Saturday, March 31, 2012

The Arrest of Dr. Longmore

The Woodstock Times carries an article this week that says that Dr. Wayne Longmore has been arrested for prescribing excessive amounts of hydrocodone, a controlled substance.  The article suggests that patients were re-selling controlled substances that they bought with Dr. Longmore's prescriptions and that the doctor has been under investigation for two years. Woodstock, New York is a century-old arts- and-music colony famous for the Woodstock concert and many of its residents. Dr. Longmore has treated me; I think highly of his practice.

His arrest renewed my interest in the drug laws.  It is possible to live in a country and not believe in its laws or its values.  I have written the following letter to The Woodstock Times:


Paul Smart’s “Doctor Derailed” (March 29) upset me in four ways.  First, Dr. Longmore is a fine physician--one of the finest who has treated me.  Second, a reasonably priced practice like Dr. Longmore’s, which does not rely on insurance, contributes to the community.  Its closing is a loss. Third, his federal persecutors  contribute nothing to  the public good on any level.  They do not heal, they do not make the community safe, and they do not protect the community’s morals.  Rather, the drug enforcement industry is a cancer on the common weal and the public purse.  Fourth, those of us who believe in liberty are reminded of America’s totalitarian drug laws.  A nation that imprisons men like Dr. Longmore is not free.  Thoreau said: “Under a government which imprisons any unjustly, the true place for a just man is also a prison.”  Today, anyone who fills in a bubble for a candidate--Democratic, Republican, or other--who supports America’s drug laws bears responsibility for the FBI’s and the federal government’s criminal violence toward Dr. Longmore. 

Update: Paul Smart's article in the April 5 Woodstock Times about Dr. Longmore's arrest quotes the above letter. 

3 comments:

Chris from Cornwall said...

I wish I could agree with you , but I was one of those patients of his that was sitting in the parking lot waiting for him to open along with a parking lot full of teenagers waiting for him. All I had to do us hand him a 60$ and in less then 45 seconds I walked out with a prescription for pain killers

Anonymous said...

...and I was one of the patients who walked in with a backache and was referred to a muscular therapist. I waited in the waiting room with a mother and child and grandmother...

I am un-insured and can only thank Dr Longmore and wish him the best.

Anonymous said...

...and I was one of the patients who walked in with a backache and was referred to a muscular therapist. I waited in the waiting room with a mother and child and grandmother...

I am un-insured and can only thank Dr Longmore and wish him the best.