Obtain Controlled Substances, Fraud Wednesday, Share Facebook — Texas Man Charged with Conspiracy to Obtain Controlled Substances by Fraud | United States Justice Department.
announcement Texas Man Charged with Conspiracy to Obtain Controlled Substances by Fraud Wednesday, December 3, 2025 Share Facebook X LinkedIn Email For Immediate Release Office of Public Affairs A federal grand jury in the Middle District of Louisiana returned an indictment today charging a Texas man with a scheme to obtain controlled substances from multiple pharmacies using fraudulent prescriptions and then sell those drugs on the street.court filings state, Darrion Denard Brooks, 28, of Houston, and co-conspirators, used fictitious identification information to obtain fraudulent prescriptions for controlled substances on behalf of patients
who either did not exist or for whom medical providers did not authorize the prescriptions. It is alleged that through this scheme, Brooks and his co-conspirators obtained at least 11 fraudulent prescriptions for codeine and other controlled substances from at least eight different pharmacies in Louisiana, Texas, Florida, Georgia and Tennessee.Brooks has been charged with one count of conspiracy to acquire and obtain controlled substances by fraud and to possess with the intent to distribute controlled substances, and four counts of obtaining possession of controlled substances by fraud. If convicted, he carries
a maximum potential penalty of four years in prison per count. In addition, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, working in conjunction with HHS-OIG, are taking steps to hold providers accountable for their involvement in health care fraud schemes. As alleged in the indictment, from November 2023 through March 2025, Brooks and his co-conspirators fraudulently obtained controlled substances from pharmacies in the Baton Rouge area and elsewhere using prescriptions obtained using the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) registration numbers and other identifying information of at least five medical professionals without their authority. A federal judge will

