. >> jim geldhof: they had a business plan.ir plan was to sell a lot of pills and make a lot of money. and they did both of those very well. >> whitaker: jim geldhof, a 40-year d.e.a. veteran, ran pharmaceutical investigations from d.e.a.'s detroit field office. frank younker supervised the agency's operations in cincinnati. joe rannazzisi was their supervisor. they saw distributors shipping thousands of suspicious orders. one example: a pharmacy in kermit, west virginia, a town of just 392 people, ordered nine million hydrocodone pills over two years. >> geldhof: all we were looking for is a good faith effort by these companies to do the right thing. and there was no good faith effort. greed always trumped compliance. it did every time. but don't sit here and tell me that, "well, we're not sure what a suspicious order is." really? i mean this-- this co-- this pharmacy just bought 50 times an amount that a normal pharmacy purchases, and they are in a town of 5,000 people. you don't know that that's suspicious? i mean, at some p