether Limbaugh illegally funneled money to buy prescription painkillers. The radio host responded with a blanket denial of the allegations during his third day back on the air.


I can't believe they can just waltz in and sieze your medical records. I know it's relevant to the case, but still, this DOES seem like a huge violation of privacy. I'm not saying he shouldn't be prosecuted - it would be a huge double-standard to jail crackheads but let the rich white guy with a designer addiction off scot free. But isn't this, like most drug cases, a fairly victimless crime? Seems to me addicts suffer their own punishment.

What do you think? Are the files fair game? How do you strike a balance between privacy and justice? Is this a victimless crime?
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Old 12-04-2003, 04:17 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Not exactly waltzing.

My math shows 4 warrants to seize records. That's 4 times that the state attorney had to go before a judge and show probable cause that a crime has been committed.

Also, 3 hours a day of spewing hate-filled rants doesn't exactly sound to me like an addict's guilt at work- especially while railing against other drug users. I don't have a sympathetic bone in my body for this man.
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Old 12-04-2003, 07:02 PM   #3 (permalink)
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Florida also has on it's books a law against shopping around for doctors who will write a script just because you show up.

This is an anti-addict edict which also gives doctors pause.

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Old 12-04-2003, 07:35 PM   #4 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by Sparhawk

Also, 3 hours a day of spewing hate-filled rants...
One of these days you should try to listen to his show.
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Old 12-04-2003, 09:22 PM   #5 (permalink)
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Originally posted by Ustwo
One of these days you should try to listen to his show.
i would, but my radio doesn't play jackass.

(not sure how that reads, so to clarify, jackass is referring to rush, not ustwo).
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Old 12-04-2003, 09:51 PM   #6 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by Ustwo
One of these days you should try to listen to his show.
That trick must work on a lot of people.

In fact, I have a few times. He did nothing but blame every single conceivable ill in our society on "Liberals." (I quote it here, because the right-wing enjoys using this label as a negative -- our founding fathers were Liberals, don't you forget that.)

He goes on and on. It's offensive to anyone who doesn't adhere to a strict right-wing idealogy. It's also a bunch of nonsense. Do you really think that everything that is wrong with the world today is... the other half of the population that doesn't agree with you? The rabid fear and hatred of anyone who disagrees with you in any way is just astonishing to me.

In some ways he is tame compared to some other talk radio "personalities" I've checked out though, which practically froth at the mouth. They can't go 4 seconds without mentioning Clinton and his blowjob. It makes me laugh.
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Old 12-05-2003, 03:13 AM   #7 (permalink)
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I've listened to his show. I think he's a jackass.

I think if he is accused of "doctor shopping" then it seems logical that his medical records would have to be reviewed. Especially if the records contain dates of prescriptions and dosages, which they undoubtedly do.

It seems like an invasion of privacy, but it also seems like a logical extension of the investigation. I think it's only causing a big stink because Mr. Limbaugh, who has an enormously large pulpit to proclaim from, is involved and not some average Joe Schmo.
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Old 12-05-2003, 03:17 AM   #8 (permalink)
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(Edited because I can't read and hit the wrong button)
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Old 12-05-2003, 05:40 AM   #9 (permalink)
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I spent a year suffering through it every day at work. There isn't a single problem in this country that doesn't have Liberals or Democrats (or as rush says, libs and dems- and how ridiculous does he sound when he says that?) to blame for it. I was half surprised he didn't blame his drug addiction on the evil commies...
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Old 12-05-2003, 07:26 AM   #10 (permalink)
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Nizzle,

How exactly is that any different than the "liberals" arguments? I'm not defending Rush nor attacking the "liberal" idealogues who spout the exact opposite of him, just pointing out that you don't say that you are equally outraged by them. Personally, I don't like either extreme side but I occasionally listen to them because interspersed within the vitriolic rants there are some ideas on both sides which should be understood and investigated.

