The Borneo Post

Pharmacy exec jailed over 2012 US meningitis outbreak

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BOSTON: A former Massachuse­tts pha rmacy exe cut ive wa s sentenced to nine years in prison on Monday after being convicted of racketeeri­ng and fraud charges for his role in a deadly US meningitis outbreak in 2012.

Prosecutor­s had asked US District Judge Richard Stearns to sentence Barry Cadden, 50, the co-founder and former president of the now- defunct New England Compoundin­g Centre, to at least 35 years in prison. They said he had directed the production of drugs at the compoundin­g pharmacy in unsanitary and dangerous ways in order to boost profits.

Prosecutor­s said those shortcuts and Cadden’s greed led to 778 people nationwide being harmed after receiving injections of contaminat­ed steroids that Cadden’s company produced. That includes 76 people who died, they said.

Cadden was convicted in March of fraud and racketeeri­ng by a federal jury in Boston but cleared of the harshest charges he faced, second- degree murder.

Cadden was one of 14 people tied to Framingham, Massachuse­ttsbased compoundin­g centre indicted in 2014 following the outbreak. He was one of only two people to face second- degree murder charges.

Prosecutor­s said Cadden, the compoundin­g pharmacy’s head pharmacist, ran the company as a criminal enterprise, selling substandar­d and non-sterile drugs to medical facilities nationwide.

They said Cadden directed the shipment of 17,600 vials of contaminat­ed steroids often prescribed for back pain despite knowing they were made in unsafe conditions, leading to the outbreak.

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