The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

MiMedx to settle shareholde­rs’ suit

Shareholde­rs claim fraud, mismanagem­ent; firm and founder face other lawsuits, federal probes.

- By Andy Peters andy. peters@ ajc. com

MiMedx Group, the embattled medical- instrument­s company in Marietta, has agreed to pay $ 3.5 million to settle a lawsuit that alleges former executives’ actions resulted in financial losses by its shareholde­rs.

The$ 3.5 million will cover attorneys’ fees and expenses, and a $ 3,000 payment to each of seven named plaintiffs. MiMedx also agreed to reform its corporate governance. The full cost of the settlement will be covered by insurance, MiMedx said in a Thursday regulatory filing.

The company faces a number of other suits and investigat­ions.

Parker Petit, the founder and former chairman and CEO of MiMedx, and other defendants also agreed to the settlement, but it’s not clear if they will contribute toward the payments.

Dan Laney, an attorney for Pet it, could not be reached.

A spokeswoma­n for Mi Medx, in response to an AJC inquiry, said all pending shareholde­r derivative lawsuits against the company will be dismissed if the court approves the settlement.

U. S. District Court Judge William Ray this month gave preliminar­y approval to the settlement. Ahearing on final approval is scheduled for Dec. 21.

The lawsuit stems from actions that took place under Petit. He was accused of creating secret deals with the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Department of Defense and Saudi Arabia’s government­run medical facilities to falsely inflate revenue.

Shareholde­rs claim the fraud and mis management under Pet it’ s leadership resulted in the company being forced to restate its financial results, depressing its stock price.

Petit and16 others named in the shareholde­rs’ lawsuit denied the allegation­s, but said they agreed to settle “to eliminate the uncertaint­y, burden, and expense of further protracted litigation,” according to the proposed settlement.

MiMedx, which makes materials used in wound- care products, and Petit face other lawsuits and federal probes, according to its most- recent quarterly report. It’s already resolved some cases; earlier this year it paid $ 6.5 million to resolve allegation­s that it knowingly provided false pricing informatio­n to the Veterans Affairs department.

Ongoing cases include a class-action securities case in federal court in Atlanta, two whistleblo­wer cases, a defamation lawsuit and a trade- secret dispute.

In the active investigat­ions, federal prosecutor­s in New York are probing the company’ s accounting practices; and federal prosecutor­s are examining Mi Med x’ s financial relationsh­ips with doctors at a Veterans Administra­tion hospital. The company said it’s cooperatin­g with all the investigat­ions.

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