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Fern5827
October 20th 03, 08:56 PM
FWD

Subject: U.S. Prescription Drug System Under Attack
From: Earl Evleth
Date: 10/19/2003 12:00 PM Eastern Daylight Time
Message-id: >

I think it Is called "free enterprise market economics".

Guess whose contributing to the Bush campaign.

"Time to cash in, boys, Soprano Economics has arrived."


Earl

*****



washingtonpost.com

U.S. Prescription Drug System Under Attack
Multibillion-Dollar Shadow Market Is Growing Stronger

By Gilbert M. Gaul and Mary Pat Flaherty
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, October 19, 2003; Page A01

First of five articles

For half a century Americans could boast of the world's safest, most tightly
regulated system for distributing prescription drugs. But now that system is
undercut by a growing illegal trade in pharmaceuticals, fed by criminal
profiteers, unscrupulous wholesalers, rogue Internet sites and foreign
pharmacies.

In the past few years, middlemen have siphoned off growing numbers of
popular and lifesaving drugs and diverted them into a multibillion-dollar
shadow market. Crooks have introduced counterfeit pharmaceuticals into the
mainstream drug chain. Fast-moving operators have hawked millions of doses
of narcotics over the Internet.

The result too often is pharmaceutical roulette for millions of unsuspecting
Americans. Cancer patients receive watered-down drugs. Teenagers overdose on
narcotics ordered online. AIDS clinics get fake HIV medicines.

Normally, drugs follow a simple route. Manufacturers sell them to one of the
Big Three national wholesalers -- Cardinal Health Inc., McKesson Corp. and
AmerisourceBergen -- which sell to drugstores, hospitals or doctors offices.
Regulators and industry officials have long considered this straightforward
chain to be the gold standard.

The shadow market exploits gaps in state and federal regulations to corrupt
this system, creating a wide-open drug bazaar that endangers public health.
A yearlong investigation by The Washington Post has found:

€ Networks of middlemen, felons and other opportunists operating out of
storefronts and garages fraudulently obtain deeply discounted medicines
intended for nursing homes and hospices. The diverters have stored drugs in
U-Hauls and car trunks in blazing heat, stuffed them in plastic sandwich
bags and traded them in a daisy chain of transactions with no purpose except
to enrich the traders. Those drugs are ultimately sold to unwitting
patients.

€ The diverters pave the way for counterfeiters who use pill-punching
machines and special inks to produce near-perfect copies of the most popular
and expensive drugs. Some fakes have passed undetected through wholesalers
to the shelves of retail pharmacies.

€ Pharmaceutical peddlers take advantage of lax regulations to move millions
of prescription drugs into the United States from Canada, Mexico and
elsewhere. Overwhelmed customs workers inspect less than 1 percent of an
estimated 2 million packages containing medicine shipped into the country
each year. Virtually all of those shipments are illegal, yet the Food and
Drug Administration fails to enforce its own import regulations, saying it
lacks the resources to intercept the illegal packages.

€ Rogue medical merchants set up Internet pharmacies that serve as pipelines
for narcotics, selling to drug abusers and others who never see doctors in
person or undergo tests. The sellers move tens of millions of doses of
hydrocodone, Xanax, Valium, Ritalin, OxyContin and other controlled
substances. Scores of customers have become addicted, overdosed or died.

The shadow market, which includes both legal and illegal operators, has
grown rapidly yet received little public attention.

Isolated problems nationwide have attracted the interest of some state and
federal prosecutors and resulted in lawsuits. But the increasing recalls of
tainted medicines, overdoses on Internet-bought drugs and cross-border
pharmaceutical trade are part of a larger pattern. Taken together, the worst
elements of the shadow market constitute a new form of organized crime that
now threatens public health.

In St. Charles, Mo., Maxine Blount, a 61-year-old woman with advanced breast
cancer, received a diluted drug distributed to her local drugstore. "It
makes you angry," she said in an interview last year. "It shakes your faith.
It saps strength you need to live." She died of her cancer a month after the
interview.

In La Mesa, Calif., Ryan T. Haight, 18, died in his bedroom of an overdose
after taking narcotics obtained on the Internet.

In Sacramento, James Lewis, 47, shopped the world for painkillers that
flowed unimpeded from pharmacies in South Africa, Thailand and Spain. His
wife discovered him dead of an overdose on the living room couch.

These victims are emblematic of the dangers that occur when profiteering and
cowboy criminality invade the nation's drug distribution system.

The shadow market takes advantage of technology, global trade, vast
disparities in pharmaceutical prices, the explosive growth of enticing new
miracle drugs and the self-medicating habits of an aging baby-boom
population. It extends from small, backroom operations to buck-raking
Internet pharmacies to the warehouses of the nation's largest drug
distributors.

Diverters reap millions illegally by buying drugs at a discount to sell to
secondary wholesalers, which then sell them to other distributors,
including the Big Three wholesalers that supply most major hospitals and
chain stores. The Big Three risk buying from these secondary sources because
they can get drugs more cheaply than if they bought them directly from
manufacturers. In some cases, the drugs have turned out to be diverted,
diluted or counterfeited.

