Sunday, May 26, 2024
ADVT 
International

John Kapoor, Rags-To-Riches Indian Billionaire, In The Eye Of US Opioid Scandal

IANS, 29 Jan, 2019 09:27 PM
  • John Kapoor, Rags-To-Riches Indian Billionaire, In The Eye Of US Opioid Scandal

An India-born onetime billionaire and founder of a drug company went on trial in the US along with four others on charges of paying doctors millions of dollars in bribes to lure them into prescribing a highly addictive opioid painkiller meant solely for cancer patients.


John Kapoor, 75, plotted to bribe doctors across the country to prescribe a fentanyl spray in order to outshine competitors and line his own pockets, a federal prosecutor told jurors as the trial opened Monday in the District Court in Boston.


Assistant US Attorney David Lazarus said Kapoor was so determined to make his Insys Therapeutics Inc a success that he turned it into a "criminal enterprise" to get the powerful painkiller in the hands of more patients, WGBH, a public radio station in Boston, reported.


"This is not a complicated case. It's a case about greed — about greed and its consequences — and what happens when you put profits over people," Lazarus said at the closely-watched trial.


Kapoor is the highest-level pharmaceutical figure to face trial amid the opioid epidemic that's claiming thousands of lives every year.


His lawyers say Insys is not responsible for the drug crisis, noting that its medication makes up a small fraction of the prescription opioid market.

 


Kapoor and four other former employees of the Chandler, Arizona-based company, are accused of paying doctors millions of dollars in bribes and kickbacks in order to boost sales for Subsys, which is meant for cancer patients with severe pain.


The bribes were paid in the form of fees for sham speaking events that were advertised as educational opportunities for other doctors, prosecutors allege.


Insys adjusted payments based on how many prescriptions doctors wrote, misrepresented patients' medical histories to dupe insurers into covering Subsys for people without cancer, and even hired a woman who was a former stripper and escort service manager as a key sales executive.


Kapoor's lawyer told jurors that Insys was open about its speaker programme and even reported payments to doctors online. Paying doctors to teach others about a medication is not illegal and is a practice widely used by pharmaceutical companies, Attorney Beth Wilkinson said.


"There was nothing illegal about that and there was certainly nothing secret about that," Wilkinson said.


She said Kapoor was motivated not by greed but by a desire to help people dealing with excruciating pain. Kapoor watched his wife suffer from breast cancer and was driven to provide other patients with a chance at relief, she said.


"He did not want that to happen to anyone else," Wilkinson said.


Wilkinson also sought to discredit the government's key witnesses: two former Insys executives who pleaded guilty and are cooperating with prosecutors.


Former sales executive Alec Burlakoff was the one cutting "side deals" with doctors and is willing to say anything prosecutors want him to in order to help himself, she told jurors.


Kapoor and the other executives are charged with racketeering conspiracy, which carries up to 20 years in prison.


The trial could last more than three months.


Several Insys employees and doctors have already been convicted in other cases of participating in a kickback scheme. A number of states have sued the company, which also agreed last year to pay USD 150 million to settle a federal investigation into inappropriate sales.


Patients say in a slew of lawsuits filed against the company that they were given high doses of the potent narcotic even though they didn't have cancer, weren't warned of the risks and became addicted before suffering through withdrawal when they were cut off.


Prosecutors say Insys executives targeted doctors at pain clinics known for operating "pill mills" and pushed physicians to prescribe the drug at ever-increasing doses. Insys employees who managed to get doctors to prescribe higher doses were rewarded with bonuses, prosecutors say.


Kapoor "demanded success at all costs," Lazarus said.


And when the drug wasn't doing as well as Kapoor wanted, "he decided to get the success he demanded by breaking the law," he said.

MORE International ARTICLES

Sikh Man Gurinder Singh Khalsa Presented With Rosa Parks Trailblazer Award In United States

An Indian-American philanthropist and entrepreneur, Gurinder Singh Khalsa, has been presented with the prestigious Rosa Parks Trailblazer award for his campaign that forced US authorities to change their policy towards headgear of the Sikh community.

Sikh Man Gurinder Singh Khalsa Presented With Rosa Parks Trailblazer Award In United States

Tulsi Gabbard Apologises For Her Past Statement On LGBTQ

Tulsi Gabbard Apologises For Her Past Statement On LGBTQ
Gabbard, 37, the first Hindu elected to US Congress and a four-time Democratic lawmaker, last week announced she will run for President in 2020.

Tulsi Gabbard Apologises For Her Past Statement On LGBTQ

While US, Japan, China Are Ageing, India Getting Younger: Sushma Swaraj

While US, Japan, China Are Ageing, India Getting Younger: Sushma Swaraj
Sushma Swaraj said the Indian diaspora has dramatically changed the world's perception of Indians and our country.  

While US, Japan, China Are Ageing, India Getting Younger: Sushma Swaraj

Nepal’s Central Bank Bans Indian Currency Notes Above Rs 100

Nepal’s Central Bank Bans Indian Currency Notes Above Rs 100
Nepal’s central bank has banned the use of Indian currency notes of Rs 2,000, Rs 500 and Rs 200 denominations, a move that could affect Indian tourists visiting the Himalayan nation, where Indian currency is widely used.

Nepal’s Central Bank Bans Indian Currency Notes Above Rs 100

Kinnar Akhara, Group Of Transgender Saints, To Build Ashram In Prayagraj

The group, which had attended the Ujjain Kumbh in 2016, has been taking part in the holy baths at the Kumbh Mela this year along with the other akharas.

Kinnar Akhara, Group Of Transgender Saints, To Build Ashram In Prayagraj

Tulsi Gabbard Doesn't Regret 2017 Meeting With Assad

She was earlier criticized for voicing skepticism that the Assad regime was behind the chemical weapons attacks.    

Tulsi Gabbard Doesn't Regret 2017 Meeting With Assad