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Compounding Pharmacy Sales Representative Pleads Guilty in Prescription Fraud Conspiracy

BIRMINGHAM – A sales representative for a Haleyville, Ala.,-based compounding pharmacy pleaded guilty recently in federal court to participating in a conspiracy to generate prescriptions, including for a $29,000 wound cream, and defraud health care insurers and prescription drug administrators out of tens of millions of dollars in 2015.

U.S. Attorney Jay E. Town, FBI Special Agent in Charge Johnnie Sharp, and other federal officials announced the charges.
PETER EODICE II, 34, of Webster, NY, pleaded guilty before U.S. District Court Judge L. Scott Coogler to conspiracy to commit health care fraud, wire fraud and mail fraud, various counts of health care fraud for submitting fraudulent prescription reimbursement claims to Blue Cross Blue Shield of Alabama, and one count of aggravated identity theft for forging a prescription. Eodice worked for Northside Pharmacy, an Alabama company doing business as Global Compounding Pharmacy. Global’s compounding and shipping facility was in Haleyville. The pharmacy did its prescription processing, billing and customer service at its “call center” in Clearwater, Fla.
Eodice is the fourth Global sales representative charged in the conspiracy. As part of his plea, Eodice agreed to forfeit $266,513 to the government as proceeds of illegal activity. His sentencing date has not been set.
“This defendant was one of the several representatives with Global Compounding Pharmacy whose greed led him to scheme to line his pockets at the expense of average citizens simply seeking quality health care,” Town said. “This type of fraud not only puts patients at risk with unnecessary prescriptions and treatments but unconscionably drives up the costs of health care for all of us.”
According to the charges and Eodice’s plea agreement, Global hired sales representatives who were located in various states and were responsible for generating prescriptions from physicians and other prescribers. To bill insurance providers, including Blue Cross Blue Shield of Alabama, for the prescriptions, Global contracted to enter the pharmacy networks of their third-party administrators, known as “pharmacy benefit managers” or “PBMs.” These PBMs included Prime Therapeutics and Express Scripts Incorporated.
The court documents describe a conspiracy at Global that centered on generating and billing PBMs for fraudulent, often high-reimbursement prescriptions. To generate prescriptions, Global hired sales representatives who were married or related to doctors and other prescribers. Global also encouraged sales representatives to volunteer at doctors’ offices where they would review patient files and push Global’s products to patients. Global executives frequently instructed employees to obtain high-reimbursing prescriptions that Global would fill and bill for reimbursement. One of the drugs that Eodice got for himself and his family members was a wound cream that cost over $29,000. Eodice also forged multiple prescriptions.
When billing, Global engaged in various fraudulent practices, including automatically refilling and billing for prescriptions regardless of patient need, and routinely waiving co-pays to encourage patients to accept unnecessary medications and refills. Global paid sales representatives a base salary, plus a monthly commission for prescriptions they obtained, according to court documents.
The charges against Eodice follow charges brought by the U.S. Attorney’s Office earlier this year against three other Global sales representatives, Robin Gary Lowry, 49, of Columbus, Miss., Bridget McCune, 42, of Destin, Fla., and Kelley Norris-Hartley, 41, of Tuscaloosa.  All three were charged with conspiracy to defraud insurance plans and PBMs, along with various health care fraud counts for submitting fraudulent claims for payment to BCBS of Alabama. McCune also was charged with conspiring to solicit and receive kickbacks in return for referring prescriptions under Medicare and TRICARE, a U.S. Department of Defense health care program, and with money laundering for spending proceeds of the crimes. All three defendants pleaded guilty. Their sentencings are scheduled for early 2018.
FBI, U.S. Postal Inspection Service, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General, and U.S. Defense Criminal Investigative Service investigated the cases, which Assistant U.S. Attorneys Chinelo Dike-Minor and Nicole Grosnoff are prosecuting.

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