Los Angeles Times

Who is Patrick Soon-Shiong?

Doctor who is in talks to buy The Times made billions on medical research and other ventures.

- By James Rufus Koren, Thomas Curwen and Melody Petersen james.koren@latimes.com thomas.curwen @latimes.com melody.petersen @latimes.com

Doctor who is in talks to buy The Times has made billions through medical research and other ventures.

After more than a decade of out-of-town ownership, the Los Angeles Times could once more be locally owned, this time by a billionair­e immigrant with a track record of immense success and dizzying — if sometimes unfulfille­d — ambition.

Patrick Soon-Shiong, a doctor - turned - entreprene­ur who was born in South Africa to Chinese parents, is in high-level talks to buy The Times and the San Diego Union-Tribune, a move that would shake up Southern California’s already tumultuous media landscape and expand Soon-Shiong’s vast and varied business holdings.

With a fortune estimated by Forbes magazine at $7.8 billion, Soon-Shiong’s deep pockets could portend reinvestme­nt at The Times, which has seen its newsroom cut in half amid steady declines in newspaper advertisin­g and more than a decade of management turmoil at its owner, Tronc Inc.

Soon-Shiong could not be reached for comment Tuesday. He has been an investor in Tronc since 2016. At the time of that initial investment, he told The Times he wanted to “save the integrity” of the publicatio­n.

“We need newspapers,” he said. “We need this intellectu­al integrity. We need writers and editors who are passionate about this work.”

Soon-Shiong is one of several local billionair­es — including Eli Broad, David Geffen and Ron Burkle — who had for years been rumored to be interested in acquiring The Times.

Unlike Broad and Geffen, Soon-Shiong is less well known as a philanthro­pist or civic leader. Much of his activity in those areas, as in his business pursuits, has been focused on healthcare and engineerin­g.

In 2009, he began to put into motion a plan to streamline the nation’s healthcare system by uniting doctors, hospitals and insurers through high-speed fiber optic networks, supercompu­ters and what he called a “wisdom database.”

That same year, he pledged $100 million to St. John’s Hospital in Santa Monica. He later made a financial guarantee to help underwrite the reopening of Martin Luther King, Jr. Community Hospital. He and his wife, Michele Chan, operate the Chan SoonShiong Family Foundation.

Last July, he announced that his Culver City company NantWorks would take control of the operations of six California hospitals, including St. Vincent Medical Center near downtown Los Angeles and St. Francis Medical Center in Lynwood.

Soon-Shiong bought into The Times’ parent company in 2016 amid a hostile takeover bid by rival publisher Gannett. His investment of $70.5 million helped fight off Gannett and seemed to make allies of Soon-Shiong and Tronc Chairman Michael Ferro, but their relationsh­ip quickly soured.

Owning the city’s largest media company would add to a business portfolio that includes a network of medical research firms that he establishe­d to, in his words, “solve cancer” — the latest ambitious goal for the physician turned entreprene­ur.

Soon-Shiong was born in 1952 in Port Elizabeth, South Africa. His parents had left China during World War II. His father was an herbal doctor.

Soon-Shiong received his medical degree at the University of Witwatersr­and, where in the late 1970s he treated South Africans who had been injured during the Soweto riots.

He interned at Johannesbu­rg’s General Hospital, which had never admitted a Chinese student before, Soon-Shiong has said. The chairman of the department stipulated that his applicatio­n would not be accepted unless he finished better than fourth in his class, which he did. He worked in the cancer wing, where he remembers an Afrikaner patient who refused to be treated by a “Chinaman.”

At a time when other colleagues were leaving South Africa, he accepted a surgical residency with the University of British Columbia. In Canada, he met Chan, who worked at the Canadian Broadcasti­ng Corp. The couple immigrated to the United States and Chan, an aspiring actress, was cast on “Danger Bay” and “MacGyver.”

He joined UCLA Medical School in 1983 as an assistant professor in the gastrointe­stinal surgery division. He later became director of UCLA’s pancreas transplant program. After developing a method for treating diabetes by transplant­ing insulinpro­ducing cells into a patient’s pancreas, SoonShiong left UCLA and founded his own medical research firm in 1991.

By the late 1990s, he was broadening his research into other cancer treatments, developing drugs to fight not just diabetes but also breast cancer. One of those drugs would become the foundation of his fortune. Called Abraxane, it was a redesigned version of a topselling cancer drug called Taxol. He sold the company that developed Abraxane to Celgene for $2.9 billion in 2010. Soon-Shiong also built and sold another pharmaceut­ical company, generic drugmaker APP Pharmaceut­icals, which was acquired by German company Fresenius for an estimated $4.6 billion.

But his work has not been without controvers­y.

Abraxane is not so much a new drug as a reworked, repackaged version of one of the best-known cancer fighters — paclitaxel, a compound derived from the Pacific yew. When the drug was approved in 2005, a group of top oncologist­s had questioned whether the expensive drug was “just old wine in a new bottle.”

In the 1990s, he got into a legal feud with his brother and others. In 2014, a whistleblo­wer lawsuit was filed in Panama City, Fla., alleging one of his companies, NantHealth, was “engaged in a multitude of fraudulent activities.”

That year a profile in Forbes described his “deep streak of P.T. Barnum showmanshi­p” and a talent for angering “investors and colleagues alike.”

Over the last year, SoonShiong’s companies have been dogged by weak stock performanc­es and shareholde­r lawsuits. Last spring, biotech news site Stat found that the University of Utah spent much of a $12-million donation from Soon-Shiong on genetic testing services provided by NantHealth.

Soon-Shiong called the story “maliciousl­y false,” but investors neverthele­ss fled NantHealth’s stock, sending shares tumbling. The company went public in June 2016, pricing shares at $14; shares now trade at about $3. Shares of another SoonShiong company, NantKwest, have fallen to about $4 from their initial public offering price of $25 in July 2015.

Both of those companies were hit with fraud suits by investors after their stocks tanked. Soon-Shiong has denied the investors’ claims. He has also been sued by singer Cher, who claims he and others duped her into selling shares in a promising drug company back to the firm at a fraction of the stock’s value.

In 2016, Soon-Shiong launched Cancer MoonShot 2020 — a collaborat­ion of companies, doctors and researcher­s that said it would conquer cancer in just four years. The group had to later change its name to Cancer Breakthrou­ghs 2020 after a lawsuit was filed by a Houston cancer center that had already staked claim to the “moonshot” name.

An avid basketball player, Soon-Shiong shoots hoops weekly with colleagues and is a part owner of the Los Angeles Lakers.

In 2012 when Michael Crow, president of Arizona State University, described Soon-Shiong, he made an off-the-cuff assessment of his friend. Before the two men took to the stage for a public conversati­on about healthcare, Crow called him “an unshielded nuclear reactor.”

 ?? Allen Berezovsky Getty Images ?? “WE NEED newspapers,” Patrick Soon-Shiong said in 2016. Above, the L.A. Lakers part owner at a game.
Allen Berezovsky Getty Images “WE NEED newspapers,” Patrick Soon-Shiong said in 2016. Above, the L.A. Lakers part owner at a game.

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