The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Judge orders payout in supplement­s case

- By Danny Robbins danny.robbins@ajc.com

Hi-Tech Pharmaceut­icals CEO Jared Wheat was ordered to pay $40 million in the latest chapter of a lawsuit filed by the FTC.

It has been a difficult month for Jared Wheat, the Atlanta-area dietary supplement entreprene­ur. And that’s putting it mildly.

Less than a week after federal authoritie­s unsealed an indictment accusing the Hi-Tech Pharmaceut­icals CEO of wire fraud, money laundering and other charges, a federal judge has ordered him, his company and an associate to pay more than $40 million to resolve an unrelated civil matter.

The Tuesday ruling by U.S. District Judge Charles A. Pannell Jr. didn’t arrive out of the blue. It’s the latest chapter in the Federal Trade Commission’s long-running lawsuit challengin­g Hi-Tech’s advertisin­g. Still, Pannell’s 132-paging ruling is yet another body blow for Wheat and his Norcross-based firm, detailing what, in the judge’s view, was an attempt to justify product claims with questionab­le science.

Pannell affirmed the FTC’s contention that Wheat, Hi-Tech

and a company vice president, Stephen Smith, violated permanent injunction­s barring them from making unsubstant­iated claims about four supposed weight-loss supplement­s: Fastin, Lipodrene, Benzedrine and Stimerex-ES. The group must pay $40.1 million, the amount it received in gross receipts for the products during a 4½-year period, and the FTC must distribute the money to consumers, the judge ruled.

The FTC had asked Pannell to impose a separate sanction of $34.4 million to compensate consumers, but the judge declined.

The ruling also requires an Atlanta weight-loss physician, Dr. Terrill Mark Wright, to pay $120,000 for making unsubstant­iated statements about Fastin.

“The court recognizes that the compensato­ry sanctions were significan­t, but so, too, was the defendants’ contumacio­us conduct,” Pannell wrote.

The sanctions stem from a lawsuit filed by the FTC 13 years ago that has had a number of twists and turns, including a hearing in which Wheat invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incriminat­ion 19 times and later collapsed in a men’s room outside the courtroom.

In 2014, Pannell ruled that the defendants were liable for $40 million in compensato­ry sanctions. However, the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals vacated the order. It said the lower court had improperly applied the doctrine of collateral estoppel, which prevents certain issues from being re-litigated.

Pannell’s ruling Tuesday in essence reinstates the earlier order while also poking holes in Hi-Tech’s reasoning for why its advertisin­g claims can stand up to scrutiny.

In one particular­ly telling passage, Pannell notes that one of the experts who testified on Hi-Tech’s behalf, Timothy Gaginella, received $60,000 a year from Wheat or his companies. The judge goes on to state that Wheat or his companies twice forged Gaginella’s signature to show that he endorsed a Hi-Tech product.

“While the evidence is more reflective of Wheat’s guile, the court mentions it here because the history between Hi-Tech and Dr. Gaginella is dubious,” Pannell wrote.

In the indictment unsealed on Oct. 5, the government contends that Wheat created a series of fake documents to make it appear to customers that Hi-Tech products met various standards set by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion. The indictment also asserts that Wheat and Hi-Tech manufactur­ed and distribute­d prohormone supplement­s that contained anabolic steroids and a supplement for reducing cholestero­l that contained the prescripti­on drug Lovastatin.

 ?? ERIK S. LESSER ?? Hi-Tech Pharmaceut­icals president and CEO Jared Wheat has been accused of wire fraud, money laundering and other charges.
ERIK S. LESSER Hi-Tech Pharmaceut­icals president and CEO Jared Wheat has been accused of wire fraud, money laundering and other charges.
 ?? ERIK S. LESSER ?? Hi-Tech Pharmaceut­icals president and CEO Jared Wheat was ordered to pay $40 million in the latest chapter of a lawsuit filed by the Federal Trade Commission 13 years ago challengin­g Hi-Tech’s advertisin­g.
ERIK S. LESSER Hi-Tech Pharmaceut­icals president and CEO Jared Wheat was ordered to pay $40 million in the latest chapter of a lawsuit filed by the Federal Trade Commission 13 years ago challengin­g Hi-Tech’s advertisin­g.

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