Crime & Safety

Loganville Woman Charged With 22 Counts of Obtaining Prescription Drugs by Fraud

Records show that the woman went to several pharmacies in the last three months to obtain more than a thousand clonazepam pills.

A Loganville woman was arrested last week on several drug charges rooting to prescription fraud.Β 

Gwinnett County Jail records indicate thatΒ 41-year-old Stacy Irene Mauro was charged Oct. 25Β with 22 counts of obtaining dangerous drugs by fraud, one count of attempting toΒ obtain controlled substances by fraud and one count of having a suspended/revoked license. Her bond was set at $68,666, and as of Tuesday afternoon (Oct. 29) she wasΒ still in jail.Β 

Police first were alerted about Mauro when she began cursing and harassingΒ the pharmacist inside Harry's in Snellville when she was denied the pills. According to the Gwinnett County Police report, Mauro went into the pharmacy to try to get a monthly supply of 90 pills ofΒ clonazepam, a drug used to control and prevent seizures and treat panic attacks.

When the pharmacist put her information and prescriptionΒ in the database, the system showed that Mauro had already picked up the drugs several times at different pharmacies for not only the month of October, but for September and August. The employee said it looked like she had made copies of her prescription, and records indicate that sheΒ visited 22 pharmacies in the Gwinnett and Walton county areaΒ from Aug. 2 to Oct. 10. She purchased up to 1,100Β clonazepamΒ pills in that time frame, the report says.

When police arrested her, she admitted to them that she had gone to about a dozen doctors in one monthΒ to get the prescriptions for the same condition. She said she was placed onΒ clonazepam therapy due to her addiction to oxycodone, but she ended upΒ abusingΒ clonazepam, too.Β She was taking seven or eight pills a day instead of only a few, she added.

Inside the Police Reports runs regularly every week. The information is based solely on police incident reports provided on request. It does not indicate a conviction.

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