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Feds Found Pfizer Too Big to Nail
Imagine being charged with a crime, but an imaginary friend takes the rap for you.
When Bextra was taken off the market in 2005, more than half of its profits had come from "off-label" prescriptions. That
is essentially what happened when Pfizer, the world's largest
pharmaceutical company, was charged with illegally marketing Bextra, a
painkiller that was taken off the market in 2005 because of safety
concerns.
When the criminal case was announced last fall, federal officials touted their prosecution as a model for tough, effective enforcement. "It sends a clear message" to the pharmaceutical industry, said Kevin Perkins, assistant director of the FBI's Criminal Investigative Division.
But beyond the fanfare, a CNN Special Investigation found another story, one that officials downplayed when they declared victory. It's a story about the power major pharmaceutical companies have even when they break the laws intended to protect patients.
Big plans for Bextra
The story begins in 2001, when Bextra was about to hit the market. The drug was part of a revolutionary class of painkillers known as Cox-2 inhibitors that were supposed to be safer than generic drugs, but at 20 times the price of ibuprofen.
Pfizer and its marketing partner, Pharmacia, planned to sell Bextra as a treatment for acute pain, the kind you have after surgery.
But in November 2001, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said Bextra was not safe for patients at high risk of heart attacks and strokes.
The FDA approved Bextra only for arthritis and menstrual cramps. It rejected the drug in higher doses for acute, surgical pain.
Promoting drugs for unapproved uses can put patients at risk by circumventing the FDA's judgment over which products are safe and effective. For that reason, "off-label" promotion is against the law.
But with billions of dollars of profits at stake, marketing and sales managers across the country nonetheless targeted anesthesiologists, foot surgeons, orthopedic surgeons and oral surgeons. "Anyone that use[d] a scalpel for a living," one district manager advised in a document prosecutors would later cite.
A manager in Florida e-mailed his sales reps a scripted sales pitch that claimed -- falsely -- that the FDA had given Bextra "a clean bill of health" all the way up to a 40 mg dose, which is twice what the FDA actually said was safe.
Doctors as pitchmen
Internal company documents show that Pfizer and Pharmacia (which Pfizer later bought) used a multimillion-dollar medical education budget to pay hundreds of doctors as speakers and consultants to tout Bextra.
Pfizer said in court that "the company's intent was pure": to foster a legal exchange of scientific information among doctors.
But an internal marketing plan called for training physicians "to serve as public relations spokespeople."
According to Lewis Morris, chief counsel to the inspector general at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, "They pushed the envelope so far past any reasonable interpretation of the law that it's simply outrageous."
Pfizer's chief compliance officer, Doug Lanker, said that "in a large sales force, successful sales techniques spread quickly," but that top Pfizer executives were not aware of the "significant mis-promotion issue with Bextra" until federal prosecutors began to show them the evidence.
By April 2005, when Bextra was taken off the market, more than half of its $1.7 billion in profits had come from prescriptions written for uses the FDA had rejected.
Too big to nail
But when it came to prosecuting Pfizer for its fraudulent marketing, the pharmaceutical giant had a trump card: Just as the giant banks on Wall Street were deemed too big to fail, Pfizer was considered too big to nail.
Why? Because any company convicted of a major health care fraud is automatically excluded from Medicare and Medicaid. Convicting Pfizer on Bextra would prevent the company from billing federal health programs for any of its products. It would be a corporate death sentence.
Prosecutors said that excluding Pfizer would most likely lead to Pfizer's collapse, with collateral consequences: disrupting the flow of Pfizer products to Medicare and Medicaid recipients, causing the loss of jobs including those of Pfizer employees who were not involved in the fraud, and causing significant losses for Pfizer shareholders.
"We have to ask whether by excluding the company [from Medicare and Medicaid], are we harming our patients," said Lewis Morris of the Department of Health and Human Services.
So Pfizer and the feds cut a deal. Instead of charging Pfizer with a crime, prosecutors would charge a Pfizer subsidiary, Pharmacia & Upjohn Co. Inc.