William K. Hubbard, senior associate FDA commissioner, stressed that the
U.S. drug distribution system is the safest in the world. "People can have a
high degree of confidence," he said in an interview.

Yet he acknowledged that in recent months the FDA has been overwhelmed by
illegal imports from Canada and offshore pharmacies. The agency also had to
apologize to Congress in June for releasing a quarantined shipment of fake
Viagra to consumers. And the FDA is now scrambling to keep up with a rise in
drug counterfeiting.

Phony medicines have surfaced in pharmacies from Florida to Hawaii,
including tens of thousands of doses discovered in warehouses of the Big
Three wholesalers.

Last summer, nearly 200,000 tablets of Lipitor, the world's best-selling
cholesterol-lowering medication, was found to be counterfeit and recalled by
a small Missouri wholesaler. Some of the pills had already reached Rite Aid
and CVS pharmacies.

"This is hurting people," said Thomas E. Getz, a federal prosecutor in
Cleveland who has pursued pharmaceutical fraud. "It's one thing to ask
people to choose between name brand or generic," he said. It's another to
"choose a bottle that came from a manufacturer or one that's been sitting in
a hot semi for three weeks."

In the past year, a Texas wholesaler bought cancer drugs that had been
spirited out in backpacks and, at least once, in a fast-food bag, from
Methodist Hospital and the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center
in Houston. A drugstore in Scotch Plains, N.J., sold insulin and brand-name
drugs stolen from Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. Pharmacies
and wholesalers from Miami to Los Angeles sold medicines that Medicaid fraud
rings bought on the streets.

The growth of the shadow market comes as Americans are spending more money
than ever on prescription drugs. Between 1994 and 2001, the number of
prescriptions swelled to 3.1 billion -- a nearly 50 percent increase. In
nearly the same period, sales soared from $61 billion to $155 billion.

There were several reasons for this. Americans took advantage of new and
better medicines, including a range of preventive drugs. Insurers promoted
the use of prescription drugs to keep down the number of more expensive
hospital stays. Employers picked up a large share of drug costs. And
advertising by drug manufacturers drove demand, especially for lifestyle
drugs such as Viagra and Celebrex.

"Americans want their Lipitor," said David B. Nash, a physician who directs
the Office of Health Policy and Clinical Outcomes at Thomas Jefferson
University in Philadelphia. "They want to be able to take it on their way to
McDonald's."
The Drug 'Diverters'


At the center of the shadow market are the "diverters" -- armies of
little-known brokers who illegally gain control of discounted medicines
intended for nursing homes, hospices and AIDS clinics. Those drugs are
supposed to be sold only to small pharmacies that serve those facilities
and have no retail business. In return for favorable prices from drug
manufacturers -- as much as 80 percent off -- the pharmacies must enter into
contracts pledging not to resell those drugs on the open market. For that
reason, they are also known as "closed-door pharmacies."

But criminals often hide behind those closed doors.

An examination of numerous court filings shows that drug diverters from
Florida to North Dakota to California have set up hundreds of institutional
pharmacies, buying billions of dollars' worth of prescription drugs. In some
cases, the diverters get their own licenses in states where regulation is
lax. In other instances, they use straw men to front for them. In still
others, the diverters bribe owners of closed-door pharmacies to order drugs
for them.

Often, fraudulent closed-door pharmacies consist of little more than a desk,
a fax machine and a few shelves. Yet they place excessively large orders
with drug manufacturers.

Anthony Rizzo, who owned a small drugstore in Jamestown, N.Y., obtained
millions of dollars in discounted drugs by claiming to serve nursing homes
with 4,100 beds. In fact, he served none, court records show. "In an ideal
world, the volume of his orders should have raised red flags, but everyone
was too happy to be making a buck," said John E. Rogowski, who prosecuted
Rizzo, now in prison.

The diverters take the discounted drugs, mark up the prices and rapidly move
them to small wholesalers who add another markup and sell to other
wholesalers. In some cases, pharmaceuticals may change hands six or more
times, going from state to state.

No one knows how big the drug diversion market is. State and federal
investigators say losses easily amount to billions of dollars annually.

If Jesse James were alive, "he wouldn't make his money robbing banks," said
Terrell Vermillion, who oversees criminal investigations for the FDA. "He
would have a cell phone, fax and mail drop and be an illicit-drug diverter."

One of the masters is Marty Rubin, a hulking 53-year-old with a penchant for
Las Vegas gambling tables. Rubin moved from Brooklyn to California with
hopes of pitching in the major leagues. When that did not happen, he became
a stock boy in a drugstore and found the business "he loved," his lawyer
later said.

His real business was fraud. Three times since 1989, Rubin has been caught
diverting medications. Federal cases in Phoenix, Kansas City, Mo., and Los
Angeles depict Rubin as the man behind pharmacies and wholesaling operations
throughout the West and Southwest that illegally moved $12 million worth of
drugs.

He has repeatedly apologized to judges and promised not to divert again.
Each time, he has broken his promise. Rubin, who declined requests for an
interview, is finishing up a five-year federal sentence.

