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Last Chance: LPN Misbehaves  on Probation, Gets Felony Convictions  and Jail Sentence

   Written by on August 28, 2015 at 11:41 am

Angela Brooke Wheeler, a 27-year-old Burkeville woman and LPN, ruined her chance to avoid two felony convictions by failing to successfully complete probation for a deferred adjudication in Lunenburg Circuit Court for Possession of Schedule II Drug and Felony Child Endangerment.

Angela Wheeler (Child Endangerment) 2015Wheeler, of 210 S. Agnew Street in Burkeville, was sentenced to five years on each conviction with all suspended except 90 days. She was ordered to report to Piedmont Regional Jail on September 4th.

According to Commonwealth’s Attorney Robert Clement, Wheeler, who obtained her LPN license in 2010, had been given the chance in August 2014 to avoid the felony drug possession conviction under the First Offender Statute and avoid the Felony Child Endangerment conviction as a deferred adjudication if she had successfully complied with the terms of her probation, including good behavior, counseling, and community service. Subsequently, the defendant was convicted in February 2015 in Nottoway County of Driving on a Suspended License. She also completed only one hour and 28 minutes of the 100 hours of community service ordered, failed to appear for a substance abuse evaluation, and missed 16 appointments with her probation officer.

The charges against Wheeler arose on May 12, 2014 at 10:15 a.m. when Lunenburg Deputy Sheriff Greg Currin noticed her car tags and inspection sticker were expired.  Wheeler was driving and had a two-year-old son in the vehicle unsecured.  Currin ran a record check on her and discovered that there was an outstanding capias for her in Nottoway County for Failure to Appear in court.

In conducting a search incident to the arrest, Currin discovered various pill bottles, loose pills, several syringes, and two spoons, one containing an orange-colored burnt residue. At first Wheeler said the syringes were for her son’s diabetes, but later admitted that she used them to shoot up drugs, but adding that she had not done so for three months.  She said she had several prescriptions for painkillers and would sometimes snort them, admitting that she had snorted a Percocet that morning. (The traffic stop was at 10:15 a.m.). She said she snorted the drugs because they would get into her system faster.  An analysis at the state lab revealed that Wheeler had 24 tablets of Hydromorphone, one sublingual film of “Suboxone” consisting of buprenorphine and naloxone, one tablet of Oxycodone, and one Clonazepam. She said she had them for pain as the result of an accident.

Wheeler was given a drug test by a representative of the Department of Social Services with a positive finding for Benzodiazepine.  Wheeler also said that her son had been in a bad car accident last year, and that any kind of head trauma would be fatal to him.  When asked why she would take a chance of him getting in an accident while not being in a car seat, Wheeler responded, “I know what I’m doing.”

When asked if she was getting Percocet from someone other than a doctor, she responded, “I mean, every once in awhile, yes,” but said she had stopped buying the drugs from non-medical sources because she had heard that the police were watching her.

The Social Services representative also reported that when she transported the child from the scene, he was thirsty and reached for his bottle in the diaper bag. The worker looked inside the baby bottle and found that the juice was spoiled and that there was mold in the nipple of the bottle. The child also had eczema and an abrasion under his right eye.

The child has been placed with another responsible family member.

In addition to her sentence, the defendant will be subject to conditions of a suspended sentence of nine years and nine months including good behavior for 10 years, supervised probation for one year, substance abuse counseling, a parenting class, and warrantless searches for five years.

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