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News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 16, 2006
Contact: Michelle Deaver
Number: (214) 366-6963
Lead Defendant In Health Care Fraud and
Rogue Internet
Pharmacy Scheme Pleads Guilty
NOV 16 -- (DALLAS) – Yesterday,
in U.S. District Court in Dallas before United States Magistrate Judge
Irma C. Ramirez, lead defendant Rakesh
Jyoti Saran pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit health
care fraud and other federal offenses; two counts of mail fraud; and
one count of conspiracy to distribute controlled substances, announced
United States Richard B. Roper. Saran, age 44, of Arlington, Texas, faces
a statutory maximum sentence of twenty years imprisonment. He will be
scheduled for sentencing by U.S. District Judge Jorge A. Solis.
Saran was arrested on September 21, 2005 on charges outlined in a 201-count
federal indictment alleging that from November 1999 through September
20, 2005 he and the codefendants conspired with each other and others
to commit health care fraud, wire fraud, mail fraud, and money laundering
and to engage in the illegal distribution of controlled substances in
a drug diversion scheme.
“The conviction of Rakesh Jyoti Saran and his co-conspirators,
along with the forfeiture of their ill gotten gains should demonstrate
the governments resolve in targeting, arresting and prosecuting those
individuals involved in the illegal distribution of pharmaceutical drugs
over the internet,” said Special Agent in Charge, James L. Capra
of the Dallas Division of the DEA. “This partnership of local,
state and federal agencies nationwide lead to the dismantling of this
internet trafficking organization. This was an extremely complex undertaking
and all agencies, investigators and prosecutors should be commended for
their perseverance and dedication to duty.”
Based on plea papers filed
yesterday, Saran operated twenty-three Texas-incorporated pharmacies
through two companies owned by him, Carrington Healthcare
Systems, Inc. and Infinity Services Group, Inc., and purchased expensive
pharmaceuticals at significant discounts from pharmaceutical wholesale
suppliers, including AmerisourceBergen, located in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania;
Anda, Inc., located in Florida; Cardinal Health, located in Dublin,
Ohio; H.D. Smith, located in Fort Worth, Texas; and Morris & Dickson
Co., L.L.C. in Shreveport, Louisiana. Saran’s pharmacies purchased
controlled substances such as hydrocodone (an addictive painkiller),
phentermine hydrochloride (an appetite suppressant), alprazolam (used
to treat anxiety, depression, panic disorder and premenstrual syndrome),
and promethazine cough syrup (containing codeine) and obtained significant
price discounts by obtaining fraudulent memberships in Group Purchasing
Organizations (GPOs). To qualify for the significantly discounted “contract
pricing” available to GPOs, Saran fraudulently represented to
wholesale suppliers that his purchases were for “institutional
distribution” and signed contracts containing “own use” or “closed
door pharmacy” provisions restricting his distribution of the
pharmaceuticals to institutions such as prisons, long-term care facilities,
and rehabilitation hospitals. However, Saran sold the significantly-discounted
pharmaceuticals outside the scope of the provisions, making substantial
profits from the diverted transactions. Saran did not disclose to the
wholesalers that the pharmacies were alter ego businesses he had created
and that he had obtained individual DEA registration numbers for each
one to camouflage his identity as the actual purchaser.
Saran also utilized his pharmacies
to operate a “store front” website
designed to facilitate the distribution of controlled substances to internet
customers. Using the website, drug users illegally acquired controlled
substances and dangerous drugs without valid prescriptions and without
doctor intervention, paying up to four times the cost if the substances
had been acquired legally.
Saran also used his pharmacies
to fill pharmaceutical order from other Internet
Facilitation Centers (IFC) involved in the illegal distribution of dangerous
drugs and controlled substances. Additionally, Saran also played an integral
role in providing promethazine cough syrup with codeine, hydrocodone,
and alprazolam to individuals who illegally sold these drugs “on
the street”, acquiring approximately $20 million in proceeds for
doing so.
As part of his plea agreement, Saran will forfeit assets earned from
his illegal activities,
including over $1,000,000 in cash seized at his residence; more than
$375,000 found in bank accounts; several vehicles; and a custom home
under construction in Arlington.
In addition to his own guilty plea, Saran entered guilty pleas on behalf
of twenty corporations he controlled and used in the criminal conspiracy,
including Alliance Pharmacy Services, Inc.; AMS Pharmaceuticals Group,
Inc.; Carrington Health Care System, Inc.; Dalamar Services, Inc.; East
Pointe Pharmacy Services, Inc.; Everest Services, Inc.; Infiniti Services
Group, Inc.; Med-Care Infusion Services, Inc.; National Executive Management,
Inc.; Orion Pharmacy Services, Inc.; Precision Pharmacy Services, Inc.;
Premium Pharmacy Services, Inc.; Quantum Infusion, Inc.; Reliance Pharmaceutical,
Inc.; Southwest Infusion, Inc.; SWS Pharmacy Services, Inc.; Texas Home
Infusion, L.L.C.; Tri-Phasic Pharmacy, Inc.; Trinity Infusion Services,
Inc.; and Trinity Pharmacy Services, Inc.
Sixteen other defendants,
including managers and employees of Saran’s
various pharmacies, have also pleaded guilty to charges in the indictment,
including conspiracy to commit healthcare fraud and conspiracy to distribute
controlled substances.
U.S. Attorney Roper said, “These convictions show that Internet
Pharmacies who
illegally peddle controlled substances over the internet will be brought
to justice. Saran’s multimillion dollar nationwide operation was
successfully dismantled by the hard work and cooperation of federal,
state and local law enforcement. These successful convictions should
exemplify federal and local law enforcement’s commitment to address
this serious problem of rouge on line pharmacy.”
U.S. Attorney Roper especially
recognized the investigative efforts and teamwork of the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration - Office of Criminal
Investigations; Federal Bureau of Investigation; Drug Enforcement Administration;
Internal Revenue Service – Criminal Investigation; U.S. Department
Social Security Administration - Office of the Inspector General; U.S.
Department of Veteran Affairs - Office of the Inspector General; Texas
Department of State Health Services and the Texas State Board of Pharmacy.
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