As drugs are diverted, the integrity of the country's drug distribution
chain is imperiled, said Louis Ling, general counsel to the Nevada State
Board of Pharmacy. Diversion, he said, has "gone from being an embarrassing
nuisance to a dangerous piracy."
Many Licenses, Few Inspectors


Existing laws and regulations present few barriers to entry into the
wholesale drug market.

It can be harder to become licensed as a beautician than as a pharmaceutical
distributor. With a $700 permit fee and a $200 bond, a pair of Florida
manicurists got a license to sell intravenous drugs. An auto body shop owner
in Miami got a license to sell drugs in Maryland. Nevada awarded a license
to a 23-year-old former restaurant hostess to operate an Internet pharmacy
that specialized in narcotics.

"The problem is, just about anybody can get a license: 50 states, 50 sets of
rules, 50 places to venue shop," said Joe Riley, an FBI agent in Newark who
has investigated pharmaceuticals stolen in cargo heists. "And that's the
first thing that's thrown back once they're caught with stolen goods or
counterfeit drugs: 'Hey, the guy I bought from faxed me a copy of his
license.' "

Florida gave licenses to at least a half-dozen felons, records show. Two
states -- Georgia and Tennessee -- gave a wholesaler license to James R.
Suozzo of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., a convicted cocaine user with a long
history of heroin abuse, investigative records show. Suozzo's background
surfaced when he was arrested in February on suspicion of attempting to sell
adulterated Procrit, Epogen and Neupogen to another small wholesaler. His
attorney, Ty Terrell, declined to comment.

Nationwide, there are an estimated 6,500 small wholesalers, yet most states
have only a handful of inspectors. In some states, amusement park rides,
elevators and even dog kennels are inspected more frequently than drug
wholesalers.

Virginia has nine inspectors for 684 wholesalers; Maryland has seven for
632.

Maryland permits wholesalers to operate from private homes, which explains
how Ultra Medical Inc. is licensed at a buff-colored split-level with maroon
shutters on High Tor Hill Drive, a cul-de-sac in Columbia. The company Web
site advertises products for cancer, HIV and plasma.

Pauline Clarke answered the door recently and said she ships and receives
pharmaceuticals for Ultra Medical, whose president lives in Atlanta.

"I try not to keep the refrigerated stuff more than 24 hours," said Clarke,
who declined to allow a reporter inside.

Company president Sony Roy said in an phone interview from Atlanta that
Ultra Medical has only "two or three customers who buy from time to time."
The Web site is out of date, Roy said, and the company "is dwindling."

Nationwide, federal investigators cannot compensate for the outmanned state
regulators. The FDA has 170 criminal investigators who must stretch to cover
cases involving everything from spoiled food to herbal medicine to
complicated drugs.

In 1988, Congress attempted to stop diverters by passing the Prescription
Drug Marketing Act. The law required that wholesalers provide a piece of
paper -- similar to a car title -- disclosing all prior sales. The paper
trail, known as a pedigree, would allow each wholesaler to verify they were
buying from reputable sources.

But wholesalers objected to what they deemed to be burdensome paperwork and
said the new law would drive some smaller wholesalers out of business.

Small wholesalers fill gaps in rural and niche markets, said Amanda Forster,
spokeswoman for the Healthcare Distribution Management Association, a trade
group. The small wholesalers are part of a supply chain that is "incredibly
safe and secure."

On four occasions, wholesalers' protests caused the FDA to back off from
implementing the rule, leaving it in limbo for 15 years.

"It is not surprising, then, that some pharmaceutical wholesalers have
fought so hard and long to keep the federal rule in abeyance," a Florida
grand jury concluded earlier this year. "In essence, the wholesale industry
is fighting for the right to keep secret from their own customers the
history of the drugs that they're being sold."

Rep. John D. Dingell (D-Mich.), who pushed the original bill, said,
"Counterfeit drugs are becoming a bigger problem now than when the bill was
passed in 1988. The FDA clearly needs to do more."

When some states crack down, the problem shifts elsewhere.

In the late 1990s, Nevada tightened its licensing requirements and limited
the amount of product a wholesaler could sell to another wholesaler.
Nevada's number of licensed wholesalers plummeted from about 50 in 2002 to
eight this year.

But they merely moved across the state line, said Judi Nurse, supervising
inspector for the California Board of Pharmacy. "We have more of them now
than ever," she said. "I'm scrambling just to try to keep up."
The Big Three Drug Wholesalers


Three Fortune 500 companies -- Cardinal Health Inc. of Dublin, Ohio;
McKesson Corp. of San Francisco; and AmerisourceBergen of Chesterbrook, Pa.
-- dominate the drug wholesaling industry, with combined annual revenue of
$146 billion. They are known in the business as the Big Three.

The wholesale drug industry is characterized by high volumes and a
razor-thin profit margin of about 1 percent of revenue. If the large
wholesalers can purchase drugs for less than the manufacturer's price, the
spread goes straight to their bottom line.

The firms said they sometimes buy from smaller companies when reserves are
tight, a sudden need arises or special promotions produce better prices. All
three firms said they limit purchases from smaller wholesalers: McKesson, 1
percent; AmerisourceBergen, 2 percent; and Cardinal, 3 percent.

