PHARMA CROOKS ???


Like the sleazy politicans????

"Not to the millions of people ripped off or dead, so where? I will tell you: to line the pockets of the people sent to protect us"

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/...in;contentBody

Speaking of those who are supposed to "protect" us, how about crooked FDA slimeballs,lol:From Wall Street Journal ! FDA Insider is charged !

By ALICIA MUNDY And BRENT KENDALL
WASHINGTON—A longtime chemist at the Food and Drug Administration was charged Tuesday with insider trading by federal authorities, who alleged he made as much as $3.6 million trading drug company stocks based on confidential drug-approval information.

Charges Against Cheng Yi Liang
View Document
.
.The Securities and Exchange Commission filed civil charges against Cheng Yi Liang, 57, an FDA employee since 1996, alleging he illegally traded in advance of at least 27 different FDA announcements involving 19 publicly traded companies.

The Justice Department filed related criminal charges and also charged Mr. Liang's son, Andrew Liang, in the case. Both are residents of Gaithersburg, Md.

The charges stunned the FDA. Mr. Liang works in the division in charge of approving new drugs, the agency's most visible and sensitive role. The pharmaceutical industry has long worried about security in this area, given how much secret corporate information is shared with employees at the agency.

"This is the kind of stuff I lost sleep over," said former FDA commissioner David Kessler, because pharmaceutical companies and Wall Street depend on FDA officials never using their proprietary knowledge "to play the market."

The SEC and the Justice Department said the men traded shares dating back to 2006 of companies whose drugs were used for colon cancer, schizophrenia, insomnia, severe constipation, osteoarthritis and heart disease.

Some of the FDA announcements at issue involved delays in the approval process due to the drugs' safety or efficacy tests. Mr. Liang allegedly bought stock for profit before positive announcements, bet on shares falling after negatives ones and sold shares to avoid losses.

Mr. Liang traded stocks of smaller companies developing new drugs, rather than major corporations, to take advantage of the relatively larger swings in these firms' stocks, the SEC said. The SEC said he went to great lengths to conceal his trading—which was financed in part with a home-equity line of credit—using seven brokerage accounts that weren't in his name. One belonged to Mr. Liang's 84-year-old mother in China, the SEC alleged.

In the most profitable transaction, the Liangs allegedly traded ahead of a May 2009 announcement by Vanda Pharmaceuticals Inc. that its schizophrenia drug Fanapt had received FDA approval. They netted more than $1 million on the trades, government lawyers alleged.

Another of the companies whose stock he allegedly traded was Momenta Pharmaceuticals Inc., a small biotechnology company from Cambridge, Mass., which was vying with two other companies to make a generic version of the blockbuster blood thinner Lovenox.

The FDA unexpectedly told the companies in November 2007 that they needed to do further testing, holding up the approval process. The SEC claimed Mr. Liang made $130,000 by trading shares a day before the news was made public, cutting Momenta's stock nearly in half.

When the drug was finally approved, in July 2010, Mr. Liang made another $85,000 buying shares three days ahead of the announcement, the SEC alleged.

Momenta's chief executive, Craig Wheeler, said the company had no comment, and hoped to soon review the SEC complaint.

SEC investigators don't believe Mr. Liang is part of a wider insider-trading ring, said a person familiar with the matter. But agency officials are checking to see if other FDA employees have been abusing market-moving information.

The FDA said Tuesday it is aware of the insider-trading charges. "The agency is cooperating fully with the authorities, and will review the situation and take any appropriate action," its written statement read.

Neither the Liangs nor their attorneys could be reached for comment.

The Justice Department said Mr. Liang's position at the FDA gave him access to the agency's password-protected tracking system used to manage drug applications and drug-safety issues. That allowed Mr. Liang to review documents as they passed through the FDA approval process.

Mr. Liang's last completed transaction in the alleged insider-trading scheme involved Clinical Data Inc., which received FDA approval in January for the antidepressant Viibryd.

According to court documents, officials with the Department of Health and Human Services' inspector general's office installed software on Mr. Liang's work computer that collected screen shots showing how he accessed the tracking system to follow Viibryd matters, including a document recommending approval of the drug.

Over several days, Mr. Liang bought more than 46,000 shares that he sold for a $380,000 profit after the drug was approved, the government alleged.

—Jean Eaglesham contributed to this article.
Write to Brent Kendall at brent.kendall@dowjones.com and Alicia Mundy at alicia.mundy@wsj.com
 


The Attorney General, Buddy Caldwell, just filled a suit agaist Roche labs , among other companies for defrauding the States Medicaid program for the poor.
Overcharging companies, off branded sales aids used, overcharges nearly 1 billion.

