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The role fake Viagra played in a 70-year-old Miami doctor losing his license
The role fake Viagra played in a 70-year-old Miami doctor losing his license

Miami Herald

time20-07-2025

  • Miami Herald

The role fake Viagra played in a 70-year-old Miami doctor losing his license

What a Miami doctor did with fake Viagra earned him a little prison time and his license revoked by the state of Florida. Dr. Hugo Romeu, 70, wasn't a Viagra user, at least not in this case. Romeu was a seller and what he sold was a counterfeit version of the erectile dysfunction drug. That's not a crime. Hiding that what you're selling is a counterfeit version counts as a crime. READ MORE: Health company sues CEO over 'greed.' How the sale of Miami hospitals is involved The indictment in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Georgia says Romeu bought faux Viagra out of Hong Kong. Romeu's guilty plea says he then created a false 'transaction statement,' dated Oct. 25, 2016 that said his Georgia-based company Pharmrce bought 100 bottles of actual Viagra from Santa Ana, California's McGuff Company. This statement went to a Pharmrce customer in Brunswick, Georgia, thus the location of the indictment. 'First: [Romeu] knowingly created a false product tracing document concerning the prescription drug Viagra,' his guilty plea said. 'Second: [Romeu] provided this false document to his customer. Third: [Romeu] did this with intent to defraud and mislead.' Romeu pleaded guilty to failure to comply with a product tracing information requirement. He was sentenced to four months in prison, $171,835 in restitution. He was released on May 7, 2021. READ MORE: Could illegal butt lifts get a Miami plastic surgery center suspended again? Romeu's professional discipline history Romeu had been licensed in Florida since Aug. 16, 1993. His previous troubles hinted at similar dishonesty as his Viagra shenanigans. Back in 2006, the Florida Department of Health said he provided no records for 101 child patients for whom he billed Medicaid. Of the 146 pediatric patient records he did send, only 'a small number' had parent or guardian information. Florida's Board of Medicine fined Romeu $10,000; ordered him to pay $6,722 in case costs; take two continuing medical education classes; and do 50 hours of community medical service.

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