A registered nurse from Lithia, Florida, has entered a guilty plea on multiple charges of tampering with a consumer product and acquiring a controlled substance by fraud. Lisa Williams, 56, could be looking at serious prison time after admitting in federal court to intentionally manipulating injectable fentanyl and falsifying hospital records. As reported by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida, Williams faces up to a decade in jail for each tampering count and a maximum of four years for each acquisition offense.
The incidents occurred on various dates between October and December of 2023. Court documents detail how Williams, a licensed RN, would systematically remove fentanyl designed for patient use from a secure drawer at Hospital #1. She is then said to have used the drug personally, substituting it with a compromised solution to then improperly reintroduce into the hospital’s supply. The reckless actions perpetrated by Williams were deemed to not just endanger the patients’ lives but also shown an “extreme indifference” to the potential risk of death or injury they could have suffered.
The investigation leading up to Williams’s guilty plea was a joint effort between the Food and Drug Administration—Office of Criminal Investigations and the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office. The Assistant United States Attorney Greg Pizzo is handling the prosecution. These formal inquiries are indicative of the severity with which the legal system views such malfeasances within the spheres of health and public safety…