But anyway, the point of this thread started out to be about the seizing of medical records. While I believe that medical records should be VERY difficult for anyone other than the doctor and patient to get, I do not have a problem with lawful seizing of records. If it is shown that the seizures were politically motivated or that this is not the "norm" for this type of investigation then I think those responsible should face serious fines and possibly imprisonment. I've read about MANY arrests related to prescription drug addiction but this one is starting to seem over the top. How many man hours are being spent on Rush Limbaugh's Rx drug habit? How many are spent on the average John Smith's Rx drug habit?
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Old 12-05-2003, 07:53 AM   #11 (permalink)
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has anyone heard if Wilma Cline, his housekeeper that supplied him, is being prosecuted for anything?
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Old 12-05-2003, 07:55 AM   #12 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by onetime2
How many man hours are being spent on Rush Limbaugh's Rx drug habit? How many are spent on the average John Smith's Rx drug habit?
If the average John Smith publicly let his rather extreme drug habits known to the authorities (and on the same scale)… then Mr. Smith will face court charges too. Police hassle junkies… Sorry to bust up everyone’s day.
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Old 12-05-2003, 08:20 AM   #13 (permalink)
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Rush isn't going to have any trouble with the law apart from what has already happened, he's a celebrity and he's already been through rehab.

Anyway, they were completely justified in thier search of his medical records, for the same reason they would be justified in this search if he had murdered. I don't believe drugs are bad; the laws are just fucked up.
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Old 12-05-2003, 08:38 AM   #14 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by Astrocloud
If the average John Smith publicly let his rather extreme drug habits known to the authorities (and on the same scale)… then Mr. Smith will face court charges too. Police hassle junkies… Sorry to bust up everyone’s day.
Bullshit. There are plenty of celebrities who flaunt their drug use and this many man hours are NOT spent on them. And the average junkie does not have his medical records seized.
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Old 12-05-2003, 08:51 AM   #15 (permalink)
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Originally posted by onetime2
Bullshit. There are plenty of celebrities who flaunt their drug use and this many man hours are NOT spent on them. And the average junkie does not have his medical records seized.
If you remember that Rush was busted by the National Enquirer. He was not "flaunting" his addiction to "blue babies". I can't think of one celebrity who flaunts a prescription drug habit... which would be akin to flaunting a heroin addiction...

Oh yes wasn't Keith Richards arrested for heroin or something? I wonder if you would complain about the police man-hours being spent on him?

Of course Rush Limbaugh is nowhere near as culturally important as Keith Richards and the comparison is only incidental
.

Last edited by Astrocloud; 12-05-2003 at 08:54 AM..
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Old 12-05-2003, 09:06 AM   #16 (permalink)
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Originally posted by Ustwo
One of these days you should try to listen to his show.
I also listened to the show for quite a long time. I assumed that he spoke for the mainstream conservatives and he would give me that balance on their point of view so I could both argue my points effectively and become better informed.

HE is CNN (Clinton News Network), he is all clinton all the time. He just can't remove his brain from Clintons cock. All he does is spew hate about liberals and democrats. Constantly till I got so sick of it I grew to have a truly visceral hatred for the man for his constant attacks on myself and people I like.

Rush is a hypocrite and a purposeful liar. Countless times he does skits or says thing that I know HE knows is wrong but he says it anyway.

Such as his little skit on hybrid SUV's.
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Old 12-05-2003, 09:12 AM   #17 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by Astrocloud
I can't think of one celebrity who flaunts a prescription drug habit... which would be akin to flaunting a heroin addiction...

Well, one example would be Jack Osbourne. I certainly wouldn't classify him as a celebrity, but he is on TV. Does anyone remember him going public with his addiction? Does anyone remember him being prosecuted for anything?

On another note, it's quite funny to hear the Libs complain about Rush "spewing hate" on his show when that's all the left can seem to do when it comes to our President these days.
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Old 12-05-2003, 09:21 AM   #18 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by bish
On another note, it's quite funny to hear the Libs complain about Rush "spewing hate" on his show when that's all the left can seem to do when it comes to our President these days.
I might, just might, be able to find you a broader brush to paint your reality with. But I doubt it.

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Old 12-05-2003, 09:23 AM   #19 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by bish
Well, one example would be Jack Osbourne. I certainly wouldn't classify him as a celebrity, but he is on TV. Does anyone remember him going public with his addiction? Does anyone remember him being prosecuted for anything?
The authorities tend to look the other way when someone with a drug habit steps forward of their own volition to seek therapy. Rush Limbaugh did not seek help on his own. Rush Limbaugh was busted by a newspaper. (Rather the newspaper released it's story when they found out that the police started their own investigation -There's nothing worse than getting scooped by the cops).


