Cox was charged by the Yavapai County Attorney’s Office in a 134-count indictment. The investigation revealed that from August 2009 to April 2011 Cox illegally obtained approximately 15,000 Hydrocodone pills. She used her knowledge as a medical assistant to fill without doctor authorization more than 100 false prescriptions in her own name and in the names of her family members. These crimes occurred at various pharmacies in Yavapai and Maricopa counties. A search of Cox’s residence revealed a number of prescription pill bottles in Cox’s name and in the names of her family members.
The Yavapai County Attorney’s Office, the Yavapai County PANT (Partners Against Narcotics Trafficking) Taskforce, and the Yavapai County Prescription Drug Taskforce cooperated on this case. The Arizona Attorney General’s’s Criminal Division’s Health Care Fraud and Abuse Section in Prescott prosecuted the case.
“Crimes related to prescription drug fraud are a serious matter,” said the Arizona Attorney General. “These crimes compromise the integrity of our health care system. They make unwitting co-conspirators out of law-abiding citizens and out of doctors and pharmacies operating in good faith. They also increase costs, and, most seriously, they endanger people’s lives.”