Big Pharma Whistleblower Gets $51 Million

Pfizer Whistleblower Gets Huge Reward

It’s an amazing story and one worth talking about.  Gulf War veteran and former Pfizer sales representative John Kopchinski is getting $51 million dollars as a result of his whistleblowing lawsuit against Pfizer – the world’s biggest drug maker -- and that's big news.

Pfizer to Pay $2.3 Billion for Fraudulent Marketing 

According to a statement from the Justice Department,   Pfizer’s illegal practices in connection with its promotion of an anti-inflammatory drug called  Bextra is what got it into big trouble.

Under  the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, a company must specify the intended uses of a product in its new drug application to FDA. Once approved, the drug may not be marketed or promoted for so-called "off-label" uses.

It turns out that Pfizer promoted the sale of Bextra for several uses and dosages that the FDA specifically declined to approve because of its safety concerns.

As a result of that conduct, (as well as violations involving other drugs) the company will pay a criminal fine of $1.195 billion, the largest criminal fine ever imposed in the United States for any matter.

Pharmacia & Upjohn (Pfizer subsidiaries) will also forfeit $105 million, for a total criminal resolution of $1.3 billion.

All in all, Pfizer settled the case( which included civil and criminal penalties) for a whopping $2.3 billion dollars.

False Claims Act Liability

Pfizer also agreed to pay $1 billion to resolve allegations under the civil False Claims Act (also know as Qui Tam).

Under the Act, it is illegal to knowingly present a false or fraudulent claim for payment to the federal government or use a false or fraudulent record to get paid. The way it works is:

  • individuals and entities with evidence of fraud involving the United States or its programs or contracts can sue the wrongdoer on behalf of the government
  • the government has the right to intervene and join the action
  • if the government declines, the private plaintiff may proceed on his or her own behalf

Those who violate the Act are liable for three times the dollar amount of the fraud and additional civil penalties. As far as the whistleblower goes, the Whistelblowers Protection Blog explains it this way:

A qui tam plaintiff can receive between 15 and 30 percent of the total recovery from the defendant, whether through a favorable judgment or settlement. To be eligible to recover money under the Act, you must file a qui tam lawsuit. Merely informing the government about the violation is not enough. You only receive an award if, and after, the government recovers money from the defendant as a result of your suit.

 In this case, Kopchinski (and others) claimed that Pfizer:

  • illegally promoted four drugs  (Bextra an anti-inflammatory; Geodon, an anti-psychotic drug; Zyvox, an antibiotic; and Lyrica, an anti-epileptic drug),
  • for uses that were not medically accepted, and
  • caused false claims to be submitted to government health care programs.

As a part of the resolution of the case,  six whistleblowers will receive payments totaling more than $102 million from the federal share of the civil recovery.

Kopchinski, whose reporting instigated the government investigation, will get $51.5 million.

Great Result For This Whistleblower

It's a fantastic result for Kopchinski and the end of a long road. Most whistleblowers go through an enormous ordeal and so did Kopchinski,

First they struggle with the difficulty of reporting the illegal and/or dangerous practices to the corporate hierarchy and the pressure that goes with it.

What happens next --  when they are ignored as they often are -- is that they are labeled as troublemakers and then fired because of trumped up charges of misconduct.

Once they report the wrongdoing to a government agency, they are blackballed in their industry and can't get work. The stress, anxiety, guilt, and financial distress is overwhelming for most.

Kopchinski had this to say in a statement he released:

In the Army I was expected to protect people at all costs, 

At Pfizer I was expected to increase profits at all costs, even when sales meant endangering lives. 

I couldn't do that.

That's why Kopchinski got fired. At the time (2003) he had a baby and his wife was pregnant with twins. He went from earning $125,000 a year, to depleting his 401(k), to finally getting a $40,000 a year insurance job.

We appreciate Mr. Kopchinski's courage and conviction and congratulate him (as well as his legal team and the Justice Department ) for a superb result.

It doesn't often turn out this way -- and it's sure great to see it when it does. It's a wonderful Labor Day story.

image: images.huffingtonpost.com

Whisteblower Gets 48 Million

Last Thursday, Northrop Grumman Corporation agreed to pay the United States government $325 million to settle a whistleblower case, reported in the Wall Street Journal to be the largest case ever alleging military-procurement fraud.  Robert Ferro, the whistleblower, and his lawyers will share  $48.7 million dollars of the settlement.  Here's the story.   

TRW, which was acquired by Northrop in 2002, made parts for spy satellites that malfunctioned which resulted in:

  • satellites failing in orbit
  • expensive fixes
  • launch delays

Robert Ferro, an Aerospace Corporation engneer who worked with TRW,  discovered the problem with defective microelectronic parts.  Ferro claimed that TRW pressured him against publishing his findings. 

According to the Wall Street Journal, even after TRW tests confirmed Ferro's conclusions, TRW continued to tell the government "it did not know and could not have been expected to know about the problems.

The case was brought under the False Claims Act also known as Qui Tam. Under the Act, it is illegal to knowingly present a false or fraudulent claim for payment to the federal government or use a false or fraudulent record to get paid. The way it works is:

  • individuals and entities with evidence of fraud involving the United States or its programs or contracts can sue the wrongdoer on behalf of the government.
  • The government has the right to intervene and join the action
  • If the government declines, the private plaintiff may proceed on his or her own behalf

Those who violate the Act are liable for three times the dollar amount of the fraud and additional civil penalties.   As far as the whistleblower goes, the Whistelblowers Protection Blog explains it this way:


A qui tam plaintiff can receive between 15 and 30 percent of the total recovery from the defendant, whether through a favorable judgment or settlement. To be eligible to recover money under the Act, you must file a qui tam lawsuit. Merely informing the government about the violation is not enough. You only receive an award if, and after, the government recovers money from the defendant as a result of your suit. 

So that's how Robert Ferro got the 48 million. 

The author of  the  Wall Street JournalLaw Blog reported on the story. He wrote that he keeps a journal of "all those people he'd like to be in his next life" and Ferro has made the list -- understandably so considering the size of the award.

I don't know Mr. Ferro's personal story.  All I know is what has been reported.

But I have represented many whistleblowers through the years and I feel compelled to add that it's not always a bright and rosy picture.

Individuals who "blow the whistle" go through enormous stress, often lose their jobs,  and suffer enormous guilt because of  the harm imposed upon their families.  They are ridden with conflict:  Did I do the right thing or should I have kept my mouth shut?  With regularity, they are blackballed from their professions. Bankruptcy and depression are common.

I congratulate Mr. Ferro.  He is a courageous man and deserves credit and our thanks for sticking his neck out and doing the right thing.

The bottom line is that this is one important story that had a happy ending, but unfortunately, that is not always the case. That's why so many are fighting very hard to get broader and uniform  whistleblower protection which is both needed and deserved.

 image: www.defensetech.org