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  • At the casino cage, wads of cash in hand.

  • The security camera captures a real player, a

  • larger-than-life gambler, a familiar face at World

  • Poker tournaments in Las Vegas.

  • Day one chip leader Lazaro Hernandez is once again

  • setting the pace.

  • With posts from luxury boats and private planes,

  • Lazaro Hernandez fashioned himself as a

  • high-flying high roller.

  • Turns out he was the mastermind of a $230

  • million drug counterfeiting operation,

  • and he was gambling with people's lives.

  • These thousands of bottles were all

  • originally prescribed and filled for patients.

  • Now they fill an evidence room at Gilead Sciences in

  • Northern California.

  • Every single bottle was discovered in a complex

  • criminal drug diversion scheme.

  • We are playing a bit of a game of whack-a-mole.

  • Lori Mayall fights to find the counterfeits every

  • day. She oversees global product security at

  • Gilead, which manufactures HIV

  • medications Biktarvy and Descovy, drugs at the

  • center of Hernandez's fraud.

  • We know that upward to 80,000 of bottles of

  • counterfeits were entered into the supply chain.

  • And what would those be worth if someone was

  • paying full retail price?

  • Those bottles would be about $230 million.

  • Here's how drug diversion works: a patient fills a

  • prescription for a medication worth several

  • thousand dollars, but turns around and sells it

  • for a fraction of that in cash.

  • The buyer, known as an aggregator, removes the

  • patient information, alters the bottle, then

  • sells it to a wholesale distributor who sells it

  • back to the pharmacy at a discount, so the same

  • bottle reenters the supply chain.

  • It's part of a massive, illegitimate drug industry

  • the World Health Organization estimates at

  • as much as $431 billion annually around the world.

  • Not only a financial threat, but one with

  • serious health consequences, too.

  • Tell me all the ways that a drug that Gilead

  • manufactures could be counterfeit.

  • You could have an original bottle with wrong tablets

  • inside that's resealed to make it look like a

  • genuine Gilead product.

  • That's a counterfeit.

  • You can have a cap that is not a genuine Gilead

  • cap on a bottle.

  • That's a counterfeit.

  • The label itself could be a copy and not coming from

  • our line.

  • Gilead first learned it had a serious problem in

  • 2020 when reports came in of Biktarvy bottles filled

  • with an anti-psychotic drug called Seroquel.

  • That raised immediate alarms that something was

  • amiss and we mobilized a team to launch an

  • extensive investigation to try to understand what

  • was happening.

  • What they found involved a slew of counterfeits.

  • This bottle doesn't even contain pills, just rocks.

  • Why do you think somebody would try to pass this off

  • as a real bottle of prescription medicine?

  • All they need to do is make the sale.

  • And this man, let's call him Julio, who agreed to

  • an interview if we concealed his identity,

  • said it was easy to persuade patients to sell

  • their bottles.

  • The had AIDS, cancer, and they don't have any money.

  • So for $100, $200, they'll sell it every day.

  • So they'll forgo the medication.

  • They won't take the medication.

  • They won't take the medication.

  • Julio says he got rich, even as a mid-level

  • middleman, in a hustle that billed millions to

  • Medicare for counterfeit medications.

  • What are the most lucrative drugs to resell?

  • Truvada.

  • Seroquel.

  • He says he processed the pill bottles himself.

  • How many bottles of pills would you have to have to

  • fill a box?

  • I'm going to say 300.

  • And then how many boxes would you sell to the

  • wholesaler?

  • In a week, 1,500.

  • The fraud achieved size and national scale because

  • licensed distributors buy from aggregators like

  • Julio, sell to the pharmacies and give the

  • whole process the sheen of legitimacy.

  • How troubled are you by the licensed distributors?

  • Very troubled.

  • They're a critical cog in the scheme.

  • Most pharmacies are unlikely to purchase from

  • the fly-by-night entities that didn't exist a year

  • ago or 30 days ago and are now offering large

  • amounts of medication for them to purchase.

  • And the distributors have relationships with

  • thousands of independent pharmacies across the

  • nation. Is there ever a deal to be had on HIV

  • medication?

  • Gilead sells all of its medicine to our authorized

  • distributors at one price .

  • So there's no deals to be made.

  • Is it possible that one bottle of legitimate

  • prescription medication gets billed and rebilled

  • over and over again to Medicare?

  • Yes. One bottle can be billed two, maybe three

  • times.

  • Stephen Mahmood is assistant special agent in

  • charge at Health and Human Services Office of

  • Inspector General.

