Doctor dealer A doctor high on greed, a biker gang high on opioids, and the woman who paid the ultimate price

George Anastasia

Book - 2020

"Dr. James Kauffman and his wife, April, were the perfect couple: a respected endocrinologist and a beautiful radio host. But under the surface lurked a world of drugs, sex, and biker gangs--and Dr. Kauffman would kill to keep it secret. In May 2012, April Kauffman, a well-known local radio personality and staunch advocate of military veterans rights, was found shot to death in the bedroom of the home she shared with her husband, Dr. James Kauffman. Six years later, in the fall of 2018, Freddy Augello, a leader of the notorious motorcycle gang the Pagans, went to trial facing murder, conspiracy, and drug dealing charges. And there were ties between Augello and the husband: Dr. James Kauffman, a prominent New Jersey endocrinologist, and... also one of the area's most prolific drug traffickers. Told by two accomplished reporters and authors with exclusive insights and details provided by two principle players, this is the story about one man's descent into evil and the people he took with him. It's a story about a doctor who helped flood the streets with opioids, about a husband who hid dark secrets from his wives, and about a man so consumed with greed and arrogance that he thought he could get away with murder"--

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Subjects
Genres
Case studies
True crime stories
Published
New York : Berkley [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
George Anastasia (author)
Other Authors
Ralph Cipriano (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
291 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780593097762
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

April Kauffman, a vivacious blonde radio host in New Jersey, was found fatally shot on her bedroom floor in 2012. Six years later, her husband, endocrinologist James Kauffman, hanged himself in his jail cell three weeks after he was charged with paying a hit man $50,000 to kill her. Did he orchestrate the murder of his second wife? In his six-page suicide note, he blamed outlaw bikers. Kauffman lied about his military service, collected guns, and wrote bogus prescriptions for the opioid oxycodone. As veteran crime writers Anastasia and Cipriano attest, word on the street was that the good doctor decided that murder "was cheaper than divorce." This well-written account reads like a Hollywood screenplay. Who will play Andrew Glick, a six-foot, 220-pound chef, biker, and former meth and cocaine distributor who becomes a government informer? Who will play Freddy Augello, a former bike gang boss convicted of orchestrating the murder? Who will play Carole Weintraub, Jim Kauffman's high-school sweetheart, who married him not long after April's death? True-crime fans will be intrigued.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This riveting look at a cold-blooded murder from Anastasia (Gotti's Rules: The Story of John Alite, Junior Gotti, and the Demise of the American Mafia) and Cipriano (Target: The Senator, a Story About Power and Abuse of Power) tells the sad story of James Kauffman, a respected endocrinologist who sold opioids illegally on the side, and his wife, April, a popular radio host. The couple were on the edge of a bitter divorce when April was found shot to death in their home in Linwood, N.J., on May 10, 2012. April's grown daughter from her first marriage instantly suspected Kauffman, who later remarried and continued his opioid pill mill and association with members of a biker gang who were drug dealers and users. In 2018, Kauffman was arrested for fraud, and several of the bikers who were arrested on various charges turned state's evidence against him as having hired a hit man to kill his wife. Kauffman committed suicide in jail before he could be tried for April's murder, but the real tragedy is his second wife, who was unaware of the doctor's drug dealing or gang connections; her reputation and business were destroyed, and the feds tried to take her home. The authors dramatically show how sometimes one can never really know another person. Agent: Frank Weimann, Folio Literary Management. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Journalists Anastasia (The Last Gangster) and Cipriano (Target) delve into the murder of April Kauffman and the dark world inhabited by her husband, James Kauffman, the well-respected doctor accused of arranging her murder. After April's death, her husband's criminal activity came to light, including a history of fraud and a prescription drug trafficking operation with an area motorcycle club. The book spans the many years it has taken to establish connections between the crimes and find answers for April. The authors rely heavily on insight from two central figures in the case, but there is a considerable amount of speculation throughout, making it a challenge to distinguish fact from theory, but nevertheless, Anastasia and Cipriano distill a sensational, complex case into a clear narrative. VERDICT An entertaining story with broad appeal for true crime fans. Readers looking to contextualize the ongoing opioid crisis may also enjoy Sam Quinones's Dreamland: The True Tale of America's Opiate Epidemic.--Kate Bellody, Stat Univ. of New York, New Paltz

