Drug Company Kickbacks
Drug Company Kickbacks
Pharmaceutical Companies Offer Doctors Free Trips, Gifts for Prescriptions
By John McKenzie
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April 13
Jury selection began today in a case that's being closely
watched by drug companies and the medical profession.
Eleven current or former sales executives from TAP Pharmaceutical
Products are going on trial, accused of paying kickbacks to doctors and
hospitals to get them to buy the company's medications.
The company, based in Lake Forest, Ill., has already paid $875 million to
settle charges that it inflated prices on its prostate cancer drug Lupron,
and that the company bribed doctors to prescribe it.
Now, federal prosecutors are going after the company's sales executives
who, according to the government, carried out the illegal scheme.
"What became the main marketing focus for the TAP employees was not 'Was
this drug better, did this drug have fewer side effects, is it cheaper?' but
instead, 'Doctor, if you buy our drug, look at what we can do for you,' "
said Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Loucks.
Free Ski Trips and Golf Outings
And according to the indictment, the drug company executives did a lot.
They gave doctors ski trips to Aspen, Colo., and golf outings to Scottsdale,
Ariz., and Santa Barbara, Calif.
There was money disguised as "educational grants" that covered doctors'
bar tabs at cocktail parties, prosecutors said.
Defense lawyers said the sales executives thought they were acting
"completely within their job description."
Other drug companies are also being investigated for allegedly bribing
doctors to order their products. The net result, say prosecutors, is that
consumers and government health plans are spending tens of millions of
dollars more than they need to for medications.
U.S. Attorney Michael Sullivan said the TAP employees participated "in a
broad scheme that picked the pockets of many cancer-stricken elderly
Americans and all taxpayers."
Since the alleged crimes, the pharmaceutical industry has strengthened
its guidelines on gifts to doctors, which now are not supposed to exceed
$100 in value.