Company Executive is 15th Defendant Charged in Continuing
Investigation
BIRMINGHAM – Federal prosecutors today charged the vice
president of sales for Northside Pharmacy, a Haleyville, Ala.-based compounding
pharmacy doing business as Global Compounding Pharmacy, with participating in a
conspiracy to generate prescriptions and defraud health care insurers and
prescription drug administrators out of tens of millions of dollars.
U.S. Attorney Jay E. Town, FBI Special Agent in Charge
Johnnie Sharp Jr., U.S. Postal Inspector in Charge Adrian Gonzalez, U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General, Special
Agent in Charge Derrick L. Jackson, Defense Criminal Investigative Service
Special Agent in Charge John F. Khin, and Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation
Special Agent in Charge Thomas J. Holloman announced the charges.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office filed a 13-count information in
U.S. District Court charging PHILLIP NATHAN MARKS, 49, of Winter Park, Fla.,
with conspiring between November 2014 and June 2016 to defraud multiple
insurance plans including Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Alabama, Medicare, and
TRICARE, as well as their prescription drug administrators. The information
also charges Marks with 12 counts of health care fraud for submitting fraudulent
prescription claims to these entities. Prosecutors also filed a plea agreement
with Marks.
“Global Compounding stole from insurance programs, including
Medicare and TRICARE, by using a marketing scheme that increased the sales of
expensive medications without regard for patient need or medical necessity,”
Town said. “Schemes like this drive up health care costs for everyone. The U.S.
Attorney’s Office and our law enforcement partners are committed to prosecuting
everyone who sought personal enrichment by participating in this pharmacy’s
health care fraud.”
The charges stem from
a larger investigation that already has resulted in guilty pleas from 13
individuals. Along with Marks, prosecutors also filed charges today against
another Global sales representative, bringing to 15 the number of defendants in
the case. The U.S. Attorney’s Office charged JODY HOBBS, 45, of Santa Rosa
Beach, Fla., in a three-count information alleging conspiracy and health care
fraud. Prosecutors also filed an associated plea agreement with Hobbs.
According to the court documents, Global, which described
itself as “one of the top three largest compounding pharmacies in the United
States,” primarily shipped compounded and other drugs from its Haleyville
facility, but did most of its prescription processing, billing and customer
service at its “call center” in Clearwater, Fla. The company hired sales
representatives who were located in various states and were responsible for
generating prescriptions from physicians and other prescribers.
The court documents describe a multi-faceted scheme that
focused on obtaining and billing for high-dollar fraudulent prescriptions. In
the scheme, Global would identify high-dollar drugs and instruct employees to
obtain medically unnecessary prescriptions for themselves and family members.
Global incentivized prescribers to issue these fraudulent prescriptions by
hiring and paying their family members as sales representatives, and by
directing sales representatives to work at practitioners’ offices to have
better access to patients and their files. Global employees obtained
prescriptions in various other fraudulent ways, including forging
prescriptions. Global maximized proceeds on these fraudulent prescriptions by
altering them to add or substitute drugs and automatically refilling and
billing for them, regardless of patient need. It also routinely waived co-pays
to encourage patients to accept unnecessary medications and refills. When
insurance plans and their prescription drug managers attempted to police
Global’s conduct, Global provided false and misleading information to them, and
began billing through affiliate pharmacies. Court filings in Marks’ case note
that two such affiliate pharmacies were The Prescription Shop in Haleyville and
Tropic Pharmacy in Boca Raton, Fla.
According to the court documents, as vice president of
sales, Marks routinely directed sales representatives to obtain medically
unnecessary prescriptions for themselves and family members. One such drug was
Silapak, which Global itself advertised as “not indicated for children.” Global
employees nonetheless submitted Silapak prescriptions for children, some as
young as two years old, which Global dispensed and billed. Nine of the health
care fraud charges against Marks include multiple counts of fraudulent Silapak
prescription billings for children of Global employees.
According to court documents, Global hired Hobbs as a sales
representative because he had high-reimbursing health insurance from his other
employer. Global billed for multiple medically unnecessary drugs for Hobbs,
including a tube of wound care cream that cost $30,812.
The 13 individuals previously charged and who have pleaded
guilty are Global Operations Manager Jeffrey South, District Manager Angie
Nelson, National Field Trainer and sales representative Bridget McCune, and
sales representatives Roddrick Boykin, Joshylyn Bowen, Vanessa Case, Peter
Eodice II, Robin Lowry, Kelley Norris and Dawn Whitten, and billers Fermin
Alfonso, Stacey Cardozo, and Christopher Nunez.
The maximum punishment for the conspiracy charge is five
years in prison and a $250,000 fine. The maximum penalty for health care fraud
is 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
FBI, USPIS, HHS-OIG, DCIS and IRS-CI investigated the cases,
which Assistant U.S. Attorneys Chinelo Dike-Minor, Don Long, and Nicole
Grosnoff are prosecuting.
An information or indictment contains only charges.
Defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.
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