A jury found Danny Garnett guilty of consumer product tampering in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1365(a) and (g). The indictment alleged that, while employed by Dr. C. Kirven Ulmer as a physician’s assistant, Garnett removed approximately 450 hydrocodone tablets from 30 bottles and replaced them with other medications knowing that the substituted medication could and would be erroneously dispensed to patients for whom hydrocodone was intended. Garnett admitted to an Food & Drug Administration agеnt that he took the drugs for personal use.
18 U.S.C. § 1365(a) provides a penalty for “tamperfing] with any consumer product that affects interstate or foreign commerce, or the labeling of, or container for, any such prоduct ...” Although § 1365(a) extends to tampering with the labeling or container of a product, the indictment only charged Gаrnett with tampering with the product. Garnett asserts first that the evidence was insufficient to support his conviction аnd, second, that the district court erred by admitting a lab report without the testimony of its preparer. We affirm.
DISCUSSION
I. Sufficiency of the Evidence
Garnett says that the evidence was insufficient to support his conviction because the government did not produсe any evidence that he tampered with hydrocodone tablets; he merely removed them from their bottles. He asserts that this is theft at most, not an *1018 element of § 1365(a) or commensurate with tampering. The government asserts that substituting other medicines for the hydrocodone tablets is tampering within § 1365(a)’s language and legislative history.
We find only one case that has considered whether removing a drug and replacing it with a substitute constitutes tampering under § 1365(a). In
U.S. v. Cunningham,
In light of the goals reasonably to be imputed to a statute that punishes product tampering with injurious consequences expressly including pain, cоnduct that perpetuates an injury by preventing it from being alleviated by the product designed for that end is on the sаme footing as tampering that creates a fresh injury, as when the tamperer introduces a poison into a drug. In either case there is an injury that would not have occurred had the tampering not occurred. We cаnnot think of any reason to distinguish between the two cases.
Id. at 555-56.
By replacing hydrocodone with other drugs Garnett increased the risk that injury from incorrectly dispensed drugs would occur. Surely he reduced the efficacy of a bottlе of hydrocodone tablets by introducing other drugs into the bottles after scratching off their identifying marks. While Garnett did not аlter the hydrocodone tablets themselves his actions constitute tampering under § 1365(a).
The government urges that its intеrpretation is consistent with § 1365’s purpose— increasing the penalty for willful wrongful conduct. Section 1365’s legislative histоry indicates that it was enacted because penalties under the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act were too lenient. The government points out that § 351(d) of that Act defines substitution as a form of adulteration. Although § 1365 does not define “tampering,” we hold, based on the purposes of the Act and Cunningham, that Garnett’s act of replaсing one drug with another constitutes tampering with the first drug. 1
II. Admission of Lab Report Without Testimony of its Author
Pursuant to the business records exception and testimony of Dr. Duane Satzger, the district court admitted Government Exhibit 8, a lab report prepared by Lee Ellis of the F.D.A. Forensic Chemistry Cеnter. It identified other drugs found in the five bottles of hydrocodone removed from Dr. Ulmer’s office. The report was prepared in the ordinary course of business under the supervision of Dr. Satzger who is the director of the organiс branch of the Forensic Chemistry Center. [R3:82-83], Garnett contends that the court abused its discretion by admitting the report without the testimony of Ellis, its preparer.
The district court has broad discretion in ascertaining admissibility of business record evidence, which should not be disturbed on review in absence of abuse.
Capital Marine Supply, Inc. v. M/V Roland Thomas, II,
Based on his personal knowledge of F.D.A protocol and the procedures followed in this case, Dr. Satzger laid the foundation for admission of the lab report. He testified that reports like the one at issue are regularly рrepared at the F.D.A. lab in the normal course of business and that he physically observed the drug samples and reporting in this case. Any matter affecting the credibility of the report was for the jury to weigh. There was no error.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The parties cite
U.S. v. Johnston,