The CNN Special Investigation found that the subsidiary is nothing more than a shell company whose only function is to plead guilty.
According to court documents, Pfizer Inc. owns (a) Pharmacia Corp., which owns (b) Pharmacia & Upjohn LLC, which owns (c) Pharmacia & Upjohn Co. LLC, which in turn owns (d) Pharmacia & Upjohn Co. Inc. It is the great-great-grandson of the parent company.
Public records show that the subsidiary was incorporated in Delaware on March 27, 2007, the same day Pfizer lawyers and federal prosecutors agreed that the company would plead guilty in a kickback case against a company Pfizer had acquired a few years earlier.
As a result, Pharmacia & Upjohn Co. Inc., the subsidiary, was excluded from Medicare without ever having sold so much as a single pill. And Pfizer was free to sell its products to federally funded health programs.
An imaginary friend
Two years later, with Bextra, the shell company once again pleaded guilty. It was, in effect, Pfizer's imaginary friend stepping up to take the rap.
"It is true that if a company is created to take a criminal plea, but it's just a shell, the impact of an exclusion is minimal or nonexistent," Morris said.
Prosecutors say there was no viable alternative.
"If we prosecute Pfizer, they get excluded," said Mike Loucks, the federal prosecutor who oversaw the investigation. "A lot of the people who work for the company who haven't engaged in criminal activity would get hurt."
Did the punishment fit the crime? Pfizer says yes.
It paid nearly $1.2 billion in a criminal fine for Bextra, the largest fine the federal government has ever collected.
It paid a billion dollars more to settle a batch of civil suits -- although it denied wrongdoing -- on allegations that it illegally promoted 12 other drugs.
In all, Pfizer lost the equivalent of three months' profit.
It maintained its ability to do business with the federal government.
Pfizer says it takes responsibility for the illegal promotion of Bextra. "I can tell you, unequivocally, that Pfizer perceived the Bextra matter as an incredibly serious one," said Doug Lankler, Pfizer's chief compliance officer.
To prevent it from happening again, Pfizer has set up what it calls "leading-edge" systems to spot signs of illegal promotion by closely monitoring sales reps and tracking prescription sales.
It's not entirely voluntary. Pfizer had to sign a corporate integrity agreement with the Department of Health and Human Services. For the next five years, it requires Pfizer to disclose future payments to doctors and top executives to sign off personally that the company is obeying the law.
Pfizer says the company has learned its lesson.
But after years of overseeing similar cases against other major drug companies, even Loucks, isn't sure $2 billion in penalties is a deterrent when the profits from illegal promotion can be so large.
"I worry that the money is so great," he said, that dealing with the Department of Justice may be "just of a cost of doing business."

28 Comments so far
Show AllSICKENING. JUST SICKENING.
After seeing how much corporate welfare the too big to fail banks get from Obama and Congress, drug company mergers accelerated during the past year to assure that drug companies will be too big to nail AND too big to fail. Other inustries are also experiencing accelerating numbers of mergers so they can cash in on the too big to fail model.
Now that Obamacare includes a prohibition on drug reimportation, prohibition on the gov. negotiating drug prices, and extension of drug patents, the drug companies are hiring more lobbyists and makingh bigger campaign contributions to assure that their license to steal has no expiration date.
They are making this smae claim regarding various banks in the USA which the Government claims colluded in a Criminal Conspiracy to manipulate the prices of Municipal bonds.
This Includes the very largest US Banks.
In essence they are saying if we INDITE the firms, those banks might collapse which would be hamful to the economy.
Everytime you or I vote for an incumbant we contribute to this problem.
Sioux Rose
GW: It's indict, not indite. Hope you don't mind the correction.
Oh i dont mind at all. That said Indite is the original spelling used until about 1920.
So I am not completely wrong .
It is sort of like....arguement. ;)
"Bextra was about to hit the market. The drug was part of a revolutionary class of painkillers known as Cox-2 inhibitors that were supposed to be safer than generic drugs, but at 20 times the price of ibuprofen. (...) [Pfizer] paid nearly $1.2 billion in a criminal fine for Bextra, the largest fine the federal government has ever collected. It paid a billion dollars more to settle a batch of civil suits -- although it denied wrongdoing -- on allegations that it illegally promoted 12 other drugs."
