CVS, America's Largest Pharmacy Chain, Pays Nearly $37 Million to Settle Federal...
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CVS, America's Largest Pharmacy Chain, Pays Nearly $37 Million to Settle
Federal and State Generic Drug Switching Charges
A COMPLETE NEWS RELEASE is available at http://www.pharmacyfraudsettlement.com
with filed documents, fraud allegations, applicable federal law, and
information about the qui tam whistleblower attorneys in this case.
CHICAGO, March 18 /PRNewswire/ -- CVS Corporation, which claims to be
America's largest pharmacy chain, has paid nearly $37 million to settle the
nation's first retail pharmacy drug switching case. CVS allegedly charged the
government up to 400 percent more for Medicaid patients by illegally changing
generic Zantac(R) prescriptions from tablets to higher priced capsules,
according to a multi-state complaint pursued by whistleblower attorneys
Michael I. Behn and Linda Wyetzner.
The federal Complaint and Settlement Agreement unsealed today in the
Northern District of Illinois stated that CVS garnered huge profits by evading
federal and state price ceilings when it unlawfully switched dosage forms.
Twenty-four states also entered separate settlements with the company, Behn
and Wyetzner said.
The generic form of the antacid Zantac, ranitidine, typically comes in
tablets. Given the drug's popularity, the government set maximum prices that
Medicaid would pay for tablets, while infrequently prescribed ranitidine
capsules had no maximum prices. When CVS switched patients' prescriptions
from ranitidine tablets to the expensive capsules, it cost taxpayers up to 400
percent more, according to court documents.
This CVS case was pursued under federal and state False Claims Acts for
more than five years by Illinois pharmacist Bernard Lisitza, the relator, and
his Chicago attorneys, Behn and Wyetzner. "Bernie's your old-fashioned corner
pharmacist who was alarmed by what he saw happening at CVS," said Behn. "It
would have been easy for him to look the other way and let CVS's switching
continue, at taxpayers' expense. Today's result is a vindication of a
dedicated pharmacist's concern for his patients and all Americans who
underwrite the costs of Medicaid."
The CVS case was spearheaded by "tough state prosecutors throughout the
country," Behn added. "They stand ready, willing and able to take on big new
cases. Lisa Madigan here in Illinois, Martha Coakley in Massachusetts, Marc
Dann in Ohio, and other state Attorneys General have made health care fraud
prosecutions a top priority, and this case is one of the results." Patrick
Keenan, Deputy Attorney General of Illinois, Robert Patten and Peter Clark,
Assistant Attorneys General of Massachusetts, and John Guthrie, Director of
the Ohio Attorney General's Health Care Fraud Unit led the multi-state team,
along with federal prosecutor Linda Wawzenski in Chicago.
The CVS $36.7 million settlement is another in a string of successful qui
tam whistleblower cases brought by Behn & Wyetzner, Chartered. In 2006, Behn
represented a pharmacist in a False Claims Act case against Omnicare for
switching drug dosage forms which resulted in a settlement of more than $50
million. In 2005, Behn represented the plaintiffs in the largest
whistleblower settlement in Illinois and the largest whistleblower settlement
in Chicago, in which Northrop Grumman paid $134 million to resolve claims
involving the B-2 "Stealth" bomber. Behn has also represented the American
Association of Retired Persons ("AARP") before the Illinois Supreme Court in
upholding the constitutionality of the Illinois False Claims Act.
In executing the Settlement Agreement, CVS denied liability, wrongdoing or
improper conduct.
Contact: Michael I. Behn, Esq. 312-629-0000
United States ex rel. Bernard Lisitza v. CVS Corporation, Northern
District of Illinois 03C00742C
SOURCE PRforLAW, LLC
Michael I. Behn, Esq., +1-312-629-0000
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