And all three said that since 2001 they have been buying cancer,
injectable and other drugs attractive to criminals only from manufacturers.
James Larkin, spokesman for McKesson, said the company does "rigorous due
diligence" on the small wholesalers.

But lawsuits and drug recalls show that deals with small wholesalers have
exposed the Big Three to counterfeit and diverted medications.

Since 2000, the large wholesalers have had to recall thousands of bottles of
counterfeit product. On occasion, the giants have sued small wholesalers,
alleging that they were the source of the bad drugs.

In 2000, AmerisourceBergen bought 52 bottles of counterfeit Retrovir, an HIV
medication, from a small Ohio wholesaler, Florida health inspectors said.
The bottles were found during a routine inspection in 2001 at
AmerisourceBergen's Orlando distribution center. By turning to the smaller
wholesaler rather than buying directly from the drug's manufacturer,
AmerisourceBergen saved about $8 per bottle on a product that costs nearly
$300 a bottle, sales records show.

The company paid a $50,000 fine in the Orlando case. In a letter to Florida
authorities, the company said that it "regrets that alleged counterfeit
Retrovir was received and distributed." The letter also said that "due to
the volume of product received daily," the company "is not able to inspect
each piece of product that is received."

In 1999, federal prosecutors in Las Vegas targeted Amerisource as part of a
broad investigation of illegal drug diversion in the Southwest. Working with
Fred Evans, a two-time felon, the FBI set up an undercover business known as
V.N. Chicago Inc. in Las Vegas. In seven months, V.N. bought $31.2 million
worth of deeply discounted drugs meant for hospices and nursing homes from
the Sacramento division of Amerisource. V.N. quickly diverted the drugs to
other smaller wholesalers, earning nearly $1 million in profit.

The FBI in Las Vegas shut down its investigation in February 2000 without
charging Amerisource or the other wholesalers. The case lay dormant for two
years until FDA and FBI agents in California took over the file.

In July, the U.S. attorney in Sacramento charged Robert Strusz, a sales
manager at Amerisource's distribution center there, with mail fraud. He
pleaded guilty in August and is cooperating with investigators.

Strusz had worked closely with Evans to arrange the sale of the discounted
drugs to V.N. Chicago. Strusz saw his bonus boosted by the sales and he also
received kickbacks, according to his plea agreement. A spokesman for
AmerisourceBergen said the diversion scheme stopped at Strusz, who declined
to comment.

The spokesman said the company became suspicious of Evans in January 2000
and stopped selling to him a month later.
'Golden Boy' Gets Caught


In the mid-1990s, David Dyck was known as the "golden boy" around Bindley
Western Industries Inc.'s drug distribution center in San Dimas, Calif.,
federal investigators said. Personable and charming, Dyck brought in
millions in sales and played a large role in making San Dimas one of the
huge wholesaler's most profitable hubs.

Dyck's job included recruiting business from the hundreds of closed-door
pharmacies in the Southern California-Las Vegas corridor. He took his job
an extra, illegal step, introducing those pharmacies to diverters.

Dyck was paid handsomely, court records show. He received approximately
$500,000, which he funneled through a shell company he set up in his
daughter's name, Santa Susanna Consultants Inc.

He was caught by a federal investigation. In 1999, he pleaded guilty to mail
fraud and began to cooperate. Nearly 18 months later, Bindley pleaded guilty
to conspiracy in federal court in Nevada and agreed to pay a record $20
million fine.

The San Dimas case was not the first time Bindley's name surfaced in drug
diversion. In 1989, the company pleaded guilty to mail fraud involving its
Atlanta distribution center and paid a $500,000 fine. Four Bindley managers,
including a top executive at headquarters in Indianapolis, also pleaded
guilty.

Bindley did not respond to a request for an interview. However, in a 2000
news release, company officials said they were "shocked" to learn of Dyck's
crimes.

Dyck, who now works for another California health care company, recently
said in an interview, "Believe me, I didn't do anything without the
knowledge of superiors. Do you think Bindley paid $20 million because I did
something wrong?"

© 2003 The Washington Post Company

Markasurus Probertasaurus
October 20th 03, 09:43 PM
The article mentions many medications, and you seem to mention just two, one
of which is not even mentioned in the article.

Do you have a problem with safe and effecitve treatment?

Do you think that because something is abused it shoudl be banned?





