3 former execs at medical billing company face criminal charges in $300M investment fraud scheme

https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/legal-regulatory-issues/3-former-execs-at-medical-billing-company-face-criminal-charges-in-300m-investment-fraud-scheme.html

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Three former executives of Constellation Healthcare Technologies, a now-bankrupt medical billing company, were charged May 16 with orchestrating an elaborate scheme to defraud investors out of more than $300 million.

The former CEO, CFO and executive director stand accused of creating phony customers, subsidiaries and acquisitions and falsifying bank records to inflate the company’s value and revenue to defraud investors. They are charged with using these methods to make their publicly traded company appear more attractive and financially stable to investors before transitioning it to the private sector.

The alleged actions caused a private investment firm and other investors to value Constellation Healthcare at more than $300 million for purposes of financing the transaction to move the company private.

The scheme was discovered in September 2017, when the three executives resigned from their positions. On March 16,  Constellation Healthcare Technologies filed for bankruptcy, citing the alleged fraud scheme as the cause of its downfall.

Parmjit Parmar, Sotirios Zaharis and Ravi Chivukula are each charged with one count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud and one count of securities fraud.  The CEO, Mr. Parmar, was arrested May 16. Mr. Zaharais and Mr. Chivukula remain at large, according to the U.S. Justice Department.

https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/former-ceo-cfo-and-director-health-care-services-company-charged-elaborate-300-million

 

Pharma karma catches up: Shkreli sentenced to 7 years

Pharma karma catches up: Shkreli sentenced to 7 years

The man who embodied the phrase “pharma bro” and once urged his fans to pull a hair from Hillary Clinton’s head at a book signing has had a visit from pharma karma. The judge in Martin Shkreli’s fraud case, Kiyo Matsumoto, has sentenced the poster man for pharmaceutical company greed to seven years. Estimates are that Shkreli, 34, might get out in a couple of years if his behavior is good.

At his sentencing hearing, Shkreli apparently, and rather uncharacteristically, expressed contrition and shed enough tears that the judge called for the court officer to bring the defendant a box of tissues. Shkreli, in making his plea for leniency, tearfully told the judge that “the one person to blame for me being here today is me.” The judge apparently was unmoved, although the sentence is less than the 15 years the prosecution requested.

Shkreli drew the time after a jury found him guilty of one count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud and 2 counts of securities fraud. The same jury found him not guilty on an additional five counts, raising some hope from his legal team that his sentence would be light. The crimes, related to stock manipulation of shares in Retrophin, one of Shkreli’s companies, and ripping off hedge fund backers, could have carried a sentence of up to 20 years.

In February 2018, Matsumoto found that losses resulting from Shkreli’s crimes tallied up to $10.4 million.

Although he’s probably best known for overseeing a 5,000 percent price hike of a toxoplasmosis drug for HIV-positive patients, Shkreli’s post-pharmaceutical shenanigans caught a much attention as his venality while helming Turing Pharmaceuticals. He dropped $2 million on the sole copy of the Wu-Tang Clan album ‘Once Upon a Time in Shaolin,” which the judge has included in his assets. He harassed a journalist on Twitter, getting himself suspended, and seemed to want to fashion himself into the Snark King of Social Media.

His posturing ended up being his downfall.

While awaiting sentencing, Shkreli boasted that he would end up serving hardly any time and what time he did serve would be in the relatively posh environs of a “Club Fed” prison for white collar criminals. But after he exhorted Facebook followers to pluck a hair from Clinton’s head and offered $5000 per sample, the judge who sentenced him revoked Shkreli’s bail and ordered him to be placed in Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention Center, a far different experience for the pharma bro.

Although Shkreli is at the center of his own story, some believe that the industry overall is not blame-free. STAT journalist Adam Feuerstein has pointed out that the pharmaceutical industry can’t entirely disown Pharma Bro and his behavior, noting that Shkreli “was doing what lots of other biotech and pharma CEOs did, and still do to various degrees. Legally.”