But well-proven marijuana, used psychoactively and as painkiller for at least 2,700 years without any death, is federally forbidden to use and never officially promoted...
Yeah, it's ironic. But don't worry, if there is a way to profit from the sale of marijuana the criminal enterprises we euphemistically call corporations will figure it out. Medical marijuana anyone?
I'm sure you know this, 'Tom Joad': marijuana as a naturally occuring herb can't be patented and thus made a high-yield profit product. Only derivatives (Marinol, Sativex) and synthetic cannabinoids (JWH-018 et al) can be marketed that way.
Marijuana is too natural for the corporations' comfort and profits. Luckily. Yet that's why it stays forbidden.
Only big-scale illegal marijuana growers can profit from the plant. And they WANT it to stay illegal. Watch the documentary "The Union" - http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-9077214414651731007&ei=bZNTS8K-GpSo-AbCiqW-Bg&q=the+union#
The politics of marijuana, medical or otherwise, are twisted far beyond sanity. The strongest interest-groups connected to it have high self-interests in it staying outlawed. While common people - those with really the strongest interest in it being available in a sanely regulated way - simply use it whenever people please, while accepting the suppression as long as it's available. Which prohibition's high prices make sure it always is.
The issue's twisted into itself in Escher-like flows...
Well said!! Thanx for the link. Very well done!
The United States of America has a Criminal Government that colludes with Criminal Corporations to protect profits and keep Wall Street rolling along, and Candidates for Public Office accept money from Criminal Corporations so they can get elected and, in effect, maintain support for the Criminal Government of the United States of America and the Criminal Corporations colluding with the Criminal Government, and all the top-echelon folks involved with the Criminal Government and with the Criminal Corporations end up living High On The Hog while the citizens of the U.S. are the victims, inclusive of their unnecessary, sometimes early, deaths because of the LIES and the COLLUSIONS of all these CRIMINALS.
Simple. It's over, folks.
Oh, come on now! Don't you think you're being just a LITTLE, ah, ACCURATE here?
But seriously, folk, this is just the latest painful reminder of the mostly invisible scandal of Amerikan jurisprudence's tradition of enabling white-collar crime.
It's not entirely "invisible", insofar as it's common knowledge that corporate crime and high-status criminals are given preferential treatment. But the everyday practices that have been put in place to ensure a non-adversarial relationship between law enforcement and big business aren't advertised.
Just from osmosis-- courtesy of Russell Mokhiber's reporting published here and elsewhere-- I'm dimly aware that corporate crime is adjudicated on a fast-track, user-friendly basis limited to contrived wrist-slapping and minimal pain or accountability.
There's an assortment of pseudo-prosecutorial substitutes in which no corporate crime is too heinous that it can't be addressed by suggesting that the corporation go to its room and think about what it's done, and not come out until it can hold up its head again.
And of course there are modest fines and voluntary stipulations and other toothless formalities, just to give it the appearance of legitimacy.
After all, the various Departments of Justice have to reserve their BIG guns for cases like Tim DeChristopher, a principled college student who fraudulently disrupted a government land auction in an act of civil disobedience.
Only Enemies of the State fully arouse the wrath of our prosecutorial bully boys, turning them into a wrathful, vengeful Goliath determined to teach an impudent David the meaning of "prosecution to the full extent of the law". Massively criminal business enterprises, not so much.
The only trouble is that if the pain killer is really a killer, then it becomes a pain, because the users die. Which means the company is loosing customers. That cannot be sustainable.
Marijuana is really ideal, since if it kills, it does so slowly. People with destroyed brains can't cause too much trouble and will still consume the product. Marijuana can be grown organically and can have a low carbon footprint, provides employment for lots of small growers, as well as keeps law enforcement occupied. We are probably in the near optimum situation as far as pot is concerned. The only trouble will occur when the pharmaceuticals want to get into the game and then we will have big plantations using a lot of tractors, water pumping, insecticides, leading to erosion destroying all the advantages of pot, and taking away the livelihoods of the poor people.
