Colorado Registered Nurse Sent to Federal Prison for Stealing Opioids

United States Attorney Jason R. Dunn announces that registered nurse Kacye Unruh was sentenced to 24 months in federal prison for stealing opioids by deceit and for tampering with a consumer product. At the conclusion of her prison sentence, she will serve 3 years of supervised release. According to the plea agreement and facts presented at sentencing, Unruh was addicted to fentanyl and/or hydromorphone while she worked as a registered nurse in the acute dialysis department at the University of Colorado Hospital from May to July, 2016. During her employment, Unruh used her position as a nurse to access secure machines — called Pyxis machines — to steal opioids intended to treat patients’ pain. She used a needle and syringe to inject herself with those stolen opioids in a bathroom. She then re-filled the partially used opioid vials with saline solution and placed the tampered vials back into the Pyxis machines. Tests of certain vials showed that they contained substantially less of the active ingredients than expected or were tainted with substances other than the active ingredients expected to be present in those vials. The evidence presented at sentencing caused the Court to infer that patients at the hospital received tainted opioids to treat their pain as a result of Unruh’s conduct. Unruh was placed on investigative leave in July 2016, during an investigation of her conduct. Her license to be a professional nurse in Colorado was suspended that same month.

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