Assistant Principal Sentenced for Role in Drug Scheme

Assistant Principal Sentenced for Role in Drug Scheme

Assistant Principal Sentenced for Role in Drug Scheme

The scheme operated from 2012 until 2020 and involved 38,780 30-milligram oxycodone tablets prescribed illegally, which the assistant principal then sold.

A former assistant principal at an elementary school in Savannah, Georgia, was sentenced to two years in federal prison for her role in the distribution of opioids that involved an Alabama physician.

Melodie Donne Armer Cheatham, 38, of Savannah, resigned as interim assistant principal of Otis J. Brock Elementary School on April 11, 2022 the Savannah Morning News reported. Her resignation came eight months after she pleaded guilty to federal charges of conspiring to unlawfully possess oxycodone with intent to distribute and for illegally distributing the prescription drug, according to a news release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Alabama.

In addition to her two-year sentence, Cheatham will have three years of supervised release, WJCL-TV reported.

Cheatham was one of 11 people who pleaded guilty to the charges in September 2021, the news release stated. She had been employed by Savannah-Chatham County Public Schools since 2015, WTOC-TV reported.

According to court documents, the defendants agreed to obtain illegitimate and unlawful prescriptions for oxycodone prescribed by D’Livro Lemat Beauchamp, a physician in Montgomery, Alabama.
The scheme operated from 2012 until April 2020 and prosecutors said the defendants distributed 38,780 30-milligram oxycodone tablets, WSAV-TV reported. Cheatham’s relationship to other defendants in the case was unclear, the Morning News reported.

Investigators said that in many cases, the prescriptions were coordinated through a third party and the defendants would never go see the doctor, WSB-TV reported.

Beauchamp pleaded guilty to the same offense as the 11 defendants on Oct. 20, 2020, prosecutors said in a news release.

In a statement, Savannah-Chatham County Public Schools officials said they were “deeply disappointed” in Cheatham’s behavior.

“This individual is no longer employed with the school district. During the time that Melodie Cheatham was employed with the Savannah-Chatham County Public School System, she had no employee infractions and there is no information to support that any of the actions with which she is charged took place in our school setting,” the statement said. “District employees are held to high standards and we expect further actions may be taken by the Georgia Professional Standards Commission. We are deeply disappointed in this behavior and do not condone any actions that place the students or staff of our district at risk.”

Approximate date(s) of the diversion: 01/01/2012
Where the Diversion Occurred: Otis J. Brock Elementary School 1804 Stratford St, Savannah, GA 31415 Type of Healthcare Facility: School
Person Diverting: Melodie Donne Armer Cheatham Profession of the person diverting: All Other
Has the incident been reported? e.g. to local law enforcement, county board of health, state licensure board, and/or federal DEA or FDA authorities? Yes To whom has the incident been reported? Local Law Enforcement
Publicly available news reports about the incident: