Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Nominee- tied firm flagged in bribery

- ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON — A medical device company in which U. S. Rep. Tom Price purchased stock last year has faced years of legal problems and agreed this month to a $ 17 million Justice Department criminal penalty in a foreign bribery case.

Democrats this week challenged the Georgia Republican, who is President- elect Donald Trump’s pick for health secretary, on his investment­s and potential conflict of interest.

Among the companies at the center of the debate is Zimmer Biomet, a manufactur­er of orthopedic and dental implant devices.

The Indiana- based company agreed to pay $ 17.4 million to resolve allegation­s that it had schemed to bribe Mexican government officials through a third- party distributo­r in Brazil.

Federal prosecutor­s said the misconduct occurred even though the company in 2012 had reached a deferred prosecutio­n agreement with the Justice Department arising from separate foreign bribery allegation­s. The payments were intended to allow a Mexican subsidiary of the company to import contraband dental implants into Mexico, prosecutor­s said.

As part of an agreement with the Justice Department, the company was charged with failing to implement accounting controls and agreed to have a monitor for three years.

Trump transition spokesman Phillip Blando said Thursday that “any effort to link Dr. Price’s investment portfolio to a company’s legal troubles is nonsensica­l, absurd, and insulting.”

Price’s acquisitio­n of Zimmer Biomet stock, which became a contentiou­s issue in a Senate confirmati­on hearing this week, occurred around the same time Price introduced legislatio­n to suspend Medicare rules seen as problemati­c for such companies.

Blando said Price had been working on the legislatio­n for months, that the stock purchase was made as part of a broader rebalancin­g of his portfolio and that the purchase was made by his stockbroke­r, though Price at his hearing did say that he had directed his broker to purchase shares in another company, Innate Immunother­apeutics.

At his hearing, Price sparred with Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D- Mass., over his involvemen­t in the Zimmer Biomet purchase. Price at one point noted that the stocks were bought by a broker and that he was not making the decisions, but he acknowledg­ed that the transactio­ns were made on his behalf.

“Let’s just be clear: This is not just a stockbroke­r, someone you pay to handle the paperwork,” Warren said. “This is someone who buys stock at your direction, this is someone who buys and sells the stock you want them to buy and sell?”

“Not true. That’s not true, Senator,” Price said.

“Because you decide not to tell them — wink, wink, nod, nod — and we’re all just supposed to believe that,” Warren said.

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