First appeared in USA Today
The nation's largest drugmakers have paid at least $8
billion in fines for repeatedly defrauding Medicare and Medicaid over the past
decade, but they remain in business with the federal government because they
are often the sole suppliers of critical products, records show. A Minneapolis
Defective Drug Lawyer has been following the case.
Pfizer, the maker of drugs that help alleviate arthritis and
other ailments, has paid almost $3 billion in fines since 2002 and entered into
three corporate integrity agreements with the Department of Health and Human
Services aimed at preventing future fraud. It and other companies are fighting
attempts by Congress to exclude them from government business because of their
history of fraud.
Merck, another pharmaceutical giant, paid $1.6 billion in
fines since 2008, Medicare and Justice Department records show, to resolve
claims it was not paying proper rebates to the government.
Pfizer's 2009 settlement was for improperly promoting the
use of drugs for purposes other than those for which they were approved by the
government. Merck's 2008 settlement involved claims the company paid illegal
kickbacks to health care providers in exchange for prescribing its drugs. A Charleston
Defective Drug Lawyer is interested.
Government investigators say their hands are tied with the
tools they have. They can exclude Pfizer and other pharmaceutical companies
from providing medications to Medicaid and Medicare beneficiaries as punishment
for bad behavior, but that would leave beneficiaries without drugs patented
through a particular company.
Or they can fine the companies and force them to enter corporate
integrity agreements that require government oversight and a promise not to
defraud the government again — a promise that often goes unkept. An Indianapolis
Defective Drug Litigation Lawyer is committed to these kinds of cases.
"We're seeing some of the big companies a second and
third time," said Gregory Demske, assistant inspector general for legal
affairs for Health and Human Services. "The corporate integrity agreement
is not sufficient to deter further misconduct."
In addition, the cases are labor- and cost-intensive as the
companies fight often for years to avoid an exclusion, Demske said.
To try to change that trend, the government announced in
2010 that, rather than exclude an entire company, investigators would go after
individuals within a company. Demske said his organization, the Justice
Department and the Food and Drug Administration have come up with some ideas to
use within the scope of the rules — such as taking away a company's patent
rights as a condition of a settlement. That could begin with cases being
investigated now, he said.
Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, introduced a bipartisan bill
that would make it easier for the government to find a middle ground, saying
the law now forces "the inspector general to use all-or-nothing, mandatory
exclusion penalties against corporations that have committed fraud." The
bill would allow the exclusion of individuals from working with the government
even after they've left the company where the fraud occurred. A Salt
Lake City Defective Drug Lawyer finds this interesting.
Pharmaceutical companies altogether spent more than $200
million lobbying Congress in 2011, including $12 million spent by Pfizer. At
least 12 pharmaceutical and medical device companies are lobbying specifically
against a House bill, HR 675, that complements Grassley's.
None of the pharmaceutical companies —Abbott Laboratories,
Pfizer or Bristol-Myers Squibb— contacted by USA TODAY responded to questions
about their response to the government's proposed enforcement actions.
The industry's trade group, the Pharmaceutical Research and
Manufacturers of America, says excluding an individual should occur only when
there is "significant wrongdoing" that the individual knew about and
did nothing to stop, said Matthew Bennett, the group's senior vice president.
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