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In April 2003, Bayer Corporation paid a $251 million
civil settlement and a $5.6 million criminal fine to settle a qui tam law suit brought
by Getnick & Getnick on behalf of a former Bayer marketing executive. This is
the largest Medicaid fraud case in history. The lawsuit alleged that Bayer engaged in a fraudulent "private labeling" scheme to avoid
paying rebates to Medicaid for two popular drugs, Cipro and Adalat CC. The rebates are required by law to ensure that Medicaid receives the same discounts
that drug makers give their commercial customers. Bayer gave deep discounts to two HMOs on the two drugs and put the HMOs' drug code numbers on
the labels instead of its own. Bayer then pretended that the HMOs were responsible
for paying the rebate on this "private label" product even though it knew that the HMOs did not sell drugs to Medicaid or pay rebates. Getnick
& Getnick's client was awarded $34 million, representing 24% of the federal portion of the civil recovery.
See:
"Big Suits: U.S. v. Bayer," The American Lawyer, June 2003.
Heather Smith, “Blowing the Whistle on Bayer,” The
American Lawyer , June 2003.
Melody Peterson, “Bayer Agrees to Pay U.S. $257 Million in
Drug Fraud, The New York Times, April 17, 2003.
Alice Dembner, "Dying executive drove landmark Medicaid case," The
Boston Globe, April 17, 2003.
Jennifer Heldt Powell, "Money wasn't reason for alert on Bayer," The
Boston Herald, April 18, 2003.
Interview with Neil V. Getnick about $257 million qui tam settlement
with Bayer Corporation, Corporate Crime Reporter, Vol. 17 No. 16,
April 21, 2003.

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