Was Jack Osbourne busted before he sought counseling?


Quote:
Originally posted by bish
On another note, it's quite funny to hear the Libs complain about Rush "spewing hate" on his show when that's all the left can seem to do when it comes to our President these days. [/B]
THIS IS COMPLETELY OFF TOPIC
Just because someone doesn't like something that the President does -or "spews hate" against the President... It does not make that person a member of a particular group nor party. One can be completely Independent and arrive at particular opinions -especially when those feelings are blatantly obvious.

Last edited by Astrocloud; 12-05-2003 at 09:32 AM..
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Old 12-05-2003, 10:50 AM   #20 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by Astrocloud
If you remember that Rush was busted by the National Enquirer. He was not "flaunting" his addiction to "blue babies". I can't think of one celebrity who flaunts a prescription drug habit... which would be akin to flaunting a heroin addiction...

Oh yes wasn't Keith Richards arrested for heroin or something? I wonder if you would complain about the police man-hours being spent on him?

Of course Rush Limbaugh is nowhere near as culturally important as Keith Richards and the comparison is only incidental
.
Way to dismiss the main points of the discussion. HOW MANY RUN OF THE MILL ADDICTS DO THE POLICE INVESTIGATE TO THIS EXTENT? I could care less about Keith Richards' arrest a quarter of a century ago. If the police took resources away from other investigations simply to "get" him, then I am absolutely against it. Additionally, I never said Rush flaunted it I said there are plenty of celebs that DO flaunt their drug use and the police do not go into large scale investigations.

The other point, was that medical records should be difficult to get because they are so personal. How long until the information within them becomes public? How long before you start hearing about the hang nail he had treated or the wart he had removed or whatever? Fishing expeditions into medical records should not be the norm. I'm not saying that this is a "fishing expedition" but it certainly seems out of the ordinary for a prescription drug case. There have been plenty of cases in my local area of people abusing prescription drugs and not once were medical records examined. And many of these cases involved far greater crimes than doctor shopping or abuse of the drug. These included defrauding clients, vehicular manslaughter, robbery, and assault.
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Old 12-05-2003, 11:12 AM   #21 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by onetime2
There are plenty of celebrities who flaunt their drug use and this many man hours are NOT spent on them. And the average junkie does not have his medical records seized.
Quote:
Originally posted by onetime2
Way to dismiss the main points of the discussion. HOW MANY RUN OF THE MILL ADDICTS DO THE POLICE INVESTIGATE TO THIS EXTENT? I could care less about Keith Richards' arrest a quarter of a century ago. [/B]
Then why bring it up?
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Old 12-05-2003, 11:25 AM   #22 (permalink)
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The police had probable cause to investigate. Even left wing judges have approved search warrants based on probable cause. This is not a "fishing expedition". The police knew what they were looking for and had a warrant to do it. If they didn't then I suppose that Rush Limbaugh's lawyers would have that evidence dismissed.


Perhaps the police need more evidence because the 'average citizen' doesn't have an army of lawyers working for the defense. I suppose in some neo-conservative's viewpoint -the only crimes worth investigating are those that the poor commit. After all, celebrities are rich and can afford decent lawyers. Prosecuting rich people in court will cost more more money than prosecuting the poor. So why don't the police prosecute only the fiscally viable? Is it because they'll get away with murder if the police don't investigate- (doesn’t anyone remember O.J. Simpson –anyone, ANYONE?)


And O.J. Simpson was just a useful comparison. Rush Limbaugh is in no way as culturally significant or as talented as O.J. Simpson.

Keith Richards was just an example. If you don't like him perhaps Robert Downey Jr. or Scott Weiland will be appropriate comparisons -although Rush Limbaugh isn't near as talented as either. And the Keith Richards example (if you bothered to follow the link that I gave) shows that sometimes -a vigorous police prosecution can set someone on the publically accepted "right" path. In Keith's case; it was a police prosecution that made him quit the smack.

It’s completely ridiculous to speculate about Rush Limbaugh’s medical records going public and revealing things like proctology exams. I know from my own vigorous drug prosecution that good lawyers can keep such records sealed. (Although I found Rush’s medical records on Kazaa and I think he’s not getting enough corn in his diet).

