Ex-Pharmaceutical Executive Sentenced To 3 Years In Opioid Bribery Scheme
A former Insys Therapeutics pharmaceutical executive in Arizona has been sentenced to nearly three years in prison for his role in a nationwide bribery scheme that paid medical practitioners to prescribe patients opioid drugs.
Michael Gurry, 56, who served as vice president of managed markets for the controversial opioid manufacturer, was sentenced in Boston on Monday to 33 months in prison after being convicted of racketeering conspiracy, the Justice Department said.
A federal judge also ordered Gurry to forfeit $3.6 million and serve three years of supervised release after completing his prison sentence.
Gurry was one of several former Insys Therapeutics pharmaceutical executives and managers convicted in May 2019 of conspiring to bribe practitioners to prescribe Insys’ fentanyl-based pain medication, Subsys, often when the highly addictive drug was medically unnecessary.
“The drug was expensive, and while bribes paid to prescribers succeeded in generating new prescriptions, insurers were reluctant to approve payment when Subsys was prescribed for patients without cancer,” the Justice Department said in a release.
To get around this, from May 2012 to December 2015, Gurry helped devise ways to trick insurance companies into covering the medication’s cost while overseeing the company’s reimbursement center, authorities said.
Gurry’s illicit tactics included authorizing his employees to call patients’ insurance companies pretending to be the drug’s prescriber. The employees then misled insurers into authorizing the drug’s prescription, including by citing false medical diagnoses.
Gurry is the first of the defendants in the scheme to be sentenced. Similar sentencing hearings are expected this month for Insys Therapeutic’s billionaire founder, John Kapoor; former CEO and president, Michael L. Babich; former vice president of sales, Alec Burlakoff; former national director of sales, Richard M. Simon; and former regional sales directors Sunrise Lee and Joseph A. Rowan.
Nearly all drug company executives are guilty of crimes. A lot of the punishments for these crimes should be death.
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