Antelope Valley Press

Pharmacy exec sentenced

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BOSTON (AP) — A former co-owner of a Massachuse­tts compoundin­g pharmacy at the center of a nationwide fungal meningitis outbreak that resulted in more than 100 patient deaths has been sentenced to a year in prison for conspiring to defraud the federal government.

Gregory Conigliaro, 57, as the vice president and general manager of the New England Compoundin­g Center, was the company’s primary point of contact with federal and state regulators, federal prosecutor­s said in a statement after sentencing, Thursday.

He and other company officials lied to the federal Food and Drug Administra­tion and the Massachuse­tts Board of Registrati­on in Pharmacy by saying the business was dispensing medication­s for patient-specific prescripti­ons.

The truth, according to prosecutor­s, is that the company was evading regulatory oversight through fraud and misreprese­ntation from 2002 until 2012, routinely shipping drugs to customers without patient-specific prescripti­ons and even creating fraudulent prescripti­ons to fool regulators.

About 800 patients in 20 states were sickened with fungal meningitis or other infections and about 100 died, in 2012, after receiving injections of medical steroids manufactur­ed by the now-closed New England Compoundin­g Center in Framingham, Mass., according to federal officials. The drugs were mostly intended to treat back pain.

“Mr. Conigliaro and his co-conspirato­rs repeatedly made the choice to put their greed over patient safety,” US Attorney Rachael Rollins said in a statement. “In turn, nearly 800 patients suffered terribly and over 100 died. Today’s sentence sends a clear message to health care executives — if you lie to regulators, the outcomes can be deadly and we will hold you accountabl­e.”

Conigliaro was among 14 company officials indicted in the case. The indictment did not charge Conigliaro with having any role in the manufactur­ing process. He was convicted by a jury in US District Court in Boston, in December 2018, of conspiracy to defraud the United States.

Barry Cadden, another co-owner who was also the head pharmacist, was sentenced, in July 2021, to 14 anda-half years in prison, ordered to forfeit $1.4 million and pay restitutio­n of $82 million. Former supervisor­y pharmacist Glenn Chin was sentenced in July 2021 to 10 and-a-half years in prison and ordered to pay $82 million in restitutio­n.

Both were convicted of fraud, racketeeri­ng and other crimes but acquitted of second-degree murder under the federal racketeeri­ng law.

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