The Pharmacist: Inside The Mind of Dr. Jacqueline Cleggett (2024)

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The story of Jacqueline Cleggett in Netflix's gripping doc series The Pharmacist is a sad tale of addiction.

The Pharmacist: Inside The Mind of Dr. Jacqueline Cleggett (1)By Chris Longo | |

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For the majority of Netflix’s limited documentary series, The Pharmacist, Dr. Jacqueline Cleggett is a name shrouded in mystery. There are limited photos of Cleggett, the former physician who established a shady medical practice outside of New Orleans, a practice that became a notorious OxyContin “pill mill.” Much of the footage that accompanies her name is hours of home video filmed outside her office by Dan Schneider, a concerned citizen, moralistic pharmacist, and grieving father.

As the series unfolds,Schneider is inspired to take action after the drug-related shooting death of his son, Danny Jr., and aims to clean up a community devastated by the opioid crisis by taking down Cleggett. Without seeing much of Cleggett through three episodes, the mounting circ*mstantial evidence builds her up to be a monster ravaging a community for her financial benefit. The series then leads us to a shocking reveal in episode 4: Cleggett agreed to a sit-down interview to tell her side of the story nearly two decades later. She remains in denial about losing her license, her role in the region’s opioid problem, and the unfathomable rate at which she prescribed OxyContin to her patients. Her story is also one of addiction and illustrates deeply rooted problems within the medical and pharmaceutical industries.

The Pharmacist co-directors and executive producers, Jenner Furst and Julia Willoughby Nason, gave Den of Geek insight into the production of the limited series in a recent interview (which you can read in full here) and elaborated on their interaction Cleggett, who was stripped of her medical license in 2002.

“We did do a long interview with her, and the highlights obviously make the film, but the reality was that it’s a sad tale,” Furst says. “It’s a sad tale of addiction, of grief, that parallels a lot of the addiction stories that we see in the series.”

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After losing her license, Cleggett was plagued with health and addiction problems–plus numerous lawsuits from former patients. She eventually accepted a plea deal for three months of probation in 2009 on conspiracy to dispense and distribute controlled substances, avoiding jail time.

To land the interview, Furst reached out to Dr. Cleggett to assure her that the creative team behind the film was committed to hearing all sides of the story. When we spoke with Furst, he reflected on Cleggett’s participation in the documentary as a way to empathize with a person who took the wrong path, rather than demonize her.

read more: The Best Documentaries on Netflix

“Dr. Cleggett herself was addicted,” he says. “She is still somewhat in denial about that, as we see in the interview. It’s a sad story. She was the top of her class. She was one of the only African American female doctors in New Orleans who had these types of credentials.

“She could’ve done anything. She could have been anyone. We deeply empathize with that, and also empathize with the idea that people can go wrong. We didn’t want to fall into this idea of demonizing her through this trope of this evil doctor.”

When Furst met with Cleggett, she insisted on sharing documents with the creative team, some of which she believed would exonerate her. That wasn’t the case when the documents were held up to the light.

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Says Furst, “When we cross referenced the facts, some of the facts were in her favor, but the vast majority show someone who was overprescribing and who was running a pill mill. And I think to this day she denies that that’s what she was doing. But the case is the case. And we show the United States against Jacqueline Cleggett, and the facts are the facts. I think that she has had a long, long period of suffering after her clinic was shut down; car accidents, illnesses, strokes, multiple brain surgeries. So she has paid a serious price, karmically, but she’s still lost in some kind of netherworld when it comes to taking accountability.”

Removing Cleggett unfortunately didn’t solve the problem for the St. Bernard, Louisiana community and greater New Orleans area. According to a NOLA.com / Times-Picayune report, more pain clinics popped up in the region to take Cleggett’s patient base: “The epidemic worsened. In late 2004, the parish coroner lamented the unabated overdose death toll, attributing most of them to ‘recreational use of prescription pills.’ The problems persist today. In the last few years, St. Bernard has posted the second-highest drug overdose rate in Louisiana, higher than any of its neighboring parishes, according to the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s county health rankings.”

At several points in the series, Schneider links overdose deaths back to Cleggett’s practice. Cleggett left a scar, one that can never be healed, on the community that she took an oath to help. In the final episode, Furst wanted to look beyond the proven wrongdoing of Cleggett, and the drug problems at the hyperlocal level, and examine how doctors nationwide were influenced by Big Pharma to perpetuate the cycle of opioid abuse.

“We wanted to also show how orchestrated the campaign was to deceive doctors, by Purdue Pharma,” he says. “This is documented stuff. They deceived doctors systematically about the impact and about the risks related to OxyContin. And I think that Dr. Cleggett fell victim to that. And then there was a personal side to that, that she fell victim to the same disease that [Schneider’s son] Danny Jr. fell victim to.”

Read more on The Pharmacist: Inside Dan Schneider’s Real-Life Superhero Story.