So,,,our government is making Medicare and Medicaid complacent in this criminal activity?
Bring America Back !!!!..........!!!....That's Right Humbaba, Big Pharma must not be criminally charged, but Grandma's home remedy of hot tea with honey definitely
must be made a hanging offense...George Orwell wins again !!!!
Smarter writes:
"I'm sure you know this, 'Tom Joad': marijuana as a naturally occuring herb can't be patented and thus made a high-yield profit product."
A U.S. judge just ruled that companies cannot patent strands of the human genome because they are naturally-occurring, but the fight ain't over yet. Corporations HAVE filed for patents on YOUR genes.
If a corporation twists a molecule of the marijuana genome and "improves" the "natural" product of Mother Nature, they can file for a patent. (Meanwhile, notice that most expert pot growers improve their crops the old-fashioned way, selective breeding. Much safer...)
This is, after all, what GM crops are all about. Proprietary control of what is discovered, becomes control of what had preceded the discovery, Mother Nature.
Strange, is it not, that in all this legal and political bickering, Mother Nature is NOT too big to fail?! That, in fact, the way we are going, it is a near certainty that she will fail, through no fault of her own except for creating humans...
The Masters of the Universe need to be sent out into space where they can learn how to short-sell mining on Pluto.
It has become evident that there is no necessary positive correlation between Western-style economics (the so-called Washington Consensus coming largely out of the Chicago School), and the health of our environment, and ourselves. (This also goes for Keynesian "stimulus" in the absence of an Environmental Component such as the CCC under FDR.)
Quite the contrary. We are approaching Soylent Green.
Take a number.
Who's next?
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It just never ends does it.
The comments about marijuana and the fact that it can't be turned into a hugely profitable patented drug reminds me of the similarity of the situation in energy production.
I live near the Owens dry lakebed in eastern California. It has an area of 280 square kilometers. The energy potential of solar here is among the highest in the world. Owens lake is dry because the water of the Owens river has been transported to Los Angeles for a century.
The dry lake bed used to be the single largest source of atmospheric particulate pollution in North America. L.A. Department of Water and Power (the DWP) has spent half a billion dollars on efforts to control the dust in the past decade or so.
But David Freeman, the visionary director of the DWP has realized that instead of flooding the old lake bed with water, it will be economically and environmentally better to pave the lake bed with photovoltaic panels.
The amount of recoverable energy with current technology available at the Owens Dry Lake is almost exactly equivalent to the total energy use of the ENTIRE state of California.
The fuel supply is completely non polluting, free, inexhaustible, and reduces the need for importation of oil.
When Wall Street bureaucrats see "inexhaustible" and "free" they have a panic attack.
This situation is the ultimate argument against Capitalism and in favor of Socialism, even more compelling than the situation with Pfizer. Not only should Pfizer be fully put out of business it should have been absorbed into Medicare and continued to operate as a publicly owned non-profit corporation.
My point about green energy is that Wall Street isn't investing in it on a crash basis that we need because the Wall Street banks own a lot of coal and oil and natural gas that they want to sell, not leave in the ground.
But there is a visionary leader of a public non-profit moving to create the largest solar energy project the world has ever seen here in eastern California. Dr. Freeman is in his eighties. He is vigorous and healthy, but we are talking about a 20 year project.
Just as a big pharmaceutical for profit is allowed to bend the law and continue on in criminal activities when the best outcome would have been for them to have been absorbed by Medicare, will the DWP be allowed to create this huge competitor for the for profit energy companies?
The enormous capital controlled by the Wall Street banks should be being used to build a solar/electric economy with electrically powered mass transit being constructed on a crash basis with fast trains and widespread electric trolleys and street cars. And doing so on a crash basis. Mayor Villarigosa of Los Angeles is doing what he can, having just shortened the time to complete some important additions to mass transit in L.A. from 30 years to 10, but this sort of vision is needed in all our cities. With the full support of Wall Street this could be done in 3-5 years.
