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In Shift, Feds Target Top Execs For Health Fraud

By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR   05/31/11 08:40 AM ET   AP

WASHINGTON -- It's getting personal now. In a shift still evolving, federal enforcers are targeting individual executives in health care fraud cases that used to be aimed at impersonal corporations.

The new tactic is raising the anxiety level – and risks – for corporate honchos at drug companies, medical device manufacturers, nursing home chains and other major health care enterprises that deal with Medicare and Medicaid.

Previously, if a company got caught, its lawyers in many cases would be able to negotiate a financial settlement. The company would write the government a check for a number followed by lots of zeroes and promise not to break the rules again. Often the cost would just get passed on to customers.

Now, on top of fines paid by a company, senior executives can face criminal charges even if they weren't involved in the scheme but could have stopped it had they known. Furthermore, they can also be banned from doing business with government health programs, a career-ending consequence.

Many in industry see the more aggressive strategy as government overkill, meting out radical punishment to individuals whose guilt prosecutors would be hard pressed to prove to a jury.

The feds say they got frustrated with repeat violations and decided to start using enforcement tools that were already on the books but had been allowed to languish. By some estimates, health care fraud costs taxpayers $60 billion a year, galling when Medicare faces insolvency.

"When you look at the history of health care enforcement, we've seen a number of Fortune 500 companies that have been caught not once, not twice, but sometimes three times violating the trust of the American people, submitting false claims, paying kickbacks to doctors, marketing drugs which have not been tested for safety and efficacy," said Lewis Morris, chief counsel for the inspector general of the Health and Human Services Department.

"To our way of thinking, the men and women in the corporate suite aren't getting it," Morris continued. "If writing a check for $200 million isn't enough to have a company change its ways, then maybe we have got to have the individuals who are responsible for this held accountable. The behavior of a company starts at the top."

Lawyers who represent drug companies say the change has definitely caused a stir, but the end result is far from certain.

"People are alarmed," said Brien O'Connor, a partner in the Boston office of Ropes & Gray. "They want to know what facts and circumstances would cause the Justice Department to indict someone who hadn't even known about the misconduct. They are doing all they can to achieve compliance."

Others say high-powered corporate targets won't go meekly.

"If the government does continue to press its campaign against individuals, we will see the limits of the government's theories tested," said Paul Kalb, who heads the health care group at the law firm of Sidley Austin in Washington. "In my mind, there is a very important open question as to whether individuals can be held criminally culpable or lose their jobs simply by virtue of their status."

Although the Obama administration has increased scrutiny of corporate America generally, this shift in health care enforcement seems to have come up from the ranks, government and corporate attorneys say.

Investigators and lawyers at the HHS inspector general's office, the Justice Department and the Food and Drug Administration started moving more or less independently toward holding executives accountable. Morris outlined the inspector general's position in congressional testimony this spring, saying his office will use its power judiciously.

A test case is playing out with an 83-year-old drug company chief executive, Howard Solomon of New York City-based Forest Laboratories. Forest makes antidepressants, blood pressure drugs and other medications. Last month, the inspector general's office notified Forest that Solomon could potentially be banned from doing business with federal programs.

The power to ban or "exclude" an individual rests with the inspector general. It's routinely applied to low-level violators, but rarely to people of Solomon's rank. In the industry, they call it the "death penalty."

Last year, a Forest subsidiary pleaded guilty to criminal charges as part of a settlement with the Justice Department in which the company also agreed to pay $313 million to resolve long-running investigations. Prosecutors charged that Forest deliberately ignored an FDA warning to stop distributing an unapproved thyroid drug, promoted the use of an antidepressant in treating children although it was only approved for adults and misled FDA inspectors making a quality check at a manufacturing plant.

The company said it had considered the case closed. But then came the inspector general's letter.

"No one has ever alleged that Mr. Solomon has done anything wrong and excluding him would be completely unjustified," Herschel Weinstein, Forest's general counsel, said in a statement. "In prior cases where a senior executive has been excluded, that individual has been accused of wrongdoing and ultimately has either been convicted of or (pleaded) guilty to a crime."

Forest is fighting the move to ban Solomon. The inspector general's office refused to comment on the case, and no final decision has been made. In congressional testimony, Morris said that when there is evidence an executive knew or should have known about misconduct, the inspector general "will operate with a presumption in favor of exclusion of that executive."

Separate from the inspector general's power to ban, the FDA has resurrected something called the "Park Doctrine," which makes it easier for prosecutors to bring criminal charges against an executive.

The doctrine, stemming from a 1970s Supreme Court case, allows the government to charge corporate officers in the chain of command with a criminal misdemeanor. They could face up to a year in prison and fines if they had the authority and responsibility to prevent, detect or resolve misconduct affecting the public welfare but failed to do so.

It's making an entire industry nervous.

