The News-Times

Drug manufactur­ing lawsuit pushes state into national spotlight

Leading pharmaceut­ical companies accused of fixing prices

- By Mark Pazniokas

Connecticu­t’s new attorney general, William Tong, is dramatical­ly expanding the scope and raising the profile of the state’s long-running investigat­ion of drug pricefixin­g, accusing the generic drug industry of a massive anti-trust conspiracy that has cost American consumers, taxpayers and insurers billions of dollars.

In lawsuit filed Friday in U.S. District Court and announced Sunday night by his office as “60 Minutes” aired a story about the case, Connecticu­t and a coalition of 43 other states accuse Teva Pharmaceut­icals and 19 of the nation’s other leading generic drug manufactur­ers of conspiring to fix prices on more than 100 drugs.

“We have hard evidence that shows the generic drug industry perpetrate­d a multibilli­on-dollar fraud on the American people. We have emails, text messages, telephone records and former company insiders that we believe will prove a multi-year conspiracy to fix prices and divide market share for huge numbers of generic drugs,” Tong said in a statement.

Tong held a news conference about the case Monday in Hartford, joined by consumer health advocates.

The new lawsuit is the second filed by the office against the generic drug industry, both arising from an investigat­ion opened in July 2014, during the administra­tion of Tong’s predecesso­r, George Jepsen. Tong, who had been a state representa­tive from Stamford, was elected in November and took office in January.

The investigat­ion began when Mike Cole, who supervises the office’s antitrust and fraud unit, read a story in the New York Times headlined “Rapid Price Increases for Some Generic Drugs Catch Users by Surprise.” On a hunch, he emailed the story to one of his antitrust lawyers, Joe Nielsen, and they eventually asked Jepsen for authorizat­ion to issue subpoenas.

Two years later, Nielsen shared his findings at a confidenti­al meeting with anti-trust lawyers from attorneys general in other states. A coalition led by Connecticu­t, initially joined by 19 other states, filed the first suit in December 2016. The coalition quickly expanded to 40 states and now numbers 44.

The industry generally has denied any wrongdoing, although two former executives from Heritage Pharmaceut­icals, one of the original defendants, have reached settlement­s with the coalition of states and are cooperatin­g.

The new lawsuit names 20 corporatio­ns and 15 executives as participat­ing in a conspiracy led by Teva. It claims the conspirato­rs have fixed prices on more than 100 generics, turning market forces on their head and causing prices to jump by as much as 2,000 percent.

“Typically, when the first generic manufactur­er enters a market for a given drug, the manufactur­er prices its product slightly lower than the brand-name manufactur­er. When a second generic manufactur­er enters, that reduces the average generic price to nearly half the brand-name price,” the suit says. “As additional generic manufactur­ers market the product, the prices continue to fall. For drugs that attract a large number of generic manufactur­ers, the average generic price falls to 20 percent or less of the price of the branded drug.”

In a telephone interview Sunday night, Tong declined to say if his office withheld an announceme­nt of the new lawsuit to time its release with “60 Minutes.” The Associated Press filed a report on Saturday. Tong said his office had been rushing to finish the expanded lawsuit in coordinati­on with the other states.

“We got it done Friday,” Tong said. “60 Minutes happened to be on a parallel track.”

CT Mirror first covered an element of the “60 Minutes” story in January 2017: How Cole’s hunch and Nielsen’s investigat­ion put the attorney general’s office of a small state at the forefront of investigat­ing what “60 Minutes” now says may be the biggest price-fixing scheme in U.S. history.

The original case was well-covered nationally, but Tong said there has been no sustained attention of a scam that he says is central to the rising cost of U.S. health care.

“It has been a remarkably sleepy story. These are the biggest manufactur­ers of generic drugs — they are 90 percent of the market,” Tong said. “I think people are just now starting to understand.”

The suit filed Friday names 20 corporate defendants:

⏩ Teva Pharmaceut­icals USA Inc.

⏩ Sandoz Inc.

⏩ Mylan Pharmaceut­icals Inc.

⏩ Actavis Holdco US Inc.

⏩ Actavis Pharma Inc.

⏩ Amneal Pharmaceut­icals Inc.

⏩ Apotex Corp.

⏩ Aurobindo Pharma U.S.A. Inc.

⏩ Breckenrid­ge Pharmaceut­ical Inc.

⏩ Dr. Reddy’s Laboratori­es Inc.

⏩ Glenmark Pharmaceut­icals Inc. USA

⏩ Greenstone LLC (a subsidiary of Pfizer).

⏩ Lannett Company Inc.

⏩ Lupin Pharmaceut­icals Inc.

⏩ Par Pharmaceut­ical Companies Inc.

⏩ Pfizer Inc.

⏩ Taro Pharmaceut­icals USA Inc.

⏩ Upsher-Smith Laboratori­es LLC

⏩ Wockhardt USA LLC.

⏩ Zydus Pharmaceut­icals (USA) Inc.

The industry generally has denied any wrongdoing, although two former executives from Heritage Pharmaceut­icals, one of the original defendants, have reached settlement­s with the coalition of states and are cooperatin­g.

 ?? Contribute­d photo ?? Attorney General William Tong. Tong is spearheadi­ng the state’s lawsuit against Teva Pharmaceut­icals and 19 of the nation’s other leading generic drug manufactur­ers for conspiring to fix prices on more than 100 drugs.
Contribute­d photo Attorney General William Tong. Tong is spearheadi­ng the state’s lawsuit against Teva Pharmaceut­icals and 19 of the nation’s other leading generic drug manufactur­ers for conspiring to fix prices on more than 100 drugs.

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