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

One   The murder was carried out with cold-blooded efficiency.   April Kauffman was asleep in the bedroom she no longer shared with her husband in their stately two-story home on Woodstock Drive in Linwood, New Jersey, an upper-middle-class neighborhood just outside of Atlantic City. It was a little after five a.m. on May 10, 2012. Her husband, Dr. James Kauffman, was downstairs getting ready to leave for work. He was an endocrinologist with a lucrative practice in a busy office less than a fifteen-minute drive from their home.   The doctor, as he did almost every morning, would stop at a Wawa, a local convenience store, on his way to work. The store was a few blocks from their house. The security camera in place at the Wawa would capture him that morning entering and leaving the store.   This, investigators would later determine, was just a few minutes after he had handed the hit man a gun and pointed to his wife's upstairs bedroom.   "She's up there," he said.   Several hours later a handyman who worked for the Kauffmans would discover April's body sprawled on the floor next to her bed. She had been shot twice. One bullet had shattered her elbow. The other had ripped through her side, slicing through a lung, her heart and her other lung. A medical examiner would speculate that she struggled out of bed after being shot, then collapsed on the floor. She had bled to death internally, he said, estimating that at least two liters of blood had poured from her wounds.   The hit man was later identified as Francis "Frank" Mulholland. He was a junkie and, it would turn out, he was ill suited for the job. But he had been offered $10,000 to commit the murder. That was enough to satisfy his habit for several months. He was driven to the home that morning by Joseph "Irish" Mulholland. They shared the same last name, but were not related. Joe Mulholland said he dropped Frank off near the house in the dark that morning and told him he would be waiting for him a few blocks away. He was driving a white Silverado pickup truck.   Joe Mulholland would later describe himself as a reluctant getaway driver.   Reluctant and also guilt ridden.   Although it would be nearly five years before law enforcement would put the case together, there were rumors, hints and whispers from day one. James Kauffman wanted his wife dead. He had talked to more than a few people about this. There was word in the Atlantic County underworld, particularly in the underworld populated by outlaw biker gangs, that there was a doctor willing to pay to have his wife killed.   Murder, the good doctor had decided, was cheaper than divorce.   At the time, the Kauffmans were a celebrity couple in Atlantic County. He was a dapper, wealthy physician who spoke at symposiums and who railed against the dietary habits and sedentary lifestyle of patients battling diabetes. This was the bulk of his practice. Described by some as charismatic and by others as arrogant, the doctor was hands-on both in practicing medicine and in a lifestyle that was luxurious and indulgent. He was an enthusiastic gun collector. He had an array of rifles and handguns that he kept under lock and key in his home. He spent time skeet shooting and on firing ranges. He was also motorcycle enthusiast. In addition to his home in Linwood, he kept a vacation home in Arizona for getaways. April was his second wife. For those who liked to converse in stereotypes, she was the shiksa blond bombshell who had swept the much older doctor off his feet. She was forty-seven at the time she was killed. He was sixty-two.   They had been married for ten years. It was her third marriage. Her second husband had also been a doctor. Their divorce had been somewhat tumultuous. April had a grown daughter, Kim Pack, from her first marriage. Pack would later provide investigators with key pieces of information. From day one, she was suspicious if not convinced that James Kauffman had had something to do with her mother's death.   April Kauffman had created a life for herself that few would have expected given her background. She had had what a friend would later describe as a "somewhat unsettled childhood," raised by her grandmother and separated from four siblings that her mother had placed in foster care. She emerged as someone who was constantly looking for validation and, more important, for love. That search would continue as an adult. She owned and operated a beauty salon and had an interest in a restaurant-catering business. April was vivacious and outgoing, with flowing blond hair and a flirtatious manner; her upbeat personality was often a mask that hid insecurity and self-doubt.   