Call & Times

Drug firm founder pleads not guilty to opioid prescripti­on bribe charges

Insys CEO says he’ll be vindicated in court trial

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BOSTON ( AP) — A pharmaceut­ical company founder accused of leading a conspiracy to bribe doctors to prescribe a powerful opioid pain medication will fight the charges against him and believes he will be vindicated, his attorney said Thursday.

John Kapoor, of Insys Therapeuti­cs Inc., pleaded not guilty in Boston's federal courthouse, and his lawyer urged the judge to allow him to remove an electronic monitoring bracelet while he awaits trial.

Attorney Brian Kelly said Kapoor isn't a flight risk and wants to clear his name in court.

"He's not going to desert the USA because of this case," Kelly told the judge. "He doesn't believe it's a strong case. He wants to fight this case."

The case centers on a highly addictive fentanyl spray made by Insys Therapeuti­cs. Kapoor, 74, and other Insys executives are charged with offering kickbacks to doctors to write large numbers of prescripti­ons for a potent opioid meant for cancer patients called Subsys.

Former CEO Michael L. Babich and others are set to go to trial next year and have pleaded not guilty.

The charges against Kapoor of racketeeri­ng conspiracy, mail fraud conspiracy and wire fraud conspiracy each carry a sentence of up to 20 years in prison upon conviction. Conspiracy to violate the anti-kickback laws calls for up to five years in prison.

Kapoor, who appeared in court on Thursday in a suit and tie, has been free on $1 million bail since he was arrested by a dozen armed agents in his home state of Arizona last month, according to his attorney. He emigrated from India decades ago, is now a U.S. citizen and handed over his passport to authoritie­s after his arrest.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Nathaniel Yeager said prosecutor­s fear he will flee the country, adding that they believe he has access to at least $2 billion.

The judge didn't immediatel­y issue a ruling Thursday on whether to remove Kapoor's GPS monitoring requiremen­t.

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