"Fern5827" > wrote in message
...
> FWD
>
> Subject: U.S. Prescription Drug System Under Attack
> From: Earl Evleth
> Date: 10/19/2003 12:00 PM Eastern Daylight Time
> Message-id: >
>
> I think it Is called "free enterprise market economics".
>
> Guess whose contributing to the Bush campaign.
>
> "Time to cash in, boys, Soprano Economics has arrived."
>
>
> Earl
>
> *****
>
>
>
> washingtonpost.com
>
> U.S. Prescription Drug System Under Attack
> Multibillion-Dollar Shadow Market Is Growing Stronger
>
> By Gilbert M. Gaul and Mary Pat Flaherty
> Washington Post Staff Writers
> Sunday, October 19, 2003; Page A01
>
> First of five articles
>
> For half a century Americans could boast of the world's safest, most
tightly
> regulated system for distributing prescription drugs. But now that system
is
> undercut by a growing illegal trade in pharmaceuticals, fed by criminal
> profiteers, unscrupulous wholesalers, rogue Internet sites and foreign
> pharmacies.
>
> In the past few years, middlemen have siphoned off growing numbers of
> popular and lifesaving drugs and diverted them into a multibillion-dollar
> shadow market. Crooks have introduced counterfeit pharmaceuticals into the
> mainstream drug chain. Fast-moving operators have hawked millions of doses
> of narcotics over the Internet.
>
> The result too often is pharmaceutical roulette for millions of
unsuspecting
> Americans. Cancer patients receive watered-down drugs. Teenagers overdose
on
> narcotics ordered online. AIDS clinics get fake HIV medicines.
>
> Normally, drugs follow a simple route. Manufacturers sell them to one of
the
> Big Three national wholesalers -- Cardinal Health Inc., McKesson Corp. and
> AmerisourceBergen -- which sell to drugstores, hospitals or doctors
offices.
> Regulators and industry officials have long considered this
straightforward
> chain to be the gold standard.
>
> The shadow market exploits gaps in state and federal regulations to
corrupt
> this system, creating a wide-open drug bazaar that endangers public
health.
> A yearlong investigation by The Washington Post has found:
>
> ? Networks of middlemen, felons and other opportunists operating out of
> storefronts and garages fraudulently obtain deeply discounted medicines
> intended for nursing homes and hospices. The diverters have stored drugs
in
> U-Hauls and car trunks in blazing heat, stuffed them in plastic sandwich
> bags and traded them in a daisy chain of transactions with no purpose
except
> to enrich the traders. Those drugs are ultimately sold to unwitting
> patients.
>
> ? The diverters pave the way for counterfeiters who use pill-punching
> machines and special inks to produce near-perfect copies of the most
popular
> and expensive drugs. Some fakes have passed undetected through wholesalers
> to the shelves of retail pharmacies.
>
> ? Pharmaceutical peddlers take advantage of lax regulations to move
millions
> of prescription drugs into the United States from Canada, Mexico and
> elsewhere. Overwhelmed customs workers inspect less than 1 percent of an
> estimated 2 million packages containing medicine shipped into the country
> each year. Virtually all of those shipments are illegal, yet the Food and
> Drug Administration fails to enforce its own import regulations, saying it
> lacks the resources to intercept the illegal packages.
>
> ? Rogue medical merchants set up Internet pharmacies that serve as
pipelines
> for narcotics, selling to drug abusers and others who never see doctors in
> person or undergo tests. The sellers move tens of millions of doses of
> hydrocodone, Xanax, Valium, Ritalin, OxyContin and other controlled
> substances. Scores of customers have become addicted, overdosed or died.
>
> The shadow market, which includes both legal and illegal operators, has
> grown rapidly yet received little public attention.
>
> Isolated problems nationwide have attracted the interest of some state and
> federal prosecutors and resulted in lawsuits. But the increasing recalls
of
> tainted medicines, overdoses on Internet-bought drugs and cross-border
> pharmaceutical trade are part of a larger pattern. Taken together, the
worst
> elements of the shadow market constitute a new form of organized crime
that
> now threatens public health.
>
> In St. Charles, Mo., Maxine Blount, a 61-year-old woman with advanced
breast
> cancer, received a diluted drug distributed to her local drugstore. "It
> makes you angry," she said in an interview last year. "It shakes your
faith.
> It saps strength you need to live." She died of her cancer a month after
the
> interview.
>
> In La Mesa, Calif., Ryan T. Haight, 18, died in his bedroom of an overdose
> after taking narcotics obtained on the Internet.
>
> In Sacramento, James Lewis, 47, shopped the world for painkillers that
> flowed unimpeded from pharmacies in South Africa, Thailand and Spain. His
> wife discovered him dead of an overdose on the living room couch.
>
> These victims are emblematic of the dangers that occur when profiteering
and
> cowboy criminality invade the nation's drug distribution system.
>
> The shadow market takes advantage of technology, global trade, vast
> disparities in pharmaceutical prices, the explosive growth of enticing new
> miracle drugs and the self-medicating habits of an aging baby-boom
> population. It extends from small, backroom operations to buck-raking
> Internet pharmacies to the warehouses of the nation's largest drug
> distributors.
>
> Diverters reap millions illegally by buying drugs at a discount to sell to
> secondary wholesalers, which then sell them to other distributors,
> including the Big Three wholesalers that supply most major hospitals and
> chain stores. The Big Three risk buying from these secondary sources
because
