The Jerusalem Post

Teva investigat­es allegation­s by tipster of bribery in Romania

- • By JOEL SCHECTMAN

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Teva Pharmaceut­ical Industries is investigat­ing claims by an anonymous tipster that the company bribed state health-care workers in Romania to get them to prescribe its medication, a Teva spokeswoma­n said.

The internal probe, which has not previously been reported, comes as the Israel-based company prepares to settle US government investigat­ions into alleged bribery in several other countries.

The spokeswoma­n confirmed the internal investigat­ion was ongoing but declined to comment on the allegation­s.

Teva launched the probe in 2015 after an anonymous tipster accused the company of paying Romanian doctors speaking and consulting fees and covering their internatio­nal travel expenses.

In exchange, the providers recommende­d Teva’s multiple sclerosis drug Copaxone “to as many patients as possible,” the tipster wrote in a 2015 email sent to Teva’s chief executive and audit committee, which was reviewed by Reuters.

For example, to make the speaking payments appear legitimate, the tipster alleged, Teva provided one doctor a short pre-written PowerPoint presentati­on to read at health-care-provider meetings. The tipster did not specify the amount of the alleged payments.

Copaxone generated $1.1 billion in sales last quarter, 19% of Teva’s total revenue, the company said last month in a regulatory filing.

Many doctors in Romania are considered state employees.

The US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act makes it a crime to bribe foreign-government officials to win business regardless of whether the payments are made directly or through other means, such as extravagan­t entertainm­ent or footing the bill for internatio­nal travel.

Teva is traded on the New York Stock Exchange and also has US subsidiari­es.

It can sometimes be difficult for law enforcemen­t to determine which expenditur­es are illegal efforts to influence officials rather than legitimate ways to market a product.

The tipster told Teva the allegation­s were being sent to the Securities and Exchange Commission and the US Department of Justice. Spokesmen for the Justice Department and the SEC declined to comment.

The allegation­s were laid out by the tipster in a series of emails to Teva’s chief executive, audit committee and compliance staff between October 2015 and last month. The Teva spokeswoma­n confirmed that the company had received the emails, which prompted the company to open the internal investigat­ion.

Teva has been in “advanced discussion­s” with the Justice Department and the SEC to settle separate foreign bribery allegation­s regarding its practices in Russia, Mexico and Ukraine, the company said in a filing last month.

Teva has set aside $520 million for possible penalties, the filing said.

To address the issues, Teva said it has ended “problemati­c business relationsh­ips with third parties,” terminated relevant employees, overhauled management of some subsidiari­es and pulled out of several countries.

US authoritie­s have been cracking down on foreign corruption in the pharmaceut­ical industry. In September, GlaxoSmith­Kline agreed to pay the SEC $20m. to settle allegation­s that it had bribed health-care profession­als in China to increase sales. The company did not admit or deny wrongdoing.

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