Judge partly vacates convictions of opioid maker Insys' founder,
executives
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[November 27, 2019]
By Nate Raymond
BOSTON (Reuters) - A federal judge on
Tuesday partially overturned the convictions of Insys Therapeutics Inc's
founder and three former executives accused of bribing doctors to
prescribe an addictive opioid, but declined to disturb the remainder of
the jury's verdict.
U.S. District Judge Allison Burroughs in Boston ruled the evidence
prosecutors presented at trial did not support finding that John Kapoor
and the others intended for doctors to prescribe the drug, Subsys, to
patients who did not need it.
The ruling could impact the eventual sentence received by Kapoor, the
highest-ranking pharmaceutical executive to be convicted in a case tied
to the deadly U.S. opioid addiction epidemic.
Chandler, Arizona-based Insys filed for bankruptcy in June days after
striking a $225 million settlement with the U.S. Justice Department.
A federal jury found Kapoor, its onetime chairman, guilty in May of
running a wide-ranging scheme to bribe doctors nationwide by retaining
them to act as speakers at sham events ostensibly meant to educate
clinicians about its fentanyl spray, Subsys.
But in her 85-page ruling, Burroughs said prosecutors failed to
establish that Kapoor and his co-defendants intended for doctors to
abdicate their duties to their patients and prescribed them Subsys for
non-legitimate medical uses.
"Even though the evidence could be readily understood as proving that
defendants did not care whether patients needed the drug, that still is
not enough to prove the requisite intent," Burroughs wrote.
As a result, she vacated the convictions of Kapoor and three former
executives, Richard Simon, Sunrise Lee and Joseph Rowan, for conspiring
to illegally distribute a controlled substance and commit honest
services fraud.
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John Kapoor, the billionaire founder of Insys Therapeutics Inc,
arrives at the federal courthouse for the first day of the trial
accusing Insys executives of a wide-ranging scheme to bribe doctors
to prescribe an addictive opioid medication, in Boston,
Massachusetts, U.S., January 28, 2019. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
Those were some of the so-called predicate acts underlying their
racketeering conspiracy conviction. She declined to overturn the
related mail fraud and wire fraud convictions of those four and
another former executive, Michael Gurry.
Burroughs said the evidence on those counts supported finding they
carried out a scheme to bribe doctors and defraud insurers into
paying for Subsys, which was approved only for treating pain in
cancer patients.
Beth Wilkinson, Kapoor's lawyer, in a statement said: "We have
always believed that the government brought charges it could not
sustain."
She and other defense lawyers in court papers had claimed the
illegal drug distribution charge if sustained could have resulted in
longer prison sentences and Kapoor being sent to a prison reserved
for "leaders and organizers in the drug-dealing world."
He and the others face sentencing in January.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Chris Reese and
Bill Berkrot)
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