The Companies need to be taught a lesson and fined Billions.

The Roche family alone could pay the fine.

Americans, stand up and defend our Country from European trash!

This company (KV Pharma) has shown it is tops in the "crooked" category when it comes to ripping off people with medical problems. They took a $10 drug to $1500 without blinking a crooked eye!!!

http://seekingalpha.com/article/259085-kv-pharmaceuticals-under-federal-scrutiny-for-price-gouging
 




Well, the FDA who originally let these crooks gouge expectant mothers finally slapped them upside the head and KV lowered their ripoff prices.

I don't remember the company name but a friend from the pharma field told me a week ago that another small co did the same thing after the FDA gave them the right to rip off sick people. Is this a game the crooks from both sides are playing?
 


The Attorney General, Buddy Caldwell, just filled a suit agaist Roche labs , among other companies for defrauding the States Medicaid program for the poor.
Overcharging companies, off branded sales aids used, overcharges nearly 1 billion.

The Companies need to be taught a lesson and fined Billions.

The Roche family alone could pay the fine.

Americans, stand up and defend our Country from European trash!

Don't forget American crooks & trash!
 


Pharma should hold itself to a higher standard than other businesses. Sadly, it is worse. This has to be the most unethical, corrupt, disgusting industry on the planet. There is not enough regulation in the world that could force liars and cheaters to tell the truth. We are completely over-regulated and it makes absolutely no difference. Six or seven billion in fines is probably not enough. I have to wonder - where do all these big fines go? Not to the millions of people ripped off or dead, so where? I will tell you: to line the pockets of the people sent to protect us.

According to a recent news article the great Johnson & Johnson had to pay $70 million to settle civil AND CRIMINAL charges of bribing doctors in Europe and paying kickbacks to the Iriqui govt to illegally obtain business.

A fine upstanding and ethical US company huh?
 


According to a recent news article the great Johnson & Johnson had to pay $70 million to settle civil AND CRIMINAL charges of bribing doctors in Europe and paying kickbacks to the Iriqui govt to illegally obtain business.

A fine upstanding and ethical US company huh?

Its the cost of doing business.

Its so funny to hear about this shit, and there are still people in the organization that really believe that they are making a difference and that they actually work for a company that has values...

how stupid some people are.

Its just a paycheck dummies.
 


According to a recent news article the great Johnson & Johnson had to pay $70 million to settle civil AND CRIMINAL charges of bribing doctors in Europe and paying kickbacks to the Iriqui govt to illegally obtain business.

A fine upstanding and ethical US company huh?

Iriqui? Is that an Indian tribe?
 




According to a recent news article the great Johnson & Johnson had to pay $70 million to settle civil AND CRIMINAL charges of bribing doctors in Europe and paying kickbacks to the Iriqui govt to illegally obtain business.

A fine upstanding and ethical US company huh?

New on CP Wire: $1 Billion Whistleblower Lawsuit Brought Against Quest Diagnostics
Submitted by admin on Mon, 07/11/2011 - 11:47
A British businessman has filed a lawsuit against Quest Diagnostics, accusing the company of overcharging the US federal govt by at least $1 billion. Access article by clicking CP Wire on the navbar or by clicking CP Wire
.
 


Its the cost of doing business.

Its so funny to hear about this shit, and there are still people in the organization that really believe that they are making a difference and that they actually work for a company that has values...

how stupid some people are.

Its just a paycheck dummies.

Seems there are as many crooked pharma companies as there are banks,lol.
 


Seems there are as many crooked pharma companies as there are banks,lol.

That's a close one.

Banks still get the cake, with their fractional banking, where they can lend out $1000 for every $100 bucks they have in their possession.

Its a sick game these banks play on the public, charging high interest rates and creating a system of inflation for their benefit of course.

Its more reason not too work too hard in life for the Almighty Dollar, because it is not worth as much as you think...

and compared to peace of mind and quality of life, dollars are a distant 3rd.
 


Pharma should hold itself to a higher standard than other businesses. Sadly, it is worse. This has to be the most unethical, corrupt, disgusting industry on the planet. There is not enough regulation in the world that could force liars and cheaters to tell the truth. We are completely over-regulated and it makes absolutely no difference. Six or seven billion in fines is probably not enough. I have to wonder - where do all these big fines go? Not to the millions of people ripped off or dead, so where? I will tell you: to line the pockets of the people sent to protect us.