> they can get drugs more cheaply than if they bought them directly from
> manufacturers. In some cases, the drugs have turned out to be diverted,
> diluted or counterfeited.
>
> William K. Hubbard, senior associate FDA commissioner, stressed that the
> U.S. drug distribution system is the safest in the world. "People can have
a
> high degree of confidence," he said in an interview.
>
> Yet he acknowledged that in recent months the FDA has been overwhelmed by
> illegal imports from Canada and offshore pharmacies. The agency also had
to
> apologize to Congress in June for releasing a quarantined shipment of fake
> Viagra to consumers. And the FDA is now scrambling to keep up with a rise
in
> drug counterfeiting.
>
> Phony medicines have surfaced in pharmacies from Florida to Hawaii,
> including tens of thousands of doses discovered in warehouses of the Big
> Three wholesalers.
>
> Last summer, nearly 200,000 tablets of Lipitor, the world's best-selling
> cholesterol-lowering medication, was found to be counterfeit and recalled
by
> a small Missouri wholesaler. Some of the pills had already reached Rite
Aid
> and CVS pharmacies.
>
> "This is hurting people," said Thomas E. Getz, a federal prosecutor in
> Cleveland who has pursued pharmaceutical fraud. "It's one thing to ask
> people to choose between name brand or generic," he said. It's another to
> "choose a bottle that came from a manufacturer or one that's been sitting
in
> a hot semi for three weeks."
>
> In the past year, a Texas wholesaler bought cancer drugs that had been
> spirited out in backpacks and, at least once, in a fast-food bag, from
> Methodist Hospital and the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center
> in Houston. A drugstore in Scotch Plains, N.J., sold insulin and
brand-name
> drugs stolen from Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston.
Pharmacies
> and wholesalers from Miami to Los Angeles sold medicines that Medicaid
fraud
> rings bought on the streets.
>
> The growth of the shadow market comes as Americans are spending more money
> than ever on prescription drugs. Between 1994 and 2001, the number of
> prescriptions swelled to 3.1 billion -- a nearly 50 percent increase. In
> nearly the same period, sales soared from $61 billion to $155 billion.
>
> There were several reasons for this. Americans took advantage of new and
> better medicines, including a range of preventive drugs. Insurers promoted
> the use of prescription drugs to keep down the number of more expensive
> hospital stays. Employers picked up a large share of drug costs. And
> advertising by drug manufacturers drove demand, especially for lifestyle
> drugs such as Viagra and Celebrex.
>
> "Americans want their Lipitor," said David B. Nash, a physician who
directs
> the Office of Health Policy and Clinical Outcomes at Thomas Jefferson
> University in Philadelphia. "They want to be able to take it on their way
to
> McDonald's."
> The Drug 'Diverters'
>
>
> At the center of the shadow market are the "diverters" -- armies of
> little-known brokers who illegally gain control of discounted medicines
> intended for nursing homes, hospices and AIDS clinics. Those drugs are
> supposed to be sold only to small pharmacies that serve those facilities
> and have no retail business. In return for favorable prices from drug
> manufacturers -- as much as 80 percent off -- the pharmacies must enter
into
> contracts pledging not to resell those drugs on the open market. For that
> reason, they are also known as "closed-door pharmacies."
>
> But criminals often hide behind those closed doors.
>
> An examination of numerous court filings shows that drug diverters from
> Florida to North Dakota to California have set up hundreds of
institutional
> pharmacies, buying billions of dollars' worth of prescription drugs. In
some
> cases, the diverters get their own licenses in states where regulation is
> lax. In other instances, they use straw men to front for them. In still
> others, the diverters bribe owners of closed-door pharmacies to order
drugs
> for them.
>
> Often, fraudulent closed-door pharmacies consist of little more than a
desk,
> a fax machine and a few shelves. Yet they place excessively large orders
> with drug manufacturers.
>
> Anthony Rizzo, who owned a small drugstore in Jamestown, N.Y., obtained
> millions of dollars in discounted drugs by claiming to serve nursing homes
> with 4,100 beds. In fact, he served none, court records show. "In an ideal
> world, the volume of his orders should have raised red flags, but everyone
> was too happy to be making a buck," said John E. Rogowski, who prosecuted
> Rizzo, now in prison.
>
> The diverters take the discounted drugs, mark up the prices and rapidly
move
> them to small wholesalers who add another markup and sell to other
> wholesalers. In some cases, pharmaceuticals may change hands six or more
> times, going from state to state.
>
> No one knows how big the drug diversion market is. State and federal
> investigators say losses easily amount to billions of dollars annually.
>
> If Jesse James were alive, "he wouldn't make his money robbing banks,"
said
> Terrell Vermillion, who oversees criminal investigations for the FDA. "He
> would have a cell phone, fax and mail drop and be an illicit-drug
diverter."
>
> One of the masters is Marty Rubin, a hulking 53-year-old with a penchant
for
> Las Vegas gambling tables. Rubin moved from Brooklyn to California with
> hopes of pitching in the major leagues. When that did not happen, he
became
> a stock boy in a drugstore and found the business "he loved," his lawyer
> later said.
>
> His real business was fraud. Three times since 1989, Rubin has been caught
> diverting medications. Federal cases in Phoenix, Kansas City, Mo., and Los
