Indiana Nurse Who Took Drugs Intended for Hospice Patients Will Serve Jail Time

A Southern Indiana hospice nurse investigated by the Office of the Attorney General in connection with the misappropriation of patients’ prescription drugs has been convicted and sentenced for her crimes. The office’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit (MFCU) began investigating Jennifer Daniel in the spring of 2019 following a pharmacist’s tip about irregularities in the way the nurse was handling prescriptions intended for terminally ill patients. In Clark County, Daniel was convicted on felony counts of interference with medical services and obtaining a controlled substance by fraud, deceit or subterfuge. As part of a plea agreement, a Scott County charge of interference with medical services was dismissed. Daniel also was convicted in Floyd County for interference of medical services.

Officials in Clark and Scott counties referred the cases against Daniel back to the MFCU for prosecution. The Floyd County Prosecutor’s Office filed its own charges against her. In Floyd County, Daniel was sentenced on Thursday to six years in jail with three years suspended — although the jail time could be modified to home detention once she completes a substance-abuse treatment program while incarcerated. In Clark County, Daniel was earlier this summer sentenced to three years of home detention, which will follow completion of her executed sentence in Floyd County.

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