More problems for Merial

Anonymous

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http://blogs.findlaw.com/in_house/2...-whistleblower-fired-for-protecting-dogs.html


The filing of a federal lawsuit last week has brought attention to yet another corporate scandal, this time known as the Heartgard Plus cover-up.

Former Global Head of Pharmacovigilance Dr. Kari Blaho-Owens has sued Merial, Ltd., the manufacturer of the canine heartworm medication, alleging that she was fired after discovering that the company had intentionally utilized improper data analysis methods to ward off an FDA investigation.

There are also allegations that she was instructed to destroy documents.

Blaho-Owens was hired in 2006 after the FDA began to inquire into the pre-approval performance data submitted for the Heartgard Plus product, according to the lawsuit. It was found to be inconsistent with consumer reports regarding effectiveness.

While reviewing the data, Courthouse News Service reports that she discovered that the company was aware that Heartgard Plus was not 100% effective as early as 2002, despite claims otherwise. It had also used flawed data analysis to respond to the FDA's inquiry.

She reported this to supervisors, who Consumer Affairs reports were more concerned with marketing than safety.

The Heartgard Plus cover-up got worse, when in 2009, a class action suit was filed against Merial. Blaho-Owens alleges that she was instructed to destroy relevant litigation documents.

After she reported the request to corporate counsel and eventually filed a retaliation complaint, she was fired.

Though we all know that these are only allegations, this story is actually a prime learning opportunity for your corporate clients. Not only is the Heartgard Plus cover-up a useful reminder about the preservation of evidence, it is also the perfect example of why corporations should not lie to investigators and how they should not handle whistleblowers.
 






























Maybe Merck / Intervet got cold feet with the merger when they saw this lawsuit and started looking more closely at Merial's financial data?

Good point. With all the outside i-bankers involved going through the books and cross checking financials with other market data both firms could have noticed discrepancies. After all the wall street scandals which wall street firm would want their name on documents submitted to the FTC or other agencies with data "allegedly" not SOX compliant.
 
























Too bad FDA is disgruntled as well. Hmmmm ... I see a pattern building. This house of cards sucks. To top things off, my manager is a diversion-master. My neighboring rep is the one taking credit for huge volumes she didn't really work for, and that's fked-up.

I hate this blsht. We are sinking, and the water rushing in is cold.