Miami Herald

Miami man accused of $230 million HIV-drug scheme is freed from lockup

- BY JAY WEAVER jweaver@miamiheral­d.com Jay Weaver: 305-376-3446, @jayhweaver

Miami businessma­n Lazaro Hernandez was arrested in mid-June on charges of directing a

$230 million scheme to distribute “adulterate­d and misbranded” HIV prescripti­on drugs through a network of wholesaler­s and pharmacies to unsuspecti­ng patients nationstro­ng wide.

Hernandez, 51, was released just before the Fourth of July holiday weekend on a $1.4 million bond and faces a mid-July arraignmen­t in a federal indictment accusing him of conspiring to defraud the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion by selling falsely labeled drugs to unsuspecti­ng patients.

His defense attorney, Marc Seitles, overcame opposition by federal prosecutor­s to the defendant’s bond, which was granted by Magistrate Judge Jonathan Goodman. Hernandez was released from the Federal Detention Center on June 30, records show.

“This is not the court of assumption. This is a court of law,“Seitles said at Hernandez’s detention hearing in Miami federal court. “You cannot proceed just on the evidence of prosecutor­s banging their chest. You have to present evidence of risk of flight and danger to the community, and they have not presented one shred of it.”

The indictment accuses Hernandez and unnamed co-conspirato­rs of illegally acquiring large amounts of HIV medication and creating false drug labels to make it appear that they were purchased legitimate­ly between 2019 and 2021. Hernandez and the others set up licensed wholesale drug distributi­on companies in Florida, Connecticu­t, New Jersey and New York, the indictment says.

The Hernandez-led network then used those companies to sell the adulterate­d HIV drugs at steep discounts to other operators of wholesale pharmaceut­ical distributo­rs in Mississipp­i, Maryland and New York, according to the indictment. In turn, those distributo­rs then resold the adulterate­d HIV drugs to pharmacies, which billed health insurers, including Medicare, while dispensing them to patients.

Prosecutor­s with the

U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami and Justice Department said in a news release that the “wholesale pharmaceut­ical distributo­rs paid Hernandez and his co-conspirato­rs more than $230 million for the illegally acquired and adulterate­d prescripti­on drugs.”

The indictment further accuses Hernandez of laundering those proceeds through several corporatio­ns in Miami. If convicted, Hernandez faces a maximum penalty of more than 100 years in prison.

The case was investigat­ed by U.S. agents with Health and Human Services and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporatio­n.

 ?? CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com ?? Lazaro Hernandez (not pictured) was released just before the Fourth of July holiday weekend on a $1.4 million bond and faces a mid-July arraignmen­t on charges of conspiring to sell falsely branded HIV drugs to patients.
CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com Lazaro Hernandez (not pictured) was released just before the Fourth of July holiday weekend on a $1.4 million bond and faces a mid-July arraignmen­t on charges of conspiring to sell falsely branded HIV drugs to patients.

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