> Angeles depict Rubin as the man behind pharmacies and wholesaling
operations
> throughout the West and Southwest that illegally moved $12 million worth
of
> drugs.
>
> He has repeatedly apologized to judges and promised not to divert again.
> Each time, he has broken his promise. Rubin, who declined requests for an
> interview, is finishing up a five-year federal sentence.
>
> As drugs are diverted, the integrity of the country's drug distribution
> chain is imperiled, said Louis Ling, general counsel to the Nevada State
> Board of Pharmacy. Diversion, he said, has "gone from being an
embarrassing
> nuisance to a dangerous piracy."
> Many Licenses, Few Inspectors
>
>
> Existing laws and regulations present few barriers to entry into the
> wholesale drug market.
>
> It can be harder to become licensed as a beautician than as a
pharmaceutical
> distributor. With a $700 permit fee and a $200 bond, a pair of Florida
> manicurists got a license to sell intravenous drugs. An auto body shop
owner
> in Miami got a license to sell drugs in Maryland. Nevada awarded a license
> to a 23-year-old former restaurant hostess to operate an Internet pharmacy
> that specialized in narcotics.
>
> "The problem is, just about anybody can get a license: 50 states, 50 sets
of
> rules, 50 places to venue shop," said Joe Riley, an FBI agent in Newark
who
> has investigated pharmaceuticals stolen in cargo heists. "And that's the
> first thing that's thrown back once they're caught with stolen goods or
> counterfeit drugs: 'Hey, the guy I bought from faxed me a copy of his
> license.' "
>
> Florida gave licenses to at least a half-dozen felons, records show. Two
> states -- Georgia and Tennessee -- gave a wholesaler license to James R.
> Suozzo of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., a convicted cocaine user with a long
> history of heroin abuse, investigative records show. Suozzo's background
> surfaced when he was arrested in February on suspicion of attempting to
sell
> adulterated Procrit, Epogen and Neupogen to another small wholesaler. His
> attorney, Ty Terrell, declined to comment.
>
> Nationwide, there are an estimated 6,500 small wholesalers, yet most
states
> have only a handful of inspectors. In some states, amusement park rides,
> elevators and even dog kennels are inspected more frequently than drug
> wholesalers.
>
> Virginia has nine inspectors for 684 wholesalers; Maryland has seven for
> 632.
>
> Maryland permits wholesalers to operate from private homes, which explains
> how Ultra Medical Inc. is licensed at a buff-colored split-level with
maroon
> shutters on High Tor Hill Drive, a cul-de-sac in Columbia. The company Web
> site advertises products for cancer, HIV and plasma.
>
> Pauline Clarke answered the door recently and said she ships and receives
> pharmaceuticals for Ultra Medical, whose president lives in Atlanta.
>
> "I try not to keep the refrigerated stuff more than 24 hours," said
Clarke,
> who declined to allow a reporter inside.
>
> Company president Sony Roy said in an phone interview from Atlanta that
> Ultra Medical has only "two or three customers who buy from time to time."
> The Web site is out of date, Roy said, and the company "is dwindling."
>
> Nationwide, federal investigators cannot compensate for the outmanned
state
> regulators. The FDA has 170 criminal investigators who must stretch to
cover
> cases involving everything from spoiled food to herbal medicine to
> complicated drugs.
>
> In 1988, Congress attempted to stop diverters by passing the Prescription
> Drug Marketing Act. The law required that wholesalers provide a piece of
> paper -- similar to a car title -- disclosing all prior sales. The paper
> trail, known as a pedigree, would allow each wholesaler to verify they
were
> buying from reputable sources.
>
> But wholesalers objected to what they deemed to be burdensome paperwork
and
> said the new law would drive some smaller wholesalers out of business.
>
> Small wholesalers fill gaps in rural and niche markets, said Amanda
Forster,
> spokeswoman for the Healthcare Distribution Management Association, a
trade
> group. The small wholesalers are part of a supply chain that is
"incredibly
> safe and secure."
>
> On four occasions, wholesalers' protests caused the FDA to back off from
> implementing the rule, leaving it in limbo for 15 years.
>
> "It is not surprising, then, that some pharmaceutical wholesalers have
> fought so hard and long to keep the federal rule in abeyance," a Florida
> grand jury concluded earlier this year. "In essence, the wholesale
industry
> is fighting for the right to keep secret from their own customers the
> history of the drugs that they're being sold."
>
> Rep. John D. Dingell (D-Mich.), who pushed the original bill, said,
> "Counterfeit drugs are becoming a bigger problem now than when the bill
was
> passed in 1988. The FDA clearly needs to do more."
>
> When some states crack down, the problem shifts elsewhere.
>
> In the late 1990s, Nevada tightened its licensing requirements and limited
> the amount of product a wholesaler could sell to another wholesaler.
> Nevada's number of licensed wholesalers plummeted from about 50 in 2002 to
> eight this year.
>
> But they merely moved across the state line, said Judi Nurse, supervising
> inspector for the California Board of Pharmacy. "We have more of them now
> than ever," she said. "I'm scrambling just to try to keep up."
> The Big Three Drug Wholesalers
>
>
> Three Fortune 500 companies -- Cardinal Health Inc. of Dublin, Ohio;
> McKesson Corp. of San Francisco; and AmerisourceBergen of Chesterbrook,
Pa.
> -- dominate the drug wholesaling industry, with combined annual revenue of
> $146 billion. They are known in the business as the Big Three.
