Eli-Lilly Slaps Will Hall, Others w/Injunction Over Leaked Drug Memos

Submitted by admin on Sat, 12/30/2006 - 18:18

Posted on Dec 30, 06

Will Hall just received a court order signed by US District Court Judge Hon Brian M. Corgan regarding the Eli-Lilly documents Alaska Attorney Jim Gottstein leaked to the New York Times. The order, dated Dec. 29th, says that the "following individuals who have received documents... are hereby enjoined from further disseminating these documents... injunction requires removal of any such documents posted at any website, and communication of this Order to anyone to whom these documents have already been disseminated..."

You can read the injunction here: http://www.freedom-center.org/pdf/LillyDocsInjunctionOrder12-29-06.pdf

Also check www.mindfreedom.org for latest news and info.

Joing the Zyprexakills campaign discussion list:
Zyprexa-discuss@acm.jhu.edu
http://lists.acm.jhu.edu/mailman/listinfo/zyprexa-discuss

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Will Hall is not at liberty to comment on the injunction, but issued the following statement:

"This is a freedom of information issue," said Hall. "People need to know what Eli-Lilly is doing behind closed doors. For years Lilly has covered up the dangers of its drugs and lied about its illegal marketing practices. Hundreds of people in Northampton are at risk for diabetes and other dangerous effects from the Zyprexa they take; many people already have been injured or even killed by this drug. Eli-Lilly has used their money to try to silence any critics, and now they are trying to intimidate and silence me. The internet is too wide open, and the documents have slipped through Lilly's fingers and are now available to anyone with a web browser."

"This is the tip of the iceberg; the story here isn't Eli-Lilly's medical fraud, which we've known about for decades, but that they got caught red handed breaking the law. With its corrupt and criminal behavior Eli-Lilly long ago forfeited any claim to ethical integrity or medical legitimacy. I don't think the New York Times call for congressional hearings in this scandal goes far enough. We need to realize that it's a disaster to entrust our health and wellbeing to private corporations, who at the end of the day can only care about stockholder profit. Whether it's health care scandals, the greenhouse effect, the arms industry, or child poverty, corporate capitalism has proved itself again and again to be at odds with human needs and common sense.

"Whenever we try to get behind the headlines and look at this big picture, we're told we have to make an either/or choice, between letting corporations like Eli-Lilly totally run amok, or tightening up a little so they get slapped on the wrist every now and then when they get caught. I think the people of the US are smarter than that. It's time we wake up and connect the dots: health care and the whole US economy are built on a rotten foundation with corporate capitalism. We can address this problem at its roots if we want to. I say we put the executives of Eli-Lilly and the rest of the pharmaceutical mafia in jail where they belong, and get to work building a better economic system."

Disclaimer from Freedom Center:

Freedom Center is an educational organization that refers to public information forwarded to the internet from unidentified sources. This information is widely available to the public; Freedom Center did not originate this information and has no opinion about implications legal or otherwise of the acts by unidentified individuals to provide these files on the internet or acts by others to access these files. We are not encouraging anyone to conduct illegal activities regarding these files. Freedom Center is not providing the 'ZyprexaKills' files for download, such as on our servers or email list. Freedom Center acts according to applicable state and federal laws.


You can read the background on Lilly's campaign to use the courts to suppress the Zyprexa documents here:
http://www.dissidentvoice.org/Dec06/Pringle25.htm

From Dissident Voice website:

Alaskan attorney Jim Gottstein says that after being served with a mandatory injunction, he has returned the internal Eli Lilly documents that he obtained in litigation and provided to the New York Times to the court.

Information from the documents related to Lilly's antipsychotic drug Zyprexa was highlighted two days in a row in front-page articles in the Times.

The documents reveal the illegal marketing schemes used by Lilly to make Zyprexa its best seller, which the company has managed to keep hidden for years by entering into out of court settlements in civil lawsuits which included confidentiality clauses and by getting judges to place the documents under protective orders to shield them from public view.

For instance, the documents under seal here are from a case where Lilly entered into an out-of-court settlement in June 2005, and agreed to pay $690 million to cover claims by about 8000 Zyprexa victims. But in order to get paid, the plaintiffs were required to sign a confidentiality clause and basically keep their mouths shut about Zyprexa from then on.