The wars for oil would make even less sense than they do now were our priorities directed to the green future that is our only chance to avoid catastrophic global warming.
We have to leave all that carbon in the ground.
Very good points and info, 'Heavyrunner'. Plus thanks for the realistic optimism.
Pfizer, etc. is owned by Monsanto. This is the company whose corporate plan is to corrupt ALL natural occurring plants on earth so they can patent them. There is no room here to lay background but if you are curious go to GMWatch for the overview. Just be sure you are sitting down - and have your teddy bear to hug because you will be rightfully scared to death.
The marketing plan for the sales force is the same modus operandi of Monsanto corporate. Ignore the law,use disinformation from 'experts' and take no prisoners. If they happen to get caught, no worries because the federal regulatory agencies - in this case, the FDA and the USDA - are run by present and former employees.
When organic farmers crops get polluted by wind blown pollen, Monsanto file lawsuits for stealing the patented seeds and puts the farmers out of business with years of lawsuits. There used to be a nice little industry in agriculture where farmers could take seeds from their own crops and have them cleaned for spring planting. That entire industry is gone because of Monsanto's greed which has no boundaries.
Monsanto has effectively stalled legislation for years which would require open labeling on all grocery products showing that they were made from genetically modified organisms so the consumer could at least make an informed choice. Isn't that the basis Americans believe is their right and expect the government to ensure? Think about how big Kraft is and rest assured everything they sell is from GMO stock. And in following with corporate policy, Kraft has invented their own organic logo (strongly resembling the USDA one) and you must read the fine print to see that it is "certified" by their own scientists. But all the consumers sees as they hurry through the task of shopping is the huge word Organic plastered on the front of the box.
The point is it doesn't take a genius to see the direct correlation between the US becoming the sickest nation on earth and the fact that we are being poisoned from the ground up. What does Monsanto care? They are making money off you dying by selling you the drugs from Pfizer. You have more to worry about than market shares except that it shows how insidious this epidemic is and it will take more than a few regulatory handslaps to even bring awareness to the public, let alone 'teach them a lesson'. The CEOs are not just smiling on the way to bank, they are guffawing at the gullibility of all humans they have duped to pay them to live.
Pfizer, etc. is owned by Monsanto. This is the company whose corporate plan is to corrupt ALL natural occurring plants on earth so they can patent them. There is no room here to lay background but if you are curious go to GMWatch for the overview. Just be sure you are sitting down - and have your teddy bear to hug because you will be rightfully scared to death.
The marketing plan for the sales force is the same modus operandi of Monsanto corporate. Ignore the law,use disinformation from 'experts' and take no prisoners. If they happen to get caught, no worries because the federal regulatory agencies - in this case, the FDA and the USDA - are run by present and former employees.
When organic farmers crops get polluted by wind blown pollen, Monsanto file lawsuits for stealing the patented seeds and puts the farmers out of business with years of lawsuits. There used to be a nice little industry in agriculture where farmers could take seeds from their own crops and have them cleaned for spring planting. That entire industry is gone because of Monsanto's greed which has no boundaries.
Monsanto has effectively stalled legislation for years which would require open labeling on all grocery products showing that they were made from genetically modified organisms so the consumer could at least make an informed choice. Isn't that the basis Americans believe is their right and expect the government to ensure? Think about how big Kraft is and rest assured everything they sell is from GMO stock. And in following with corporate policy, Kraft has invented their own organic logo (strongly resembling the USDA one) and you must read the fine print to see that it is "certified" by their own scientists. But all the consumers sees as they hurry through the task of shopping is the huge word Organic plastered on the front of the box.
The point is it doesn't take a genius to see the direct correlation between the US becoming the sickest nation on earth and the fact that we are being poisoned from the ground up. What does Monsanto care? They are making money off you dying by selling you the drugs from Pfizer. You have more to worry about than market shares except that it shows how insidious this epidemic is and it will take more than a few regulatory handslaps to even bring awareness to the public, let alone 'teach them a lesson'. The CEOs are not just smiling on the way to bank, they are guffawing at the gullibility of all humans they have duped to pay them to live.