Last edited by Astrocloud; 12-05-2003 at 11:32 AM..
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Old 12-05-2003, 11:27 AM   #23 (permalink)
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Rush was purchasing drugs at dealer volumes. That is why he got and continues to recieve much attention from law enforcement.

Penalties are much greater under the dealer laws, and the necessary investigation is required by law to be much more thorough.

Plus his investigation involved blackmail, which is another felony Rush has to answer to, from the start.
Then there is the (by a legal definition) money laundering.

His is a very special case.
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Old 12-05-2003, 12:18 PM   #24 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by Sparhawk
Then why bring it up?
Just responding to Astrocloud's question around why I wasn't against that.
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Old 12-05-2003, 12:25 PM   #25 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by Astrocloud
The police had probable cause to investigate. Even left wing judges have approved search warrants based on probable cause. This is not a "fishing expedition". The police knew what they were looking for and had a warrant to do it. If they didn't then I suppose that Rush Limbaugh's lawyers would have that evidence dismissed.


Perhaps the police need more evidence because the 'average citizen' doesn't have an army of lawyers working for the defense. I suppose in some neo-conservative's viewpoint -the only crimes worth investigating are those that the poor commit. After all, celebrities are rich and can afford decent lawyers. Prosecuting rich people in court will cost more more money than prosecuting the poor. So why don't the police prosecute only the fiscally viable? Is it because they'll get away with murder if the police don't investigate- (doesn’t anyone remember O.J. Simpson –anyone, ANYONE?)


And O.J. Simpson was just a useful comparison. Rush Limbaugh is in no way as culturally significant or as talented as O.J. Simpson.

Keith Richards was just an example. If you don't like him perhaps Robert Downey Jr. or Scott Weiland will be appropriate comparisons -although Rush Limbaugh isn't near as talented as either. And the Keith Richards example (if you bothered to follow the link that I gave) shows that sometimes -a vigorous police prosecution can set someone on the publically accepted "right" path. In Keith's case; it was a police prosecution that made him quit the smack.

It’s completely ridiculous to speculate about Rush Limbaugh’s medical records going public and revealing things like proctology exams. I know from my own vigorous drug prosecution that good lawyers can keep such records sealed. (Although I found Rush’s medical records on Kazaa and I think he’s not getting enough corn in his diet).
This isn't about neo con this or liberal that. Simply a question about politically motivated investigations that go beyond the norm of investigations and reaching into medical records. Were Scott Weilands medical records seized in his investigations? Is there any case you can point to for precedent? If not, then my point remains that it APPEARS to go beyond the bounds of a normal investigation. I would be saying the same thing no matter the target (yes even if it was your dear sweet Bill Clinton).
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Old 12-05-2003, 12:49 PM   #26 (permalink)
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The only way that it is beyond the bounds of a NORMAL investigation is that normally a person's drug habit isn't made public by a newspaper. Police get warrants for evidence, normally.

In Scott Weiland's case he was caught red handed with drugs in his possesion. He later violated his probation by committing DUI.

In the drug possesion case; he was pulled over while driving with no headlights on. The police used (gasp!) reasonable cause and searched his vehicle.

If you simply read the news link here. Then you realize that Scott has had an on-again off-again problem with heroin. He "was also arrested in New York City... for heroin possession, during a police drug sweep on the Lower East Side."

Drug sweep... what!??? Police harassing Junkies!??? -The shame of it. Perhaps only celebrities that I like should be excluded from their "politically motivated" investigations.


(I would like to re-emphasize that Rush Limbaugh is in no way as talented as Scott Weiland.)
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Old 12-06-2003, 06:01 AM   #27 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by Astrocloud
The only way that it is beyond the bounds of a NORMAL investigation is that normally a person's drug habit isn't made public by a newspaper. Police get warrants for evidence, normally.

In Scott Weiland's case he was caught red handed with drugs in his possesion. He later violated his probation by committing DUI.

In the drug possesion case; he was pulled over while driving with no headlights on. The police used (gasp!) reasonable cause and searched his vehicle.

If you simply read the news link here. Then you realize that Scott has had an on-again off-again problem with heroin. He "was also arrested in New York City... for heroin possession, during a police drug sweep on the Lower East Side."

Drug sweep... what!??? Police harassing Junkies!??? -The shame of it. Perhaps only celebrities that I like should be excluded from their "politically motivated" investigations.


