Pfizer Is Lobbying to Thwart Whistleblowers Exposing Fraud
PFIZER AND OTHER large pharmaceutical corporations are
pushing to block legislation that would make it easier for whistleblowers to
hold companies liable for corporate fraud.
In the midst of a dizzying legislative environment, with
much attention focused on the Build Back Better debate, major corporate
interests, including Pfizer, are fighting an update to the False Claims Act, a
Civil War-era law that rewards whistleblowers for filing anti-fraud lawsuits
against contractors on behalf of the government.
The law has historically returned $67 billion to the
government, with whistleblowers successfully helping uncover wrongdoing by
military contractors, banks, and pharmaceutical companies.
The law has been particularly thorny for Pfizer. In 2009,
Pfizer paid $2.3 billion in criminal and civil fines to settle allegations that
the company illegally marketed several drugs for off-label purposes that were
specifically not approved by the Food and Drug Administration. The company
instructed its marketing team to advertise Bextra, which was approved only for
arthritis and menstrual cramps, for acute and surgical pain issues. The lawsuit,
brought under the False Claims Act through the actions of six whistleblowers,
ended in one of the largest health care fraud settlements in history.
But the law poses far less risk today to companies engaged
in criminal behavior. That’s because the anti-fraud statute has been severely
hampered by a series of federal court decisions that radically expanded the
scope of what’s known as “materiality.” In 2016, the Supreme Court ruled in
Universal Health Services v. United States ex rel. Escobar that a fraud lawsuit
could be dismissed if the government continued to pay the contractor.
The court reasoned that if the government continues to pay a
company despite fraudulent activity, then the fraud is not “material” to the
contract. That ruling functionally neutered application of the False Claims Act
against many companies that are so large that the government cannot abruptly
sever payments, especially against large health care interests and defense
contractors.
Recent court decisions, including cases involving Honeywell
and Halliburton, show contractors winning dismissal of fraud cases by simply
citing “continued government payments.” Last year, a federal district court
dismissed a False Claims Act case against engineering company Aecom brought by
a whistleblower alleging widespread billing fraud for a $2 billion contract in
Afghanistan. Aecom lawyers also cited the government’s continued payments to
the company. The lawsuit is now under appeal.
What’s more, the federal government has taken an active role
in discouraging cases. In 2018, the Trump administration’s Justice Department
issued the “Granston Memo,” which encouraged the dismissal of more
whistleblower-initiated suits under the False Claims Act.
In October, Attorney General Merrick Garland officially
rescinded the “overly restrictive” memo, a move widely seen as designed to
promote greater False Claims Act enforcement.
THE EROSION OF the statute has brought together a bipartisan
push, led by Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, to update the law to give
whistleblowers greater protection against potential industry retaliation and
make it more difficult for companies charged with fraud to dismiss cases on
procedural grounds.
Earlier this year, as he introduced the legislation,
Grassley took to the Senate floor to showcase images of scrapped multibillion
Afghanistan War contracts and examples of fraud cases that have escaped accountability
because of the judicial constraints placed on the False Claims Act.
“Defendants get away with scalping the taxpayers because
some government bureaucrats failed to do their job,” thundered the senator. “In
my many years of investigating the Department of Defense, it has taught me that
a Pentagon bureaucrat is rarely motivated to recognize fraud. That’s because
the money doesn’t come out of their pocket.”
“A Pentagon bureaucrat is rarely motivated to recognize
fraud. That’s because the money doesn’t come out of their pocket.”
The legislation, the False Claims Amendments Act of 2021,
adjusts the materiality standard to include instances in which the government
made payments despite knowledge of fraud “if other reasons exist” for
continuing the contract. The bill also expands the anti-retaliation protections
of the law, which currently only cover current whistleblower employees of a
company. The bill seeks to prevent an industry from blacklisting former
whistleblowers seeking employment.
That push has run into a buzzsaw of corporate opposition,
some of it disclosed and some of it shrouded from public view. Pfizer hired
Hazen Marshall, a former policy director for Senate Minority Leader Mitch
McConnell, R-Ky., to lobby on the issue, along with the law firm Williams &
Jensen, a powerhouse that employs an array of former congressional staffers.
Pfizer, which has cast itself as a hero in the fight against
Covid-19 and a trustworthy corporate citizen, did not respond to a request for
comment.