  • He leads investigations into Medicare fraud.

  • The pharmacies that are on the receiving end of

  • these diverted prescriptions, do they

  • know?

  • Some do, some don't.

  • They're the kinds of drugs that the government pays a

  • lot of money for people to receive.

  • Right, yes. Medicare pays out to pharmacies a lot of

  • money for these drugs because they are expensive

  • and life-sustaining.

  • It drives up the government's health care

  • costs and adds to the more than $100 billion in

  • waste, theft and abuse that taxpayers pay for

  • annually. Investigators have watched the crime in

  • progress. This hidden camera video has never

  • been seen in public.

  • Shot by an undercover informant, it shows a

  • woman, her husband and son cleaning prescription

  • pill bottles in a South Florida apartment.

  • The individual in the white shirt in the middle,

  • you can see what appears to be lighter fluid.

  • He's using that lighter fluid, a harsh chemical,

  • to clean the bottle and remove the pharmacy

  • prescription label.

  • That would have had the name of the patient.

  • It would have had the name of the patient on it.

  • Because obviously no one is going to sell a drug

  • with someone else's name on it.

  • And they're cleaning it to make it look new again.

  • It's a mom-and-pop operation.

  • Often, it shows.

  • So here is an example of a patient leaflet that was

  • attached to a counterfeit Biktarvy bottle that we

  • seized from one of the wholesalers.

  • And you can see it's a very horrible copy.

  • It's falling apart.

  • But in other words, if a patient were to get a

  • bottle and have a patient leaflet like this, that

  • would be a warning sign that something's wrong.

  • Absolutely. It would be a warning sign and a patient

  • should never receive a leaflet in this type of

  • condition.

  • Though the companies lose money on every bottle that

  • gets reintroduced in the system, they say their top

  • concern is safety.

  • Johnson and Johnson, whose HIV drug Symtuza was

  • targeted, said in a statement it's found "HIV

  • medication bottles filled with a different product

  • or bearing false or adulterated packaging,

  • labeling or instructional inserts." The company

  • insists "Counterfeiting of life-saving medicines

  • is a criminal act that puts patient lives at

  • risk." Cancer patients cut their dosing in

  • exchange for cash.

  • Hiv patients get paid but go without.

  • Their viral load can increase, which makes it

  • more likely to spread HIV to others.

  • The pharmaceutical companies are serious

  • about disrupting the drug diversion.

  • Gilead Sciences and Johnson and Johnson have

  • sued distributors and pharmacies throughout the

  • country. Their investigations and

  • litigation are still unfolding.

  • These three were convicted in connection

  • with the prescription drug counterfeiting

  • operation. Julio served time behind bars for his

  • pill diversion scheme, and insists his

  • counterfeiting days are behind him.

  • And the big-time poker player?

  • Lazaro Hernandez's jet-setting days ended

  • abruptly this year.

  • He was convicted in that $230 million drug

  • counterfeiting operation.

  • An attorney for Hernandez argued in court his

  • "gambling addiction" was a "driving force behind

  • his participation in the criminal conspiracy." And

  • said Hernandez regularly took "large quantities of

  • cash obtained from his sales of diverted drugs"

  • to casinos.

  • He pled guilty to conspiracy charges related

  • to distributing adulterated and misbranded

  • drugs and money laundering.

  • He is serving a 15-year prison sentence.

  • And the critical cog in these schemes, the

  • distributors?

  • None have been criminally charged, though the CEO of

  • Scripts Wholesale was indicted in June for

  • buying more than $150 million of "illegally

  • diverted prescription HIV medication" and reselling

  • it to pharmacies.

  • He pled not guilty.

  • His attorney declined to comment.

  • Today, federal authorities say they are

  • actively investigating other major drug

  • counterfeiters. In October, prosecutors

  • charged New York pharmacy owners with a $20 million

  • scheme to buy and sell HIV medications on the

  • black market and pay illegal kickbacks.

  • Then, fraudulently bill Medicare, Medicaid and

  • private insurance companies. The proceeds

  • allegedly went for lavish purchases, like this

  • Mercedes Maybach.

  • Drug diversion is widespread and it impacts

  • the entire country.

  • I'm saddened and disheartened that the

  • schemes cross the entire United States and the

  • territories, but I'm not surprised.

  • Fraud is always evolving.

At the casino cage, wads of cash in hand.

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How Criminals Are Making Millions Counterfeiting Prescription Drugs

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2024 年 02 月 24 日
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