(I would like to re-emphasize that Rush Limbaugh is in no way as talented as Scott Weiland.)
I'm very familiar with Weiland's arrests as I love STP. Too bad he's going the route he is. But anyway, finding drugs on people and doing drug sweeps in known drug areas are far different than going into people's medical records to prove a charge that likely won't even get the guy punished. As I've said before, medical records should be held in the strictest confidence no matter who that person is. I still believe that there is little chance a "normal" prosecution on these charges would include so much police time and searches of medical records.

After all, I don't believe he has a criminal record and would have probably gotten court ordered drug treatment and maybe probation. He has already done the treatment on his own so the judge will probably only have him evaluated at this point and maybe he'll get probation. In the mean time they are spending a hell of a lot of time for a relatively minor conviction with little to no prospect for punishment.
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Old 12-06-2003, 07:38 AM   #28 (permalink)
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The two reasons Rush is targeted by the media for his drug use.
1. He is a celebrity
2. He is VERY much a hypocrite

They are playing gotcha.

And while I do appreciate the freedom of health privacy,
once you have a few legitimate warrants to justify it in a criminal investigation, then you've temporarily lost that right.
(and believe it or not, Rush would have said the same thing before his OWN drug case)

Rush doesn't haven anything really good to say except about his ego.
But hey, that's how he makes his gobs of money, spouting off rhetoric.
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Old 12-06-2003, 11:47 AM   #29 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by onetime2
But anyway, finding drugs on people and doing drug sweeps in known drug areas are far different than going into people's medical records to prove a charge that likely won't even get the guy punished.
It's funny that you use the word "known". Rush Limbaugh is a "known" junkie. Just as the cops have a justified reason for conducting drug sweeps. The cops have a justified reason for sweeping through Rush Limbaugh's palaces and looking into his misconduct. Part of Rush Limbaugh's misconduct involves possession of over 2,000 pills simply from doctor swapping. But you know the charges just won’t stick without some evidence… So what should the police do? They are investigating a crime after all… Here I’ll say it


If the police have the right to investigate known criminal activity then the police have the right to search his medical records.

Please note that the above is a hotlink to a web page. If you disagree with the above statement –then by all means click on the link. It’s a harmless page, I promise.

Quote:
Originally posted by onetime2

I still believe that there is little chance a "normal" prosecution on these charges would include so much police time and searches of medical records.
So what are you suggesting? Come out with it please. It seems like you’re saying that there’s a conspiracy to ‘get’ Rush Limbaugh… Well are you? The police really aren’t doing anything abnormal. They are securing their case before a judge. Otherwise the charges wouldn’t stick and ole’ Rush walks.

Quote:
Originally posted by onetime2

After all, I don't believe he has a criminal record and would have probably gotten court ordered drug treatment and maybe probation. He has already done the treatment on his own so the judge will probably only have him evaluated at this point and maybe he'll get probation. In the mean time they are spending a hell of a lot of time for a relatively minor conviction with little to no prospect for punishment.
Now wouldn’t it be sad if he got caught using again? Junkies have a tendency to return to their former habits. If taking pills was as easy as going to a few doctors and Rush got his literal slap on the wrist –Do you think he’ll really quit? Maybe he’d just cut back a little –after all his medical records ARE private –what would stop him from doing the whole thing over again?
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Old 12-06-2003, 03:06 PM   #30 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by Astrocloud
It's funny that you use the word "known". Rush Limbaugh is a "known" junkie. Just as the cops have a justified reason for conducting drug sweeps. The cops have a justified reason for sweeping through Rush Limbaugh's palaces and looking into his misconduct. Part of Rush Limbaugh's misconduct involves possession of over 2,000 pills simply from doctor swapping. But you know the charges just won’t stick without some evidence… So what should the police do? They are investigating a crime after all… Here I’ll say it


If the police have the right to investigate known criminal activity then the police have the right to search his medical records.

Please note that the above is a hotlink to a web page. If you disagree with the above statement –then by all means click on the link. It’s a harmless page, I promise.



So what are you suggesting? Come out with it please. It seems like you’re saying that there’s a conspiracy to ‘get’ Rush Limbaugh… Well are you? The police really aren’t doing anything abnormal. They are securing their case before a judge. Otherwise the charges wouldn’t stick and ole’ Rush walks.



