A
Florida man who returned used enemas, some with traces of “fecal
matter” to a CVS pharmacy has been busted and charged with “reckless
disregard and placing others in danger of death or bodily injury”.
The accused Ronald E. Robinson, according to prosecutors purchased CVS pharmacy’s ready-to-use enemas on several occasions between April and June this year. After using them, he re-packed them into the boxes, resealed the containers and returned the same to the store to receive refunds.
The returned items were re-sold to unsuspecting customers by the unsuspecting employees subsequently.
The pharmacy, according to a press release has notified the customers who purchased the tainted products.
Robinson’s malicious racket came to light when an employee lodged a complaint with Jacksonville police department that a customer who purchased enemas returned them at several occasions with the boxes tampered.
The employee Dustin McDonald told the department that customer returned the enemas stating that he purchased them for his mother, but, she no longer needed them. When McDonald opened the tampered boxes to check the boxes, he noticed all enemas have been used.
An analysis later revealed that “fecal matter was located on some of the returned enema bottles”.
If found guilty, Robinson is expected to spend 10 years behind a maximum security prison coupled with a hefty fine of $ 250,000. Police say Robinson was previously convicted for burglaries, assault, battery, writing bad checks and criminal mischief.
Source: The smoking gun
The accused Ronald E. Robinson, according to prosecutors purchased CVS pharmacy’s ready-to-use enemas on several occasions between April and June this year. After using them, he re-packed them into the boxes, resealed the containers and returned the same to the store to receive refunds.
The returned items were re-sold to unsuspecting customers by the unsuspecting employees subsequently.
The pharmacy, according to a press release has notified the customers who purchased the tainted products.
Robinson’s malicious racket came to light when an employee lodged a complaint with Jacksonville police department that a customer who purchased enemas returned them at several occasions with the boxes tampered.
The employee Dustin McDonald told the department that customer returned the enemas stating that he purchased them for his mother, but, she no longer needed them. When McDonald opened the tampered boxes to check the boxes, he noticed all enemas have been used.
An analysis later revealed that “fecal matter was located on some of the returned enema bottles”.
If found guilty, Robinson is expected to spend 10 years behind a maximum security prison coupled with a hefty fine of $ 250,000. Police say Robinson was previously convicted for burglaries, assault, battery, writing bad checks and criminal mischief.
Source: The smoking gun
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