03 May Fentanyl: Billionaire drug company founder guilty of bribing doctors to prescribe dangerous opioid
A billionaire drug company boss has been found guilty of bribing doctors to prescribe a highly addictive and dangerous painkiller, in a first criminal conviction of a pharmaceuticals chief executive over the opioid epidemic.
A jury in Boston found John Kapoor, the 75-year-old founder of Insys, and four colleagues guilty of defrauding insurance companies by misleading them into paying for a spray form of fentanyl, a drug that is 100 times more potent than morphine and 50 times stronger than heroin.
Mr Kapoor directed a scheme to bribe doctors to prescribe the spray, branded as Subsys, to patients that did not need it. Prosecutors said that helped to fuel the opioid epidemic and cost lives.
“These patients were used. Their pain was exploited,” US attorney Nathaniel Yeager told the court. “The decisions, the money, the strategy came from the top.”
Mr Kapoor’s company paid doctors more than $1m speak at sham events ostensibly promoting Subsys. He now faces up to 20 years in prison.
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A soldier burns an illegal opium plantation near Pueblo Viejo in the Sierra Madre del Sur, in the southern state of Guerrero, Mexico
Reuters
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Illegal opium plantation burning
Reuters
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Poppy farmer Nieves Garcia reacts next to her husband, “We are not drug traffickers, we want a dignified life,” said Garcia, who has grown poppies since she was a child. “My kids have left this place because there’s no way of getting ahead.”
Reuters
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Soldiers cut opium poppies as they destroy a field of illegal plantation
Reuters
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Clouds over the Sierra Madre del Sur
Reuters
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Poppy farmer Francisco Santiago Clemente walks with his gun on his back in a corn field
Reuters
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Opium poppies burn after being set on fire to by the army
Reuters
8/20
Soldiers arrive at the area where they found an illegal opium plantation
Reuters
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Poppy farmer Santiago Sanchez holds opium paste
Reuters
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Soldiers unload their weapons at the camp near the area where they found an illegal opium plantation
Reuters
11/20
A soldier burns an illegal opium plantatio
Reuters
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A child sits on a sidewalk in Santa Cruz Yucucani
Reuters
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Soldiers destroy a field of illegal opium plantation
Reuters
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A woman tends to her opium poppy plant outside her house
Reuters
15/20
A soldier waves to locals near the area
Reuters
16/20
A soldier stands near residents as he arrives at the area where they found an illegal opium plantation
Reuters
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Soldiers camp near the area where they found an illegal opium plantation
Reuters
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Soldiers patrol the area of Pueblo Viejo
Reuters
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A soldier burns an illegal opium plantation near Pueblo Viejo
Reuters
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Soldiers cut opium poppies
Reuters
1/20
A soldier burns an illegal opium plantation near Pueblo Viejo in the Sierra Madre del Sur, in the southern state of Guerrero, Mexico
Reuters
2/20
Illegal opium plantation burning
Reuters
3/20
Poppy farmer Nieves Garcia reacts next to her husband, “We are not drug traffickers, we want a dignified life,” said Garcia, who has grown poppies since she was a child. “My kids have left this place because there’s no way of getting ahead.”
Reuters
4/20
Soldiers cut opium poppies as they destroy a field of illegal plantation
Reuters
5/20
Clouds over the Sierra Madre del Sur
Reuters
6/20
Poppy farmer Francisco Santiago Clemente walks with his gun on his back in a corn field
Reuters
7/20
Opium poppies burn after being set on fire to by the army
Reuters
8/20
Soldiers arrive at the area where they found an illegal opium plantation
Reuters
9/20
Poppy farmer Santiago Sanchez holds opium paste
Reuters
10/20
Soldiers unload their weapons at the camp near the area where they found an illegal opium plantation
Reuters
11/20
A soldier burns an illegal opium plantatio
Reuters
12/20
A child sits on a sidewalk in Santa Cruz Yucucani
Reuters
13/20
Soldiers destroy a field of illegal opium plantation
Reuters
14/20
A woman tends to her opium poppy plant outside her house
Reuters
15/20
A soldier waves to locals near the area
Reuters
16/20
A soldier stands near residents as he arrives at the area where they found an illegal opium plantation
Reuters
17/20
Soldiers camp near the area where they found an illegal opium plantation
Reuters
18/20
Soldiers patrol the area of Pueblo Viejo
Reuters
19/20
A soldier burns an illegal opium plantation near Pueblo Viejo
Reuters
20/20
Soldiers cut opium poppies
Reuters
Fentanyl is only approved in the US as a medication to alleviate cancer pain but Insys marketed it via a network of doctors to a much wider and more lucrative market.
Mr Kapoor’s lawyers acknowledged that Insys paid doctors but argued that he believed this was part of a legitimate discussion about the benefits of fentanyl spray.
As part of its sales tactics Insys produced a rap video for its sales staff describing ways to boost sales featuring a large bottle of Subsys including the line, “I got new patients, and I got a lot of ’em.”
During the trial, witnesses testified that an Insys regional sales rep who had worked as a stripper gave a lap dance to a doctor in a nightclub as part of efforts to persuade him to prescribe Subsys.
Aggressive marketing helped to rapidly boost sales of Subsys to half a billion dollars in 2017, from $14m five years earlier.
Drug manufacturers, distributors and pharmaceutical firms are facing hundreds of lawsuits over the costs of a crisis estimated to have killed more than 400,000 people over two decades.
Mr Kapoor and his co-defendants, former Insys executives and managers Michael Gurry, Richard Simon, Sunrise Lee and Joseph Rowan, deny wrongdoing, and indicated that they planned to appeal.
“Dr. Kapoor is disappointed in the verdict, as are we,” Beth Wilkinson, Mr Kapoor’s lead attorney, said in a statement. “Four weeks of jury deliberations confirm that this was far from an open-and-shut case.”
Prosecutors said the case was part of the US government’s effort to prosecute those deemed responsible for fuelling a nationwide epidemic of addiction to prescription painkillers.
“This is a landmark prosecution that vindicated the public’s interest in stanching the flow of opioids into our homes and streets,” US Attorney Andrew Lelling said in a statement.
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