At the time of her death, she had a weekly radio show in Atlantic County and had become a strong advocate for the rights of military veterans. "She was part princess, part bulldog," said an associate who worked with her on veterans' issues. That work brought her into contact with elected officials and government and military leaders in the area. Among other things, every Thanksgiving she would host a dinner at her home for recruits from the US Coast Guard station in nearby Cape May, young men and women who were unable to be with their families. She was offering a home away from home during the holiday.   Friends and neighbors would be invited as well. One local man who was a regular at the dinners had created something of a problem, according to an account provided by her daughter. He was a cross-dresser who would show upin drag. April had no problem with his proclivities, but told him some of the recruits were uncomfortable. She said that while he was welcome to come, she would prefer that he show up dressed as a man. It wasn't a question of her being intolerant, but rather a typical attempt on her part to ensure that her guests were at ease in her home.   In her last radio appearance, she described herself in terms that would prove to be a fitting epitaph. "I don't like training wheels," she said. "That's why . . . I drive a Corvette. I drive a motorcycle. I'm a full-throttle person."   On that same radio show, she also offered this eerie commentary: "I feel like I'm on borrowed time. And now if I was to be taken out, I'm telling you going up to see our Creator, I know I raised my daughter right with right American values. . . . She's moral. She's a good person, a hard worker, a patriotic person. . . ."   April Kauffman was well-liked and highly regarded in business, social and political circles around South Jersey, and her murder sent shock waves through those communities for various reasons, some of them unspoken.   "She was a do-gooder," said one person familiar with the events that unfolded. "But she had a voracious sexual appetite. The doctor thought he was a swinger, but his wife, she was major-league."   The sexual lifestyle of April and James Kauffman would hang over the murder investigation. In fact, there are those who believe one of the reasons the case went cold for so long was pressure from powerful individuals to keep details about April's sexual partners-some of whom moved in the upper circles of government, politics and business-from becoming public. April kept a diary. But after she was murdered, it disappeared.   Its content might have provided answers to what happened to her and why. Among other things, it might have shown how much she knew about her husband's involvement in a pill mill ring linked to an outlaw motorcycle gang. Medical records from Dr. Kauffman's office would show that he was writing prescriptions for oxycodone for members and associates of the Pagans, a motorcycle gang that dominated the biker underworld in the Philadelphia-South Jersey region. In fact, there are those who would describe the Pagans as one of the toughest and most violent gangs on the East Coast. Several years earlier the Pagans had waged war against the Hells Angels, who attempted but failed to move into Pagan territory in Philadelphia and New Jersey.   Dr. Kauffman liked to identify with the bikers, although he had little in common with most of them. "People like us," he would say while discussing the biker world with a member of the club. The club member would nod, but would later shake his head.   "He didn't have a fuckin' clue what we were about," the biker said.   Jim Kauffman liked to portray himself as a tough guy. He would refer to his experience with an elite Green Beret Army unit and to his two tours of duty in Vietnam. He would sometimes show up in Army fatigues and a beret while supporting his wife's veterans' advocacy programs. He occasionally filled in on or cohosted her radio show. His military background, friends would say, was one of the things that drew April to the older man she would eventually marry. Part of his story was detailed in a paper written by April's daughter, Kim, when she was a college student. The assignment was to interview a military veteran. The interview took place shortly after April and Jim had married. He told a detailed story about how his unit had come under a vicious attack by the Vietcong and about how he had been one of the few to survive, licking water off leaves as he struggled to make his way out of the jungle.   None of it was true.   He had never been in the military.   About a year before she was killed, April discovered the lie. Those who knew her said it was one of the reasons she wanted a divorce. Authorities also would claim it was one of the reasons she was murdered. A law enforcement affidavit written five years after the homicide included the claim that about a year before she was killed "April became aware that Doctor Kauffman had never served in the Armed Forces and was not a veteran in any capacity. It is known that April was devastated by this revelation and it is believed that she threatened to use this info to produce a beneficial divorce from him."   