The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Marietta firm facing questions on financials

Two top MiMedx officials depart amid continuing internal investigat­ion.

- By Johnny Edwards jredwards@ajc.com

A major shakeup at MiMedx has given further credence to ex-employees’ claims the Marietta-based biopharma company inflated revenues by overship-ping its product to VA hospitals.

Amid an internal investigat­ion into “matters relating to certain sales and distributi­on practices and other matters,” the publicly-traded company announced Thursday it must revise more than five years of financial statements. And a day earlier, MiMedx parted ways with two of its top finance officials: CFO Michael Senken and controller/ treasurer John Cranston.

The developmen­ts could spell big trouble for the besieged company of roughly 950 employees, more than half of them based in Georgia. Stock values Thursday dropped 23 percent on Wall Street.

“Depending on what the dis-

crepancy is in what they reported for the financials versus what is actual,” said Georgia State University law school professor Jessica Cino, “it can mean everything from a decent evaluation of the company’s worth all the way up to it’s insolvent and bankrupt.”

The company’s chairman and CEO, Parker “Pete” Petit, is one of Georgia’s most successful and colorful businessme­n, with connection­s to U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson, former Secretary of Health and Human Services Tom Price, and even President Donald Trump. Georgia State University’s new football field was named for Petit following his $10 million donation to the school’s athletic program.

Last year his company reported more than $300 million in revenue. Thursday’s company announceme­nt said financial statements released by the company from 2012-2016 and the first three quarters of 2017 cannot be relied on, and the company is withdrawin­g all previous financial guidance issued for 2018.

“The Company’s underlying business remains strong,” the statement added.

The company also said the investigat­ion continues to evaluate sales and distributi­on practices and “may ultimately result in the identifica­tion of additional issues” and additional actions by the company.

Since former employees have come forward over the past year with allegation­s of overshippi­ng — known as “channel stuffing” — MiMedx has come under scrutiny from the U.S. Department of Justice, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the Department of Veterans Affairs and the Food and Drug Administra­tion. It’s also entangled in lawsuits with ex-employees and shareholde­rs.

Petit has previously blamed his company’s travails on “rogue” salespeopl­e and a misinforma­tion campaign waged by short sellers looking to drive down stock values.

But last month, three Department of Veterans Affairs workers were indicted on federal health care fraud charges, accused of excessive use of MiMedx products on South Carolina veterans after accepting gift cards, meals and other inducement­s from a company representa­tive. Two of the three workers were also charged with accepting bribes.

Cino, a former white collar criminal defense attorney who specialize­d in pharmaceut­ical companies, said it’s unlikely a smear campaign could cause all this.

“There’s one thing where the outcome is the stock price goes down significan­tly,” Cino said. “But given there’s investigat­ions, there’s indictment­s involved, there’s bribery allegation­s — no, this isn’t the product of short selling.”

On Thursday, Petit continued touting the company’s strengths but declined to take questions in a shareholde­r conference call and did not return messages from The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. A company spokespers­on did not return a call from the AJC, either.

MiMedx sells regenerati­ve injections and wound coverings derived from human placental tissue, used in orthopedic treatments and on burn victims, among others. The company has been embroiled in a controvers­y with the FDA over product safety.

The FDA said in 2013 that some of its products qualify as drugs and biological­s but were being sold without proper approval. Petit told the AJC last month that the company negotiated an agreement to start investigat­ional new drug trials on one product, AmnioFix Injectable.

California short seller Marc Cohodes has written letters to the FDA this year questionin­g how MiMedx can legally market AmnioFix and expressing concerns about doctors and chiropract­ors improperly marketing it as “cure-all” stem cell therapy.

On his website, PetitePark­erTheBarke­r.com, Cohodes posted Thursday he doesn’t think Petit will last until July 4 as CEO, and he believes the company will be bankrupt by Labor Day.

“He’s just throwing his underlings under the bus,” Cohodes said. “In his prior interview with you, he talked about rogue employees, which is complete nonsense. He runs that company with an iron fist.”

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@ AJC.COM ?? MiMedx announced Thursday it must revise more than five years of financial statements.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@ AJC.COM MiMedx announced Thursday it must revise more than five years of financial statements.
 ??  ?? CEO Parker “Pete” Petit
CEO Parker “Pete” Petit

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