Scientology Ringleaders Are Dope Dealers
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/06024/643187.stm
Tuesday, January 24, 2006
By Torsten Ove, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Markell D. Boulis made national news in the 1990s when he paid
$200,000 for his freedom in an Atlanta cocaine case so controversial
that it prompted Georgia to change its sentencing rules.
He might soon be in the national spotlight again.
Mr. Boulis, an admitted drug dealer, suspended Pittsburgh
chiropractor and founder of the Hemorrhoid Relief Centers of
Pittsburgh, is a central figure in one of the largest health
insurance fraud cases in the United States.
[...]
Finances aside, the Boulises have more immediate problems in
Georgia, where Mr. Boulis first got into trouble as a student at
Life University near Atlanta.
Just before he got his chiropractic license in 1991, he was arrested
in Cobb County, Ga., on charges of trying to sell cocaine. A jury
found him guilty of possession in 1993, and he was sentenced to five
years in prison, 25 years of probation and a $50,000 fine.
Mr. Boulis petitioned the court under Georgia's Probation for First
Time Offender Act and got his sentence reduced to a year in jail, 25
years of probation and $150,000 in cash.
"It was my cocaine," he admitted in court. "I purchased
it, and I was going to distribute it."
His jail term was later eliminated after he made a $200,000
"donation" to the Marietta-Cobb-Smyrna Narcotics Unit.
The probationary term remained.
[...]
After the story broke in the Atlanta paper, Ms. Skulos-Boulis
accused the district attorney's office of reneging on a promise to
seal the case so her husband could retain his license. He finally
lost his license in 1997 after spending five years as a chiropractor
at several locations in the Pittsburgh area and West Virginia.
No longer able to practice, Mr. Boulis then joined up with Mr.
Goroway and Brad Goldstein, owner of Premier Medical Group, in
Florida. The three had met at Life University and were members of
the Church of Scientology.
[...]
Howard
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