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The Pharmacist: Inside The Mind of Dr. Jacqueline Cleggett (2)

Written by

Chris Longo|@east_coastbias

Chris Longo is the Director of Editorial and Partnerships for Den of Geek. He produces special live events and screenings, and oversees production of the Den…

Read more from Chris Longo

The Pharmacist: Inside The Mind of Dr. Jacqueline Cleggett (2024)

FAQs

Where is Dr Jacqueline Cleggett now? ›

Cleggett, currently in her mid-50s, lives in an apartment in East Baton Rouge, according to public records. She has almost entirely disappeared from the public eye – aside from her interview in "The Pharmacist." For more stories on misguided medicine, watch License to Kill on Oxygen and Dr. Death on Peaco*ck.

Did Jacqueline Cleggett lose her medical license? ›

Jacqueline Cleggett as she not only had her medical license revoked by the medical board in 2002, but Schneider's investigation also uncovered that her "pill mill" business extended beyond Louisiana, and that she was also selling OxyContin to a group of people in Mississippi, who would then sell the drugs throughout ...

How much money did Dr. Cleggett make? ›

Cleggett and reported their finds to the DEA. Agents of the DEA started investigating Dr. Cleggett in February 2000 without Dan's knowledge, observing Dr. Cleggett prescribe medication for 76 patients per day and depositing almost $2 million over one year.

How many prescriptions did Dr. Cleggett write? ›

A DEA agent stated that Clegget had written 182,723 prescriptions distributed among ten pharmacies over the course of one year. ² They discovered that Dr.

Where is Jackie from married to medicine? ›

Jacqueline Walters, born on July 27, 1958, also known as Dr. Jackie Walters, is an obstetrician-gynecologist currently working in Atlanta, Georgia. She is married to former N.B.A. star Curtis Berry. Even though she is married, she, like most women, decides to practice under her maiden name.

Where does The Pharmacist documentary take place? ›

The Netflix documentary series "The Pharmacist" centers around Dan Schneider, a small-town pharmacist in Poydras, Louisiana, and his efforts to track down his son's killer and expose the truth behind the opioid crisis in the United States ¹ ² ³ ⁴ ⁵.

Who is the pill mill doctor in New Orleans? ›

A Louisiana federal judge has sentenced Dr. Frederick Floyd to 10 years in prison for operating two New Orleans-based “pill mills.” Last September, Floyd pleaded guilty to dispensing millions of dosages of oxycodone, fentanyl and other addictive drugs to patients.

Does Mer lose her medical license? ›

He does not recover and dies at Grey Sloan. The trial is postponed until Alex brings dozens of Meredith's former patients in to give statements. Meredith gets to keep her license and is offered her job back at Grey Sloan by Bailey, which she accepts.

Did Izzy lose her medical license? ›

It was a success at first, but later that night, Denny suffered a stroke and died. Izzie cutting Denny's LVAD wire, which ensured he would get the available heart over other patients, should have resulted in her medical license being revoked in Grey's Anatomy. However, that never happened.

What drug is The Pharmacist about? ›

After his son's tragic death, a Louisiana pharmacist goes to extremes to expose the rampant corruption behind the opioid addiction crisis.

What happened to Jeffrey Hall, The Pharmacist? ›

Hall, the son of Redding's best friend, was 15 years old when he killed Danny Jr. He pleaded guilty to manslaughter in 2000 and served 13 years of a 15-year prison sentence, according to the documentary.

Is The Pharmacist a true story? ›

Netflix's docuseries The Pharmacist is a personal look at "pill mills" that have contributed to the opioid epidemic, and it's full of shocking reveals including how Dr. Cleggett ran her unusual business. The story for the series started with Dan Schneider, whose teenage son died in a drug-related murder.

Is Jacqueline Cleggett still a doctor? ›

The evidence that Schneider found, in fact, was enough to get Cleggett's medical license revoked in 2002.

Is OxyContin still available? ›

Oxycodone is only available on prescription. It comes as slow-release tablets, standard tablets and capsules, and a liquid that you swallow.

What is the Holy Trinity of OxyContin? ›

This combination is frequently referred to as the “Holy Trinity.” The, “Holy Trinity” is a combination of opioids, benzodiazepines and carisoprodol (a muscle relaxant also known as Soma).

What happened to Doctor Cleggett? ›

Her clinic operated late hours, sometimes opening until the early hours of the morning, only accepted cash and prescribed Oxy to people who, in Schneider's view, had no need for such a powerful drug. The evidence that Schneider found, in fact, was enough to get Cleggett's medical license revoked in 2002.

How many episodes of The Pharmacist are on Netflix? ›

The new Netflix series attempts to contain the sprawling opioid epidemic within the conventions of true crime. It's easy to see, from the opening minutes of the new four-part Netflix show The Pharmacist, why its directors took one meeting with Dan Schneider and decided to structure a true-crime series around him.

What is the Big Pharma documentary on Netflix? ›

Following in the footsteps of Dopesick, The Dropout and Netflix's own Painkiller, Pain Hustlers adheres to a now-standard story arc — lies fueled by greed lead to dire results — in its depiction of the big-money world of pharmaceuticals.

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