One posters view on big pharma and current drug shortages:
SonofCJ writes:
Despite massive profits, the pharma companies have spent more on dividends and lobbying Congress for even more, instead of their production facilities in foreign countries, which can't pass even the occasional cursory FDA inspection.

Johnson and Johnson specializes in recalls, not drug manufacturing. Pharma companies give private enterprise a bad name. Greedy, obscenely profitable and incompetent.
 


And another posters view on present drug shortages:

FrayedGenes writes:
I think Big Pharma is the OPEC of healthcare. Create a shortage - that'll get their attention. And it will get the population accustomed to paying higher prices.

The prices might go up first in Canada because they get their pharmaceuticals cheaper than we do in the USA. That'll help stop people from going to Canada for their meds. Congress isn't strong enough to do ALL the bidding of Big Pharma, so Big Pharma has to take matters into their own hands.

The primary purpose of Big Pharma for existing is to generate profits for shareholders. Having met their primary purpose, their second great purpose is to generate enough profits to pay big executive bonuses and make their selective donations to congressional campaigns. If there is still profit remaining after these needs are met, they can make grants to Universities, who actually do the research and development for new meds.

Those of you wishing and hoping for cures to things that kill us, such as cancer and diabetes, can just keep wishing and hoping. Big Pharma has no intention of curing disease. They want to help you manage your disease; not cure it. There's no profit in healthy patients. Just watch the myriad of TV commercials touting the many benefits of drugs such as for "restless leg syndrome", "indigestion" and "high blood pressure". All the drugs directed at issues such as these only treat the symptoms, never the cause.

The drug shortage is the tip of the iceberg. More and more "issues" will arise as the government gets closer to helping you to manage your health care. This is just my personal opinion. God help us!
 




No truer words written.



October 2, 2011
11:54 a.m.
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Reply to this post
SonofCJ writes:
The Pharmaceutical Industry's mascot should be a vulture setting in a tree.

An example is a new lupus drug approved by the FDA. In the U.S., it costs $35,000 per treatment regimen, which is just one of a long line of massively priced new drugs that are approved in the United States.

Yes, the Pharma company offered the same drug in the U.K. for $15,000 (in equivalent pounds sterling) and a panel of doctors did not add it to the formulary because 1) its effectiveness was marginal, if any existed at all, and 2) the cost was completely out of line with the limited effectiveness.

When was the last time that a Pharma company in the U.S. denied access to the market because their product was ineffective and too expensive? Never, because we exist to be harvested by Big Pharma, Big Banks, Big Insurance, Big Military Contractors.

The GOP has proposed a bill that would only require the Pharma company to prove that their new drug is safe, NOT that it is effective, before it could be marketed.

The greatness of this country has come to be measured by how profitable our largest companies are. In the mean time, the average citizen drops further and further down the economic ladder.

2011, increasing corporate profits, increasing cash reserves, increasing poverty. That is the real America....but is it the one we want?
 


October 2, 2011
11:54 a.m.
Suggest removal
Reply to this post
SonofCJ writes:
The Pharmaceutical Industry's mascot should be a vulture setting in a tree.

An example is a new lupus drug approved by the FDA. In the U.S., it costs $35,000 per treatment regimen, which is just one of a long line of massively priced new drugs that are approved in the United States.

Yes, the Pharma company offered the same drug in the U.K. for $15,000 (in equivalent pounds sterling) and a panel of doctors did not add it to the formulary because 1) its effectiveness was marginal, if any existed at all, and 2) the cost was completely out of line with the limited effectiveness.

When was the last time that a Pharma company in the U.S. denied access to the market because their product was ineffective and too expensive? Never, because we exist to be harvested by Big Pharma, Big Banks, Big Insurance, Big Military Contractors.

The GOP has proposed a bill that would only require the Pharma company to prove that their new drug is safe, NOT that it is effective, before it could be marketed.

The greatness of this country has come to be measured by how profitable our largest companies are. In the mean time, the average citizen drops further and further down the economic ladder.

2011, increasing corporate profits, increasing cash reserves, increasing poverty. That is the real America....but is it the one we want?


Suit accuses pharma companies of Medicaid price-data manipulation
By David Sell

Inquirer Staff Writer

A former executive with a pharmaceutical distributors trade group alleges in a federal whistle-blower lawsuit that 13 drug companies manipulated price data to reduce the amounts they owed federal and state governments for the taxpayer-funded Medicaid program that serves the poor.

The number of companies named as defendants has fluctuated. The original filing accused 30 companies. The fourth and most recent version of the complaint, unsealed this week in Philadelphia, accused 13 companies: Allergan, Amgen, AstraZeneca, Biogen, Bradley, Cephalon, Eisai, Genzyme, Mallinckrodt, NovoNordisk, Reliant, Sunovion, and Upsher-Smith.

