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Seldom does a week pass without news about a pharmaceutical giant engaged in corporate wrongdoing. This week, the feds announced that they had filed a complaint under the False Claims Act (FCA) against Mallinckrodt ARD LLC. The complaint alleges that the pharmaceutical company “avoided paying hundreds of millions of dollars in Medicaid rebates due to significant drug price increases” as a result of “large increases in the price” of its drug H.P. Acthar Gel.
Recently, pharmaceutical company Sanofi-Aventis U.S., LLC, agreed to pay $11.85 million to resolve allegations that it violated the False Claims Act by paying kickbacks to Medicare patients through a purportedly independent charitable foundation, The Assistance Fund. And earlier, as reported by RACmonitor, electronic health records provider Practice Fusion Inc. agreed to pay a total of $145 million to resolve criminal charges and civil claims that it solicited and accepted unlawful kickbacks from pharmaceutical companies.
During this edition of Monitor Mondays, famed whistleblower attorney Mary Inman continues her reporting on the misdeeds of big pharma, with an update on the aforementioned Sanofi-Aventis FCA case.
Other segments to be featured during the live broadcast include the following:
By RACmonitor4.5
2323 ratings
Seldom does a week pass without news about a pharmaceutical giant engaged in corporate wrongdoing. This week, the feds announced that they had filed a complaint under the False Claims Act (FCA) against Mallinckrodt ARD LLC. The complaint alleges that the pharmaceutical company “avoided paying hundreds of millions of dollars in Medicaid rebates due to significant drug price increases” as a result of “large increases in the price” of its drug H.P. Acthar Gel.
Recently, pharmaceutical company Sanofi-Aventis U.S., LLC, agreed to pay $11.85 million to resolve allegations that it violated the False Claims Act by paying kickbacks to Medicare patients through a purportedly independent charitable foundation, The Assistance Fund. And earlier, as reported by RACmonitor, electronic health records provider Practice Fusion Inc. agreed to pay a total of $145 million to resolve criminal charges and civil claims that it solicited and accepted unlawful kickbacks from pharmaceutical companies.
During this edition of Monitor Mondays, famed whistleblower attorney Mary Inman continues her reporting on the misdeeds of big pharma, with an update on the aforementioned Sanofi-Aventis FCA case.
Other segments to be featured during the live broadcast include the following:

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