
Records from a private ambulance service show paramedics claimed to have treated a patient who had been dead for three years.
Another form suggested a female rider was treated by the paramedics at a horse riding event, despite her having given birth by C-section just weeks earlier and not being in any condition to ride.
The Crown pointed to these records in its opening of a jury trial in Tauranga where a couple, who ran a private ambulance service in the Bay of Plenty, are accused of deceiving doctors to obtain morphine and fentanyl.
The bulk of the charges specify allegations of doctoring and reproducing records to account for the large amounts of drugs they procured.
Rebecca Couchman and Craig Lohgan, who also used the surname McLaren, collectively face 35 charges, related to their operation of EMC Ambulance, or Emergency Medical Care Ltd, out of Kawerau.
They both deny all charges, which include forgery, obtaining by deception, using an altered document, and administering and possessing a class B controlled drug.
Lohgan is being referred to as 鈥淢r McLaren鈥 during the trial, but is referred to as Lohgan on the charge list.
Craig Lohgan and Rebecca Couchman (R), who also use the surname McLaren, collectively face 35 charges related to using altered documents to obtain class B controlled drugs morphine and fentanyl, when they operated a private ambulance.
鈥楨xperienced paramedics鈥
Crown prosecutor Laura Clay said the pair held themselves out to be 鈥渆xperienced paramedics鈥 and deceived a number of doctors.
They allegedly used their relationships with these doctors, who were appointed as medical directors, to procure 鈥渢housands鈥 of ampoules of morphine and fentanyl.
鈥淣ot only did they procure those drugs, they also took it upon themselves to administer the medication to vulnerable members of the public,鈥 Clay said.
Clay explained to the jury that up until 2020, anyone could set up a private ambulance service. They primarily contracted services to private event organisers, including equestrian and motocross events, and alarm companies.
A private ambulance could not respond to 111 calls, nor was it entitled to subsidised medicines.
The Crown claims Couchman and Lohgan managed to get 鈥渟tanding orders鈥 that allowed them to administer controlled drugs, such as fentanyl and morphine.
The Crown claims the defendants 鈥減rovided themselves鈥 with certification, and managed to 鈥渄eceive鈥 medical professionals into signing standing orders, based on their 鈥渋ncorrect鈥 belief that they were qualified.
Despite this, the defendants were 鈥渃overed鈥 by the standing orders, so only face charges of illegally administering class B drugs for a limited period the Crown says fell outside the time the standing orders were in place.
The bulk of the charges they face relate to reproducing 鈥減atient report forms鈥 and the reporting of these on the controlled drug register.
The Crown gave examples of forms that related to things that happened years before the dates on the form, including one that outlined the treatment of a man who had in fact died three years before the treatment date.
Another was a form for a rider who had fallen from her horse at a Tauranga Racecourse event in February 2016.
The form detailed her injuries and treatment, which included a 5mcg dose of morphine. The Crown says that was the 鈥渙riginal鈥 form.
The Crown says another form under the same patient name, with similar details was dated December 1, 2017, and indicated a 6mcg morphine dose and two further doses being 鈥渄rawn and dumped鈥.
The horse rider would give evidence she was treated in 2016 but was just a few weeks postpartum on the 2017 date.
鈥淭here is no way she was riding horses on the 1st of December, 2017,鈥 Clay said.
Clay said there had been about 80 patient report forms provided to a doctor, who has interim name suppression and was a former medical director of the private ambulance service, as part of an audit.
The audit was triggered, the Crown says, when a locum pharmacist at a Kawerau pharmacy became suspicious about the quantity of morphine and fentanyl being supplied to the private ambulance.
The Crown says the patient report forms, alongside the controlled drugs register, are a 鈥渇alsity鈥.
They were created, and provided to the then-medical director, 鈥渇or the express purpose of creating a guise as to what has occurred for the significant quantity of controlled drugs received by the defendants鈥.
The Crown case is that the false document trail was created to satisfy the audit and keep the 鈥渟upply chain of the controlled drugs flowing鈥.
The Crown says the pair also reproduced false forms, with unauthorised sign-off from a medical director, to receive controlled drugs from medical wholesaler Onelink.
鈥楩orged鈥 framed university qualifications were a 鈥榲ision board鈥, defence says
The couple are also charged with creating forged university qualifications 鈥 framed certificates police found hanging in their home during a search warrant, purporting to be from overseas universities.
The defence accepts the documents were false, but Couchman鈥檚 lawyer Martin Hine said, in his defence opening statement, that it wasn鈥檛 used to deceive anyone, and was never 鈥減roffered or relied upon鈥.
鈥淢s Couchman didn鈥檛 have a Bachelor of Science in Paramedic Studies from the University of Limerick,鈥 Hine said.
The framed certificate was created by her as a 鈥渧ision board鈥, formed around the belief that if you can conceive of it, you can achieve it, and it was an 鈥渁spirational aid鈥, not intended to be 鈥渦sed or acted upon鈥.
Hine said the trial was a 鈥渃omplex鈥 case, not because of the facts, but because of the overlaying law.
This included aspects that related to the defendants being charged as 鈥減arties鈥 to the various offences. He also covered aspects related to the defendants鈥 intent, and pointed to questions around how the various documents had actually been used.
Hine said there had never been deception in the application to medical wholesaler Onelink, and had been 鈥渘o false representation鈥 or intention to deceive.
鈥淭here was no knowledge the application forms contained any false material... nor was anyone actually deceived... the documents were exactly what they purported to be.鈥
Hine said the patient report forms the Crown says were reproduced in their efforts to procure drugs had been altered for 鈥渢raining purposes only鈥, and there was no evidence they had anything to do with acquiring controlled drugs.
Lohgan鈥檚 lawyer, Paul Devoy, did not make an opening statement.
The trial before Judge David Cameron is expected to go into next week.
Hannah Bartlett is a Tauranga-based Open Justice reporter at 九一星空无限. She previously covered court and local government for the Nelson Mail, and before that was a radio reporter at 九一星空无限talk ZB.
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