The plaintiff's attorneys suggested the companies' actions cost taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars. "We have every reason to believe this continues today," said Dan Miller, one of the attorneys.

Ronald J. Streck, former president and chief executive officer of the Healthcare Distribution Management Association, filed his original complaint in October 2008. Medicaid relies on manufacturers to self-report price data. Streck, of suburban Washington, had contracts between manufacturers and distributors that show price manipulation, Miller said. He added that Streck was brushed off by the companies when he brought the problem to their attention.

The U.S. Attorney's Office in Philadelphia notified the court earlier this year that it would not prosecute the case at this time. A spokeswoman declined to say why. As a whistle-blower, Streck could get money from a civil case if a jury ruled against the companies.

"We don't know why they didn't intervene," said attorney Jacob Goldberg, also representing Streck.

Eisai spokeswoman Lynn Kenney said: "We don't believe there is merit to this claim." Amgen spokeswoman Christine Regan said, "Amgen plans to vigorously defend against the allegations and takes its price reporting obligations to all government entities very seriously." Spokesmen for the other companies either declined comment or could not be reached.



Read more: http://www.philly.com/philly/business/131370778.html#ixzz1aFTZQZ6A
Watch sports videos you won't find anywhere else
 


October 2, 2011
11:54 a.m.
Suggest removal
Reply to this post
SonofCJ writes:
The Pharmaceutical Industry's mascot should be a vulture setting in a tree.

An example is a new lupus drug approved by the FDA. In the U.S., it costs $35,000 per treatment regimen, which is just one of a long line of massively priced new drugs that are approved in the United States.

Yes, the Pharma company offered the same drug in the U.K. for $15,000 (in equivalent pounds sterling) and a panel of doctors did not add it to the formulary because 1) its effectiveness was marginal, if any existed at all, and 2) the cost was completely out of line with the limited effectiveness.

When was the last time that a Pharma company in the U.S. denied access to the market because their product was ineffective and too expensive? Never, because we exist to be harvested by Big Pharma, Big Banks, Big Insurance, Big Military Contractors.

The GOP has proposed a bill that would only require the Pharma company to prove that their new drug is safe, NOT that it is effective, before it could be marketed.

The greatness of this country has come to be measured by how profitable our largest companies are. In the mean time, the average citizen drops further and further down the economic ladder.

2011, increasing corporate profits, increasing cash reserves, increasing poverty. That is the real America....but is it the one we want?


Lets throw these slimeball ,price gouging, thieves preying on sick poeple in jail now!!!!

http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20111005-715113.html
 


October 2, 2011
11:54 a.m.
Suggest removal
Reply to this post
SonofCJ writes:
The Pharmaceutical Industry's mascot should be a vulture setting in a tree.

An example is a new lupus drug approved by the FDA. In the U.S., it costs $35,000 per treatment regimen, which is just one of a long line of massively priced new drugs that are approved in the United States.

Yes, the Pharma company offered the same drug in the U.K. for $15,000 (in equivalent pounds sterling) and a panel of doctors did not add it to the formulary because 1) its effectiveness was marginal, if any existed at all, and 2) the cost was completely out of line with the limited effectiveness.

When was the last time that a Pharma company in the U.S. denied access to the market because their product was ineffective and too expensive? Never, because we exist to be harvested by Big Pharma, Big Banks, Big Insurance, Big Military Contractors.

The GOP has proposed a bill that would only require the Pharma company to prove that their new drug is safe, NOT that it is effective, before it could be marketed.

The greatness of this country has come to be measured by how profitable our largest companies are. In the mean time, the average citizen drops further and further down the economic ladder.

2011, increasing corporate profits, increasing cash reserves, increasing poverty. That is the real America....but is it the one we want?

Speaking of vultures, an article in the Nov. 12th issue of Fortune magazine basically calls the companies who make Opioids (Oxycontin,etc) vultures on the American public. The article "Painful Medicine" really slams Purdue Pharma.
 


I knew pharma was crooked. I took a job with a big box chain for some extra Christmas money working nights and weekends. It is brutal. Don't ask questions and run for like a dog for minimum wage. It is shame to see good people working 2-3 just to survive and mean-survive.

It is food, shelter and fuel,if, they have car. No health care, retirement, nothing. They split shifts and schedule staff to the second. They generally give 5 hour shifts and out the door.
That way they owe them nothing and do not have to provide lunch.

Mean while the top 5% of the company make huge money with all the trimmings. Select your parents wisely.
 



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