November 2, 2009
LANSING
- Attorney General Mike Cox today announced that his office has
filed a Medicaid fraud suit against pharmaceutical manufacturer Amgen,
purchasing group International Nephrology Network (INN), and wholesaler ASD
Healthcare, accusing each of defrauding Michigan's Medicaid program and offering
illegal kickbacks to promote Aranesp, Amgen's anemia drug.
The complaint alleges the companies knowingly offered illegal
kickbacks to medical providers to increase sales of the drug, including offering
free Aranesp product to medical providers and encouraging them to bill third
party payers such as Michigan's Medicaid program. Amgen is also alleged to have
conspired with INN and ASD Healthcare to offer illegal kickbacks to medical
providers to attend all-expense paid meetings with the intention of increasing
sales of Aranesp and luring new providers away from competitor drugs.
As a result of the illegal inducements, the complaint asserts the
companies caused medical providers to falsely certify to Michigan's Medicaid
program that the providers were in compliance with federal and state
anti-kickback statutes that prohibit bribes to medical providers. Because
compliance with these laws is a condition of payment by the Medicare and
Medicaid programs, the defendants allegedly caused thousands of ineligible
claims for Aranesp to be paid and millions of dollars in damages to Michigan and
other state's Medicaid programs. The exact amount of damages in Michigan has
not yet been determined.
"Michigan families deserve to know that every one of their tax
dollars is being used appropriately," said Cox. "By rooting out Medicaid fraud
we are ensuring these dollars are being spent as they were intended, to help
those who need it most."
Cox teamed up with 14 other states in the action, joining a
whistleblower suit filed in the United States District Court for the District of
Massachusetts in 2006 (Docket No. 06-10972), which remained under seal while the
federal and state governments investigated the allegations brought by a former
Amgen sales and marketing professional. The United States Department of Justice
continues to investigate these allegations.
The case is being handled by the Michigan Attorney General's
Health Care Fraud Division. The multi-state investigation was coordinated by a
team appointed by the National Association of Medicaid Fraud Control Units that
includes attorneys, investigators and auditors from New York, Massachusetts,
Michigan, and California working in coordination with the ongoing federal
investigation.
Other states participating in the suit include California,
Delaware, the District of Columbia, Florida, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana,
Louisiana, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Hampshire, New York, Tennessee, and
Virginia.
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