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WASHINGTON -- It's getting personal now. In a shift still evolving, federal enforcers are targeting individual executives in health care fraud cases that used to be aimed at impersonal corporations. ...
WASHINGTON -- It's getting personal now. In a shift still evolving, federal enforcers are targeting individual executives in health care fraud cases that used to be aimed at impersonal corporations. ...
WASHINGTON -- It's getting personal now. In a shift still evolving, federal enforcers are targeting individual executives in health care fraud cases that used to be aimed at impersonal corporations. ...
WASHINGTON -- It's getting personal now. In a shift still evolving, federal enforcers are targeting individual executives in health care fraud cases that used to be aimed at impersonal corporations. ...
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07:02 PM on 06/04/2011
Obama DOJ- San Francisco Court Rig Medicare Fraud Case
Judge Richard Seeborg admits that Kaiser Permanente whistleblower case in U.S. District Court in San Francisco was "plagued" with errors by Justice Department lawyers, judges, and court administration adverse to relators, not to DOJ.
Motion and Order posted on www.hmohardball.com, http://www.judicialactivism.info/PACER- QUI TAM MOTION 5-27-10.pdf , and http://judicialactivism.info/PACER-QUI TAM ORDER 6-22-10.pdf
Robert Finney PhD
12:15 PM on 06/03/2011
The hands-off approach to fraud by business has brought us to our current state of the nation - none too good. Executives don't care if the company has to pay a fine; they still manage to get their bonuses. The possibility of jail does get their attention, and that is what we need. When consumers are hurt by corporate decisions it makes no sense for the government to make money (the fine) from it. That's like getting a kickback for looking the other way.
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03:14 PM on 06/02/2011
"Many in industry see the more aggressive strategy as government overkill, meting out radical punishment to individuals whose guilt prosecutors would be hard pressed to prove to a jury."

Yeah I bet. Crooks always say that. It's one of the few times I'd change my standing "Innocent" vote to "Flat Out Guilty!"

""To our way of thinking, the men and women in the corporate suite aren't getting it," Morris continued. "If writing a check for $200 million isn't enough to have a company change its ways, then maybe we have got to have the individuals who are responsible for this held accountable. The behavior of a company starts at the top."

Gee. Yah think? Bet more than a few politicians get caught in the net. What if THEY are thrown in jail? Lose ALL retirement benefits? Have to pay back the money, not to some ambiguous "government" but to actual people, i.e. "victims:, more i.e. American and non-American citizens and their families? What if they also had to pay fines- big ones in actual cash money-to the above-mentioned? Think THAT would make future leeches think?

And a "fine" paid to any state or government is called a bribe since it goes to fat, gloating, ambiguous "panels" made up of state and government criminals.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ZeraLee
A Citizen's View from Main Street
07:41 AM on 06/02/2011
The decision-makers are too insulated from moral hazard. They only seek to save face and pass the economic penalties on to others.

Fines are clearly ineffective. The other choices are structural changes to the business or jail time for the perpetrators.
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AlButerol
It's all about me
11:11 PM on 06/01/2011
As long as individuals are exempt from prosecution, corporations will continue to try to get away with whatever they can. Corporations do not have nervous systems and do not fear legal repercussions. If they are fined, they feel no pain and in reality the fines cause little real damage to them. However, start imprisoning and fining human beings in charge of those corporations and you will see instances of fraud disappear immediately.
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dragongal
06:13 PM on 06/01/2011
Every nonsensical person, whether blind, deaf, dumb, you name it knows that CORPORATIONS in this country are the BIGGEST FRAUDSTERS there is and yet the escape EVERY time with a hugs and kisses and continue to rip off the tax payers of this country. The bigger the FRAUD, the more hugs and kisses. Its time the FEDS do a little weenie peenie something about it, its full time FEDS, GET IT DONE!!!
05:57 PM on 06/01/2011
Who are they kidding we stopped going after the robber barons after the depression. Now all you need is enough republicans and you can buy a law to make the unethical legal!
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kyrose777
04:58 PM on 06/01/2011
....and the GOPs want to get their nasty hands on medicare!
01:14 PM on 06/01/2011
I would really prefer castration, followed by hanging, but hey jail's good.
12:26 PM on 06/01/2011
The lagest insurance fraud case in the state of florida was Columbia/HCA. They were found guilty of fraud and fined 1.7 billion. At the same time Rick Scott (the CEO) walked away with 700 million and was never charged. Then the fools in Florida elect this crook governor. This all took place while Jeb Bush was governor and G. Bush was in the whitehouse. Clearly that much money buys alot of friends.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
outofstepper
C21H30O2
10:18 AM on 06/01/2011
Now move onto the banksters and indict a few of them as well.
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Barb Keryan
Don't raise Medicare age!
09:59 AM on 06/01/2011
Drug executives do make decisions that endanger people. They test drugs overseas now on poor people who do not understand the risks and are really not comparable to Americans to Americans physically. In other words people who already not healthy do not make good test subjects.

I will always have a problem with Americans being charged more for drugs than the rest of the world. What is sad is the people without good insurance get charged the most. I just read that they up the price of drugs just before their patent runs out. Their ethical standards seem to be sadly lacking.
09:26 AM on 06/01/2011
It's all about lining their pockets. CEO and CFO are paid bonuses plus a percentage of the revenues earned. They could care less of the fraudelent activities within the company. They only want to see the bottom line so they can get their xxxm/billion dollar yearly bonuses.The government have been using tax payers dollars bailing out corporations for years due to Executive Management fraud. This is why the Sarbanes Oxley Act was put into place, to hold the CEO and CFO responsible for financial statement (FS) fraud and prevent them from delegating this responsibility to subordinates and claiming ignorance when fraud is uncovered by the FS. As CEO, you should know what's your company is producing and what operations are going on. Yes, a re-examination is needed to include the operations as well. They've been getting away with it for years.
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USCOASTGUARDVET
09:01 AM on 06/01/2011
It's all come's down to $$$.
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Karma2U
Blessed are the Peacemakers
07:55 PM on 06/01/2011
Absolutely! The very fact that we are bombarded daily with commercials for dangerous drugs is the equivalent of being a pusher.
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biggerjake
Religion poisons everything...
08:45 AM on 06/01/2011
This is already done routinely with violators of banking laws and safety laws.

If I am the plant manager of an industrial facility and I know that my people are not complying with the law or if I should know, I can go to jail. It happens all the time.

If I am the president of a bank that is laundering money and I know or should know, I can go to jail.

Why not drug companies?