Florida ‘pill mills’ were ‘gas on the fire’ of opioid crisis

In this March 2010 file photo, Law enforcement agents carry out boxes of evidence gathered from the East Coast Pain Clinic West Palm Beach, Fla. Florida’s ‘pill mills’ were a gateway to the nation’s opioid crisis, feeding addiction and overdoses in Appalachia and other states. They exploded across Florida in the early 2000s and operated for years with little oversight. The release this week of July 19, 2019, of a trove of federal data showing the distribution of opioids across the U.S. put the spotlight again on Florida’s notorious ‘pill mills,’ which provided the seeds of an epidemic that continues to cost tens of thousands of lives each year. (Bill Ingram/Palm Beach Post via AP)

In this Aug. 15, 2011 photo, Florida Department of Law Enforcement officers carry bags of prescription drugs that were confiscated from a clinic to be burned in an incinerator facility in Coconut Creek, Fla. Florida’s ‘pill mills’ were a gateway to the nation’s opioid crisis, feeding addiction and overdoses in Appalachia and other states. They exploded across Florida in the early 2000s and operated for years with little oversight. The release this week of July 19, 2019, of a trove of federal data showing the distribution of opioids across the U.S. put the spotlight again on Florida’s notorious ‘pill mills,’ which provided the seeds of an epidemic that continues to cost tens of thousands of lives each year. (Carey Wagner, South Florida Sun Sentinel via AP)

In this Feb. 2011 photo a DEA agent escorts Zvi Harry Perper to an awaiting police car after his Delray Pain Management clinic was raided by agents in Delray Beach, Fla. Florida’s ‘pill mills’ were a gateway to the nation’s opioid crisis, feeding addiction and overdoses in Appalachia and other states. They exploded across Florida in the early 2000s and operated for years with little oversight. The release this week of July 19, 2019, of a trove of federal data showing the distribution of opioids across the U.S. put the spotlight again on Florida’s notorious ‘pill mills,’ which provided the seeds of an epidemic that continues to cost tens of thousands of lives each year. (Carline Jean/South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP)

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Florida survives on tourism, but a decade ago thousands of visitors made frequent trips to the state not to visit its theme parks or beaches. Instead, they came for cheap and easy prescription painkillers sold at unscrupulous walk-in clinics.

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