In an initial test vote, the bill was blocked. In August,
Grassley proposed his False Claims Amendments Act as an amendment to the
bipartisan infrastructure agreement in the Senate. The bill, however, never
reached the floor for a vote because of an objection lodged on behalf of Senate
Democrats.
In October, the legislation again found a hearing. Sen. Tom
Cotton, R-Ark., attempted to erase most of the bill in a Judiciary Committee
meeting. The amendment Cotton proposed sought to strike all substantive lines
of the bill except for the first title, which is simply the description of the
legislation. During committee debate, Cotton argued that the Supreme Court
“made the right decision” in the Escobar case and the “continued payment”
standard for materiality. The legislation “potentially could increase health
care costs,” the senator argued, echoing industry claims that litigation from
the False Claims Act would force health care interests to raise prices.
The American Hospital Association reportedly lobbied to
delay a vote, but the bill eventually passed 15-7 out of the Senate Judiciary
Committee, with the support of Grassley and his main co-sponsor, Sen. Patrick
Leahy, D-Vt.
“This is a very concerted lobbying effort that really took
our supporters on Capitol Hill by surprise.”
“This is a very concerted lobbying effort that really took
our supporters on Capitol Hill by surprise,” said Stephen Kohn, a whistleblower
attorney with the law firm Kohn, Kohn & Colapinto.
Many of the companies engaged in the lobbying fight have chosen
to conceal their efforts through undisclosed third-party groups such as the
U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which has made the Grassley bill one of its primary
targets for defeat. The chamber does not disclose its membership or which
corporations direct its advocacy, but previous reporting suggests companies
such as Halliburton, Lockheed Martin, and JPMorgan Chase, among others that
have faced False Claims Act violations in the past.
Other trade groups — including the American Hospital
Association, the Healthcare Leadership Council, the Pharmaceutical Research and
Manufacturers of America, and the American Bankers Association — have lobbied
against the bill without disclosing the companies directing their actions.
The known corporate interests lobbying on the Grassley bill
include Pfizer, Amgen, AstraZeneca, Merck, and Genentech. These companies
listed the legislation on lobbying disclosures. All five have paid nine-figure
settlements over health care fraud brought to light through the False Claims
Act.
“Drug companies are notorious for paying kickbacks, giving
benefits in exchange for a competitive advantage. Drug companies and health
care firms are about 80 percent of the False Claim[s] Act recoveries for a
reason,” said Kohn.
In the case of Pfizer’s record settlement, whistleblowers
charged that the company promoted Bextra for uses that were not approved by the
FDA, placing patients at risk for heart attack and stroke. The company
allegedly paid doctors kickbacks for off-label uses. The False Claims Act, like
other “qui tam” laws, awards whistleblowers a portion of the money the
government recovers from lawsuits.
“Drug companies are notorious for paying kickbacks, giving
benefits in exchange for a competitive advantage.”
“The whole culture of Pfizer is driven by sales, and if you
didn’t sell drugs illegally, you were not seen as a team player,” said John
Kopchinski, one of the Pfizer whistleblowers, following the settlement.
The Grassley initiative is championed by a diverse array of
watchdog groups over government waste. Taxpayers Against Fraud, the National
Whistleblower Center, the Project on Government Oversight, and the Government
Accountability Project are among the groups officially supporting the update to
the anti-fraud law.
But advocates have expressed confusion over the involvement
of several other supposed taxpayer protection organizations. Citizens Against
Government Waste and Americans for Tax Reform, two conservative groups that do
not disclose donor information, filed a letter to lawmakers urging them to vote
down the Grassley measure.
Despite Citizens Against Government Waste’s official focus
on fighting government waste, the very intent of the False Claims Act, the
group’s lobbying arm argued in a letter that the bill was not appropriate for
inclusion in the infrastructure package because it is “not related to
traditional infrastructure” and the bill is not fully “understood by the 95
senators who have not cosponsored” the legislation. Americans for Tax Reform
similarly argued that the legislation had not “received proper debate.”
Neither Citizens Against Government Waste nor Americans for
Tax Reform responded to a request for comment explaining why they have lobbied
so aggressively against taxpayer protection legislation and whether any donor
interests are involved.
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