Authorities would also claim that she was threatening to expose his involvement in the pill mill operation. But there is little to support that allegation or that she even knew about the oxycodone ring.   The pill mill, in fact, was only a small piece of the doctor's criminal activity.   Federal authorities had linked him and another local doctor, along with the representative of a pharmaceutical company, to a massive insurance-fraud scheme that involved prescribing compound-cream prescriptions for pain management. The Compound cream, scams based on which which have played out throughout the country, have been described as the "snake oil of the twenty-first century" by an insurance watchdog group. Like the pill mill operation and the opioid crisis it helped fuel, fraudulent scripts for unneeded creams to treat nonexistent pain was another example of Dr. James Kauffman trading his medical ethics-first do no harm-for dollars.   He also was targeted in a separate insurance-fraud scheme involving unnecessary blood tests. He would prescribe a test and, investigators later alleged, he would receive a kickback from the lab that conducted the procedure and billed the patient's insurance company. Both the compound-cream and blood-test scams generated tens of thousands of dollars in illegal income for the doctor, authorities now believe. This was in addition to his legitimate income from what has been described as a thriving and highly regarded medical practice, fees he was paid for speaking engagements at pharmaceutical conventions and, of course, the cash he made in the pill mill operation.   Money, it appears, was more important than the practice of medicine for Dr. James Kauffman. Or, perhaps, it was that he viewed the practice of medicine as a conduit for cash. So when he balked at granting April a divorce, telling friends and associates there was no way he was going to give her "half of his empire," she launched a counterattack.   She was burning up his credit cards, several of which were close to maxing out. Thousands had been spent on furnishing a home they shared in Tucson, Arizona, and now she was planning a $60,000 kitchen renovation for the home in Linwood. The credit card bills that arrived each month were her way of pressuring her husband into letting her go. She hoped he would come to the conclusion that it would be cheaper to divorce her.   He decided it would be even cheaper to have her killed.   Dr. Kauffman's net worth at the time was an estimated $4.6 million, according to authorities. The doctor believed April would be in line for half of that in a divorce settlement. So he put out word in the biker underworld that he was willing to pay to have her killed. The price varied depending on whom he was talking with, but the range was between $10,000 and $50,000. Even at the high end, the doc considered it a bargain.   A security surveillance camera mounted on the wall of Mainland Regional High School about a block from the Kauffman home recorded traffic passing by in the early-morning hours of May 10, 2012. Shortly after five a.m. a Silverado pickup truck, like the one Irish Mulholland said he was driving that morning, passed by. A few minutes later an SUV like the Ford Explorer driven by Dr. Kauffman took the same route. That same SUV would be filmed in the parking lot of the Wawa convenience store a few minutes later.   Finally, several minutes after the SUV had been picked up by the high school surveillance camera, a man was spotted walking by. He was wearing white sneakers, dark sweatpants and a dark hoodie. Although there was no way to see it on camera, the man was also carrying a gun. Frank Mulholland, minutes after the death of April Kauffman, was recorded fleeing from the scene.   That was when the cold, efficient hit began to unravel.   The hit man got lost in suburbia. As dark turned to dawn and residents woke and began to emerge from their homes, Frank Mulholland wandered around the neighborhood, finally reconnecting with Joe "Irish" Mulholland, who had parked at a diner about a mile from the murder scene.   "He got disoriented, tried to cut through the high school property and got lost," Irish would say later in explaining the reason it had been more than an hour before they reconnected. "He called me on his cell and said, 'Where are you?' I told him I was at the diner."   Irish Mulholland had originally parked in front of a paint store closer to the crime scene. He was a painter by trade. His business was Custom Design Painting. There was a bagel shop across the street, and while he waited, he walked over to the store and bought a bagel that he sat eating in the cab of his pickup truck as April Kauffman lay bleeding to death on the floor of her bedroom. Excerpted from Doctor Dealer: A Doctor High on Greed, a Biker Gang High on Opioids, and the Woman Who Paid the Ultimate Price by George Anastasia, Ralph Cipriano All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.