>
> The wholesale drug industry is characterized by high volumes and a
> razor-thin profit margin of about 1 percent of revenue. If the large
> wholesalers can purchase drugs for less than the manufacturer's price, the
> spread goes straight to their bottom line.
>
> The firms said they sometimes buy from smaller companies when reserves are
> tight, a sudden need arises or special promotions produce better prices.
All
> three firms said they limit purchases from smaller wholesalers: McKesson,
1
> percent; AmerisourceBergen, 2 percent; and Cardinal, 3 percent.
>
> And all three said that since 2001 they have been buying cancer,
> injectable and other drugs attractive to criminals only from
manufacturers.
> James Larkin, spokesman for McKesson, said the company does "rigorous due
> diligence" on the small wholesalers.
>
> But lawsuits and drug recalls show that deals with small wholesalers have
> exposed the Big Three to counterfeit and diverted medications.
>
> Since 2000, the large wholesalers have had to recall thousands of bottles
of
> counterfeit product. On occasion, the giants have sued small wholesalers,
> alleging that they were the source of the bad drugs.
>
> In 2000, AmerisourceBergen bought 52 bottles of counterfeit Retrovir, an
HIV
> medication, from a small Ohio wholesaler, Florida health inspectors said.
> The bottles were found during a routine inspection in 2001 at
> AmerisourceBergen's Orlando distribution center. By turning to the smaller
> wholesaler rather than buying directly from the drug's manufacturer,
> AmerisourceBergen saved about $8 per bottle on a product that costs nearly
> $300 a bottle, sales records show.
>
> The company paid a $50,000 fine in the Orlando case. In a letter to
Florida
> authorities, the company said that it "regrets that alleged counterfeit
> Retrovir was received and distributed." The letter also said that "due to
> the volume of product received daily," the company "is not able to inspect
> each piece of product that is received."
>
> In 1999, federal prosecutors in Las Vegas targeted Amerisource as part of
a
> broad investigation of illegal drug diversion in the Southwest. Working
with
> Fred Evans, a two-time felon, the FBI set up an undercover business known
as
> V.N. Chicago Inc. in Las Vegas. In seven months, V.N. bought $31.2 million
> worth of deeply discounted drugs meant for hospices and nursing homes from
> the Sacramento division of Amerisource. V.N. quickly diverted the drugs to
> other smaller wholesalers, earning nearly $1 million in profit.
>
> The FBI in Las Vegas shut down its investigation in February 2000 without
> charging Amerisource or the other wholesalers. The case lay dormant for
two
> years until FDA and FBI agents in California took over the file.
>
> In July, the U.S. attorney in Sacramento charged Robert Strusz, a sales
> manager at Amerisource's distribution center there, with mail fraud. He
> pleaded guilty in August and is cooperating with investigators.
>
> Strusz had worked closely with Evans to arrange the sale of the discounted
> drugs to V.N. Chicago. Strusz saw his bonus boosted by the sales and he
also
> received kickbacks, according to his plea agreement. A spokesman for
> AmerisourceBergen said the diversion scheme stopped at Strusz, who
declined
> to comment.
>
> The spokesman said the company became suspicious of Evans in January 2000
> and stopped selling to him a month later.
> 'Golden Boy' Gets Caught
>
>
> In the mid-1990s, David Dyck was known as the "golden boy" around Bindley
> Western Industries Inc.'s drug distribution center in San Dimas, Calif.,
> federal investigators said. Personable and charming, Dyck brought in
> millions in sales and played a large role in making San Dimas one of the
> huge wholesaler's most profitable hubs.
>
> Dyck's job included recruiting business from the hundreds of closed-door
> pharmacies in the Southern California-Las Vegas corridor. He took his job
> an extra, illegal step, introducing those pharmacies to diverters.
>
> Dyck was paid handsomely, court records show. He received approximately
> $500,000, which he funneled through a shell company he set up in his
> daughter's name, Santa Susanna Consultants Inc.
>
> He was caught by a federal investigation. In 1999, he pleaded guilty to
mail
> fraud and began to cooperate. Nearly 18 months later, Bindley pleaded
guilty
> to conspiracy in federal court in Nevada and agreed to pay a record $20
> million fine.
>
> The San Dimas case was not the first time Bindley's name surfaced in drug
> diversion. In 1989, the company pleaded guilty to mail fraud involving its
> Atlanta distribution center and paid a $500,000 fine. Four Bindley
managers,
> including a top executive at headquarters in Indianapolis, also pleaded
> guilty.
>
> Bindley did not respond to a request for an interview. However, in a 2000
> news release, company officials said they were "shocked" to learn of
Dyck's
> crimes.
>
> Dyck, who now works for another California health care company, recently
> said in an interview, "Believe me, I didn't do anything without the
> knowledge of superiors. Do you think Bindley paid $20 million because I
did
> something wrong?"
>
> © 2003 The Washington Post Company
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>

Jeff
October 21st 03, 01:34 AM
"Markasurus Probertasaurus" > wrote in
message et...
> The article mentions many medications, and you seem to mention just two,
one
> of which is not even mentioned in the article.
>
> Do you have a problem with safe and effecitve treatment?
>
> Do you think that because something is abused it shoudl be banned?

Perhaps they should ban vitamins, minerals and diuretics, because they can
be abuse too. And acetaminophen and aspirin.

Jeff