"Pfizer, etc. is owned by Monsanto. "
Nope. Monsanto was owned by Pharmacia which spun Monsanto off to a separate company before it was bought by Pfizer. Pfizer does not own Monsanto and Monsanto does not own Pfizer and there are no links between the two companies that are different than any other two companies in the US.
Pfizer, whom everyone hates, also does a lot of research into AIDS drugs and has loads of research into Alzheimer's going on which, if you have had a family member die from, is something that is worth them continuing on with.
This judgment against them was over off-label sales which is unethical, but in the scheme of things, they weren't selling drugs that didn't work or were watered down.
Bring America Back !!!!
***Of course, this is the same decrepid philosophy our wonderful Congress used when passing the FISA legislation with retro-active immunity to the Big Telecons for illegal and felonious wiretapping crimes against Americans. Way Too Big to Prosecute for their Crimes. ?
***Of course, it didn't matter that the Big Telecons were
holding hands with King George the "W"; the FBI, and the
NSA, did it ????
***Of course, it did not matter a certain then Senator named
Obama voted FOR the Immunities for Crimes--we still worked for the election of the Saviour !!!
***Now Prez Obama has proven again that the Big AMA, Big Pharma, Big HMO's and Big Insurance are much TOO BIG to
impose a Single Payer Healthcare Plan for Americans.
Too Big Indeed, also too Corrupt, too Influential, and way
too many Political Campaign Contributions. !! Ain't it
The Truth >???? Another great example of why our Government is All Busted !
"Just as the giant banks on Wall Street were deemed too big to fail, Pfizer was considered too big to nail."
Change the patent laws. If a pharmaceutical company commits fraud, take away their patent rights for that particular drug! That should prevent "too-big-to-nail" fraud!
Who's to make the "change"? Who's to "take away their patent rights"? - Aye, there's the rub...
"""I worry that the money is so great," he said, that dealing with the Department of Justice may be "just of a cost of doing business.""
*******************************
I have no doubt that, just as exxon mobil had a convenient judge to reduce their penalty, a questionably low fine for the damage done to begin with, to a mere pittance of little recompense for the criminal deed, that pfuxus, too, will have a benevolent kind soul help them in their hour of need so that they may continue to 'indulge' the american butt of corporate flimflam.
Oh, and never you mind pfuxus, about a 'cost of doing business' for us people cajoled into thinking you are, in your ostensible 'compassion', doing what you can to help people when actually you're just feeding the bottom line and bonuses and investor 'indulgence'.
They are not too big too nail. Obama didn't want them upset before the 2010 elections. He's counting on getting some really big bucks after selling us out to big pharma and the rest of the health care hoodlums.
In many cases, Medicare and Medicaid patients would be better off not being prescribed many of Big Pharma's expensive drugs. This would save really big bucks and probably prolong lives.
This is especially true of the psychoactives, such as the SSRI's and SNRI's (Paxil et al) which serve no physical purpose but instead serve to mediate lifestyle issues such as anxiety.
Most such patients would be better served by being told that the reason for their anxieties, sleepless nights, poor social relations, etc., are due to the cognitive dissonance in their lives, that they need therapy at the semantic-variable level, that "the truth is out there" and they do not need to have their brain chemistry permanently altered by addictive corporate drugs. (Any questions about addiction here? Check out withdrawal issues of these classes of drugs via wikipedia.)
OTOH, reports from therapists I know suggest that these government programs are funding psychotherapy (generally) less and less. Nor do I mean psychotherapy only in the old Adler/Freud/Jung sense. There have been many advances in our knowledge of the relationship between language and Mind in the past half century.
Example: Think of all those people who are tearing their hair out and screaming "Obama is a socialist." In linguistics, it can be said that their world view bears no relation to the facts. Drugs won't change a delusion. They may just make you care less. The original source of delusion remains unchanged.
There is a Drug War out there, but it has been mischaracterized. It really is between those who use drugs to mitigate the slings and arrows of outrageous misfortune and those who would profit from it.
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