Now wouldn’t it be sad if he got caught using again? Junkies have a tendency to return to their former habits. If taking pills was as easy as going to a few doctors and Rush got his literal slap on the wrist –Do you think he’ll really quit? Maybe he’d just cut back a little –after all his medical records ARE private –what would stop him from doing the whole thing over again?
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Old 12-06-2003, 06:07 PM   #31 (permalink)
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I like Rush pretty well - and I like him more since he's gone through rehab - but I do believe the searches were entirely the right thing to do and are being properly executed.
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Old 12-06-2003, 07:38 PM   #32 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by onetime2
After all, I don't believe he has a criminal record and would have probably gotten court ordered drug treatment and maybe probation. He has already done the treatment on his own so the judge will probably only have him evaluated at this point and maybe he'll get probation. In the mean time they are spending a hell of a lot of time for a relatively minor conviction with little to no prospect for punishment.
Again, this is not a relatively minor conviction. Limbaugh bought too many drugs to be charged under the user laws. Limbaugh will be dealt with as a DEALER. That is a much more serious crime. So stop trying to trivialize what he did.

Then when you consider the money laundering, doctor shopping and harassment/threats to his maid....

This is serious shit, and if there is any justice in the world Limbaugh is looking at 10 years MINIMUM just for the Dealer charges.
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Old 12-06-2003, 09:13 PM   #33 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by Superbelt
Again, this is not a relatively minor conviction. Limbaugh bought too many drugs to be charged under the user laws. Limbaugh will be dealt with as a DEALER. That is a much more serious crime. So stop trying to trivialize what he did.

Then when you consider the money laundering, doctor shopping and harassment/threats to his maid....

This is serious shit, and if there is any justice in the world Limbaugh is looking at 10 years MINIMUM just for the Dealer charges.
Ahh yes, I'm sure he's another Cali cartel. I'm also sure he's as much a threat to the public as those Hell's Angels. Let's lock him up for good, he allegedly threatened his maid that's at least as bad as the people who tortured and killed the prosecutor near DC. Please.
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Old 12-06-2003, 09:59 PM   #34 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by onetime2
Ahh yes, I'm sure he's another Cali cartel. I'm also sure he's as much a threat to the public as those Hell's Angels. Let's lock him up for good, he allegedly threatened his maid that's at least as bad as the people who tortured and killed the prosecutor near DC.

This is not a response. The charges are serious. There is data to back this up. To say that he's not as bad as criminal X does not excuse his behavior or make it less of a crime.

If he does get charged as a dealer -then it would imply that he's more culpable than what the 'I'm just a junkie -gimme mercy' defense would entail. In fact, if Limbaugh was hosting parties and handing out blue babies -he would most certainly serve jail time.

But this is all speculation... just like an assertion that Rush is just a harmless junkie -we won't know until the police finish their investigation and the chips fall.
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Old 12-06-2003, 10:12 PM   #35 (permalink)
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He doesn't have to actually deal the drugs to others. Simply possessing the drugs in the volumes we know he does, thousands of pills at a time qualifies him under federal law as a dealer.

That is the simple law, and Rush himself advocates punishing people to the full extent of the law for drug crimes.

What you just did onetime2, that's equivocating. Bad form.
Don't judge Rush in how he compares to California Cartels or someone who kills a prosecutor.

Judge him on the volume of pills he has, his threats to his maid, his money laundering, and his doctor shopping.
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Old 12-06-2003, 11:14 PM   #36 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by Superbelt
He doesn't have to actually deal the drugs to others. Simply possessing the drugs in the volumes we know he does, thousands of pills at a time qualifies him under federal law as a dealer.
Silly me. I vacuously forgot about Mandatory Minimum Laws.

I stand corrected.
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Old 12-08-2003, 06:15 AM   #37 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by Superbelt


What you just did onetime2, that's equivocating. Bad form.
Don't judge Rush in how he compares to California Cartels or someone who kills a prosecutor.

Sorry to offend your sensibilities, but I am making a statement about the relative seriousness of his offenses versus the laws the prosecutors, (and by extension, you and astrocloud) are using to justify the investigation. Even if Rush was distributing the drugs he collected, can you point to a single case where medical records were seized in a similar investigation? I'm not saying that it absolutely hasn't happened, just that I have never heard of it and this investigation SEEMS to be going beyond the bounds of most investigations. I have no interest in defending Rush Limbaugh and it won't bother me one bit if all the anti-Rush people are right and he's a menace to society. What bothers me is the fact that his opponents are willing to comprise the principles they claim to hold so dear (mandatory minimums being bad, drug users being treated rather than punished, etc) to silence an opposing voice.

