John H. Durham, United States Attorney for the District of
Connecticut, announced that JEFFREY PEARLMAN, 51, of Edgewood, N.J., pleaded
guilty today before U.S. District Judge Janet Bond Arterton in New Haven to
engaging in a kickback scheme that defrauded federal healthcare programs.
According to court documents and statements made in court,
from approximately September 2012 until November 2015, PEARLMAN was employed by
Insys Therapeutics, an Arizona-based pharmaceutical company that manufactured
and sold Subsys, a fentanyl-based sublingual spray that was approved by the
Food and Drug Administration solely for the management of breakthrough pain in
cancer patients. The company first hired
PEARLMAN as a sales representative and subsequently promoted him to the position
of District Sales Manager. As a District
Sales Manager, PEARLMAN was responsible for managing the company’s sales
representatives who called on licensed healthcare providers in Connecticut, New
York, New Jersey and Rhode Island.
In pleading guilty, PEARLMAN admitted that he and the sales
representatives he managed induced certain physicians, advanced practice
registered nurses (APRNs) and physicians’ assistants to prescribe Subsys by
paying them to participate in numerous sham “Speaker Programs.” The Speaker Programs, which were typically
held at high-end restaurants in Connecticut and elsewhere, were ostensibly
designed to gather licensed healthcare professionals who had the capacity to
prescribe Subsys and educate them about the drug. In truth, the events were usually just a
gathering of friends and co-workers, most of whom did not have the ability to
prescribe Subsys, and no educational component took place. “Speakers” were paid a fee that ranged from
$1,000 to several thousand dollars for attending these dinners.
In 2013, PEARLMAN attended a dinner at a New Haven
restaurant where a Connecticut healthcare provider was paid a speaker fee even
though no other healthcare professionals were present, and no presentation of
Subsys took place.
In a meeting that occurred with the same Connecticut
healthcare provider in the spring of 2013, PEARLMAN told the provider that the
more prescriptions of Subsys that the provider wrote, the more Speaker Programs
PEARLMAN could provide. In June 2013,
when these prescriptions were not initially being written as planned, PEARLMAN
emailed the Insys sales representative who was responsible for calling on the
provider and reiterated that per the “verbal agreement” PEARLMAN had made with
the provider, the provider needed to write more Subsys prescriptions or he was
“going to have tremendous difficulty in justifying more [speaker] programs.”
As a result of this scheme, Medicare Part D plans authorized
payment for nearly 400 Subsys prescriptions made by the Connecticut healthcare
provider, causing millions of dollars of losses. PEARLMAN personally profited from this scheme
through inflated quarterly bonuses he received that were based in large part on
the sales results of the sales representatives he managed.
PEARLMAN pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to
violate the anti-kickback law, an offense that carries a maximum term of
imprisonment of five years and a fine of up to $250,000. Judge Arterton scheduled sentencing for
October 31, 2018.
PEARLMAN was arrested on September 29, 2016. He is released on a $200,000 bond pending
sentencing.
This investigation is being conducted by the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services Office of the Inspector General and the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, with the assistance of the Drug Enforcement
Administration’s Tactical Diversion Squad.
The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Douglas P.
Morabito, Sarah P. Karwan and Richard M. Molot.
Several other individuals affiliated with Insys
Therapeutics, and medical practitioners involved in this kickback scheme, have
been charged in the District of Connecticut and in other Districts across the
United States.
U.S. Attorney Durham encouraged individuals who suspect
health care fraud to report it by calling the Health Care Fraud Task Force
(203) 785-9270 or 1-800-HHS-TIPS.
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