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			 A federal jury in Concord, New Hampshire, will hear opening 
			statements in the trial of Christopher Clough, whose case could 
			provide a glimpse into some of the evidence prosecutors plan to use 
			in the upcoming trial of six former Insys executives and managers. 
 Both cases stem from what prosecutors say was a wide-ranging scheme 
			overseen by Insys executives including John Kapoor, a onetime 
			billionaire who was its founder and chairman, to pay medical 
			practitioners kickbacks to prescribe its powerful opioid, Subsys.
 
 Prosecutors contend Clough accepted nearly $50,000 in fees from 
			Insys from 2013 to 2014 to act as a speaker at events ostensibly 
			meant to educate healthcare professionals about Subsys but which 
			were actually shams.
 
 Clough, 45, has pleaded not guilty to receiving kickbacks.
 
 A years-long investigation led to the indictment of Kapoor and 
			former Chief Executive Michael Babich, who will both face trial in 
			Boston federal court in January on charges they conspired to bribe 
			doctors to prescribe Subsys.
 
 Prosecutors have said they plan to introduce evidence about Clough 
			at that trial. Kapoor, Babich and their four co-defendants have 
			pleaded not guilty to racketeering conspiracy.
 
 Insys in August said it had agreed to pay at least $150 million to 
			resolve a related U.S. Justice Department probe. In 2017, Insys paid 
			$3.4 million to resolve a probe by New Hampshire's attorney general 
			centered on its payments to Clough.
 
 The cases, brought amid a U.S.-wide epidemic of opioid addiction, 
			center on Subsys, an under-the-tongue spray that contains fentanyl, 
			an opioid 100 times stronger than morphine.
 
 
 
			
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			The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Subsys in 2012 for 
			treating sudden increases in pain in cancer patients.
 Prosecutors said Insys sought to encourage medical professionals to 
			prescribe Subsys to patients who did not have cancer by paying them 
			speaker fees as a reward for writing prescriptions for the drug.
 
			
			 
			Prosecutors said that before Clough was stripped of his medical 
			license, he was the biggest prescriber of Subsys in New Hampshire 
			and wrote more than 700 prescriptions for the spray.
 
 Potential trial witnesses include Natalie Babich, a former Insys 
			sales representative who is married to Michael Babich and who 
			pleaded guilty in 2017 to conspiring to pay kickbacks to, among 
			others, Clough.
 
 (Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi 
			and Matthew Lewis)
 
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