Noooo! United Pharmacy.com order seized

bluntman

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United was very helpful and have great customer service. I placed an order and it was siezed. Then i opted for a replacement shipment, and that one got seized. I placed an order with InHousePharmacy.com, and its been about 3 weeks....im starting to lose hope, i dont want to get bent over by walgreens....
 

Brandon Mthson

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I guess we should place our orders at least 2 months in advance to avoid disrupting our regimen iin case something goes wrong with the shipment.
 

ash900

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The truth.

For the truth please take a look here
http://subs.nzherald.co.nz/topic/story. ... D=10380892

Medicine

Wallace Waugh


$33,000 fine for selling medicines over internet

09.05.06
By Simon O'Rourke


A father-and-son pair illegally sold more than $10 million worth of pharmacy-only medicines over the internet before the Ministry of Health finally caught up with them and brought them to court.

It is estimated the drugs had cost Iain Waugh and his father Wallace just $2.5 million on the wholesale market.

The medicines were sold over the internet under the company name Ink Media Ltd.

Other companies that were part of the Ink Media group and were run by the Waughs included Ink Electronic Media Ltd and Standard 304 Ltd.

However, the exact profits of the companies were unknown, said Judge Neil MacLean during sentencing at the Hamilton District Court yesterday.

Ink Media continues to sell medicines through its internet site http://www.unitedpharmacies.com.

Only Wallace Waugh, 69, appeared at yesterday's sentencing.

His son, Iain Waugh, is thought to be in China. He was also missing during the court hearing last year. A warrant is out for his arrest and he faces many more charges on his return.

Waugh junior's sentencing on the charges for which he has already been convicted is set down for 26 May.

While a jail term for Waugh senior was not sought by Crown Solicitor Mike Heron yesterday, a substantial fine for more than 80 charges was.

Judge MacLean fined Wallace Waugh and Ink Media a total of $33,000. Court costs for 86 charges were ordered, totalling $11,180.

After the sentencing, Waugh refused to answer questions about whether he regretted his actions.

He told the Herald that the Ministry of Health had tried and failed three times to get a conviction before the latest court hearing. He said he would appeal.

The judgment handed down by Judge MacLean shows the medicines were sold to individuals in overseas markets without prescription. The orders were distributed from a Fijian base to many countries, including Australia and the United States.

Wallace and Iain Waugh illegally sold and advertised drugs on the internet between November 2002 and August 2003.

Included in their list of goods were Ventolin inhalers, Xenical and Argentinian-sourced Proscar.

Many medicines were bought from ZZ Pharmacy, a licensed pharmaceutical wholesaler.

The relationship between ZZ Pharmacy and the Waugh-run Ink Media was described by an employee of ZZ Pharmacy as "sizeable, averaging perhaps $100,000 a month."

During yesterday's hearing Mr Heron described the operation as a "money-making venture" in which the Waughs had knowingly and deliberately broken the law.

He said aggravating factors included the premeditation and planning of a large-scale operation, the risk to consumers and the threat to the regulatory integrity of other countries as well as of New Zealand.

"The actions were cynical and deliberately mercenary."

Judge MacLean summarised the men's attitude as one of "chancing their arm". He said although the risks to the public were theoretical they were nevertheless real.

A sudden drug recall would be impossible to trace to purchasers because no prescriptions existed. Proscar, if it came into contact with pregnant women, presented risks of birth defects to the newborn.

CASE 'SENDS MESSAGE'

Medsafe, a regulatory arm of the Ministry of Health, says buying medicines over the internet was not a victimless crime because it was potentially "very dangerous" to the health of patients to use prescription drugs without medical advice or supervision.

Medsafe's principal technical specialist Dr Stewart Jessamine said the sentencing sent a message to New Zealand suppliers that irrespective of where their website was situated, or where the medicines were ultimately supplied from, if the route of supply originated in a New Zealand entity and the sale took place in New Zealand, it was an offence under New Zealand law and offenders might be prosecuted.

"Medsafe will continue to prosecute those found to be committing similar offences." Dr Jessamine said.
 

the_swami

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Wierd.

Well, they're definitely still in business. I ordered from UP and got my generic Finast just a few days ago. I e-mailed them about my order and I just checked to see were the e-mail came from and it looks like it came from NZ. The package came from India. Their prices are very good though (and meds seem legit), and so far I'm happy with their service.
 

hairwegoagain

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Why is everyone so surprised? Importing this stuff into the US is not legal. There are very good reasons for this. Maybe customs will catch it, maybe they won't....but don't act shocked when they do because the policies couldn't be more clear. Cracking down on this will only get worse for both suppliers and recipients.

Duh.
 

ash900

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yeah

i was pretty shocked when i found that article.
im sure theres a similar story behind all online pharmacies (the non legit ones anyway) it's just that you usually never hear about it.

must be operated by the son now... i would assume since the domain name is registered to an address in hong kong... so figures.. since he is apparently in hiding, somewhere in china, etc...
 
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