As I've stated before on the Rush subject, I would take the points of the anti-Rush liberals much more seriously if they consistently applied the morals they claim to represent. I apply this standard to all who espouse political/social beliefs, it just so happens that in this case it's coming from the left.

**edit** Not being critical, just a clarification, Cali doesn't = California, it's an infamous drug cartel that operates internationally.
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Last edited by onetime2; 12-08-2003 at 06:18 AM..
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Old 12-08-2003, 06:53 AM   #38 (permalink)
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The relative seriousness of the offense is that he had dealer quantites. That is not small potatoes to the prosecutors.
That requires the type of thorough investigation we are seeing now. Especially because they are large quantities of prescription drugs. Prescription drug investigations are different from narcotics like marijuana and cocaine because the drugs Rush was buying have been coming from some "legitimate source" And in alarming quantities. So the feds must track this down, thus the thorough investigation. Including the seisure of his doctors records.
The reason you haven't heard of an investigation of a celebrity like this before is because most celebs don't get caught buying several thousand pills at one time, along with the additional FELONIES he seems to be racking up in this investigation.

I want the laws changed. I don't think these kinds of problems are helped by prison sentences. But until the laws are changed, there are thousands of men and women in prison right now. And until they are released, the kind of man who is supporting their incarceration while he himself is guilty of the same transgressions, he belongs there with them.
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Old 12-08-2003, 07:13 AM   #39 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by onetime2


As I've stated before on the Rush subject, I would take the points of the anti-Rush liberals much more seriously if they consistently applied the morals they claim to represent. I apply this standard to all who espouse political/social beliefs, it just so happens that in this case it's coming from the left.
I'm not "the Left" -repeat ad nauseum.

For your query on the government seizing medical records... Try a google search

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&l...ords+-limbaugh

You make too many assumptions about the positions of "the Left" and the anti-Rush people in general. You state that they are "willing to comprise the principles they claim to hold so dear" -yet Lurkette (who started this thread) is supporting his defense precisely on principle. Do you even know who your arguing against?

I assert that drug laws in this country have been controlled by right wing interests for years. The left wing has espoused treatment and the right has pushed for harder time and mandatory sentences. Now it seems like a hero for the right is going to be locked away in prison... Am I supporting this? Yes and no.

If Rush Limbaugh supporters genuinely believe in the values that he disseminates. Values like
Quote:
"There's nothing good about drug use. And we have laws against selling drugs, pushing drugs, using drugs, importing drugs. And the laws are good because we know what happens to people in societies and neighborhoods which become consumed by them. And so if people are violating the law by doing drugs, they ought to be accused, and they ought to be convicted, and they ought to be sent up."
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v03/n1594/a01.html?178


-Then perhaps this is a chance for them (his supporters) to reconsider their own priorities. Should drug offenders be given more time than murderers? The laws in this country say yes...
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Old 12-08-2003, 07:56 AM   #40 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by onetime2
Even if Rush was distributing the drugs he collected, can you point to a single case where medical records were seized in a similar investigation? I'm not saying that it absolutely hasn't happened, just that I have never heard of it and this investigation SEEMS to be going beyond the bounds of most investigations.
Actually, I know of dozens upon dozens of cases in which people who possess drugs in dealer quantities had all manner of records seized, including medical records. You see, a good friend of the family works with the United States Attorney's Office, and I have also spent a good deal of time in the New Hampshire District Office. While I can't give any case names -- I don't remember any of them, to be honest -- I know for a fact that this friend of the family spent a good deal of his time working for the U.S. Attorney who aided in ATF and narcotics prosecution.
Trust me, more hours than you can even begin to comprehend goes in to preparing for a federal drug possession case (and remember, the quantity of drugs Limbaugh possessed may make him eligible for federal prosecution). This includes the collection of pertinent material, such as the collection of medical documents. It happens. You don't hear about it because most of the people prosecuted in this manner are not celebrities, so the media doesn't showcase the event.
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