Its really comical the way Lilly keeps acting all indignant over the disclosure of these documents as if they contain brand new charges, when the company has been under federal and state investigations related to its off-label marketing of Zyprexa for several years already. The company is also facing Medicaid fraud charges in lawsuits all over the county.

In 1996, Zyprexa was approved for the treatment of adults with schizophrenia, and a few years later, it was approved for short-term treatment of adults with manic episodes associated with bipolar disorder.

Yet despite these extremely limited approved uses, Zyprexa went on to become the top selling antipsychotic worldwide with an estimated 20 million people having used the drug and Lilly's best-selling product, with $4.2 billion in sales in 2005, which translates into 30% of its total revenues.

The documents provided to the Times span a decade and clearly show that the company promoted off-label the sale of Zyprexa for uses not approved by the FDA as being safe and effective. They also reveal that Lilly knew about Zyprexa's link to drastic weight gain and diabetes for years but failed to inform prescribing doctors and consumers.

In fact according to the Times, Lilly knowingly distributed false information to doctors about the risks as late as 2001. On December 21, 2006, the Times reported that the information provided to doctors about the blood-sugar risks of Zyprexa did not match data circulated inside the company after a review of Lilly's clinical trials.

The Times quotes a Lilly report from November 1999 that shows that after examining 70 clinical trials, Lilly found that 16% of patients taking Zyprexa for a year had gained over 66 pounds. But instead of making these findings public, the company used data from a smaller group of trials that showed roughly 30% of Zypexa patients gained 22 pounds.

Mr. Gottstein is not involved in the case in which the judge issued a protective order In re: Zyprexa Products Liability litigation, MDL No. 1596, United States District Court, Eastern District of New York (MDL 1596), "in any manner whatsoever," he says.

He is the leader of The Law Project for Psychiatric Rights (PsychRights), a public interest law firm devoted to the defense of people facing forced psychiatric drugging against their will.

Currently, Mr. Gottstein represents an Alaskan patient and says the injunction will prevent him from using the Lilly documents to show that the side effects of Zyprexa are well-established by the company's own clinical trials, and therefore his client should not be forced to take such drugs against his will.

In Myers v Alaska Psychiatric Institute, 138 P.3d 238 (Alaska 2006), a case argued by Mr. Gottstein last summer, the Alaska Supreme Court ruled that Alaska's forced drugging procedures were unconstitutional because they did not require the court to find such drugging to be in the person's best interests, and that there were no less restrictive alternatives.

In order to present the evidence in the case he is handling now, Mr. Gottstein is looking to the Alaskan courts to issue a ruling that says his client's right to avoid forced drugging outweighs Lilly's right to keep the information about risks hidden.

He says the documents are highly relevant to a court inquiry, now required in Alaska, before a court can make an informed decision about whether to order forced drugging for his client.

In a December 17, 2006 letter to the court in the New York case, Mr. Gottstein stated: "In large part, this state of affairs has been created by the lies told by the manufacturers of psychiatric drugs."

"My impression," he wrote, "is that Eli Lilly's lies about Zyprexa form the basis of the plaintiffs' claims in MDL 1596, but that is not PsychRights' focus."

"PsychRights' focus," he explained, "is helping people avoid being forcibly drugged pursuant to court orders, where the courts have been, in my view, duped by Eli Lilly and other pharmaceutical company prevarications."

"In my view," Mr. Gottstein concluded, "the proper disposition of the question would be in favor of my client's right to inform the court of the extreme harm caused by Zyprexa, which Eli Lilly has successfully hidden for so long, while making its billions off the pill."

A court hearing was held in Brooklyn, New York on December 18, 2006, on a motion by Lilly asking the court to order Mr. Gottstein to the return the documents to the court and to bar him from disseminating them any further.

According to the transcript, Lilly also asked the court to require Mr. Gottstein to "preserve all emails and all correspondence of any kind, whether it's voice mail, written letters, emails, so that we can pursue a contempt proceeding against both he and Dr Egilman."

Even though the Lilly documents prove that the company knew that Zyprexa was causing diabetes and kept pushing the drug anyways, potentially harming millions more patients, the judges gave Mr. Gottstein hell and threatened to find him in contempt for doing nothing more than warning the public about the side effects of Zyprexa after Lilly concealed the information for a decade.

There is not one single word in the transcripts about Lilly knowingly injuring and killing people with Zyprexa or illegally pushing the drug to unwitting victims for off-label use.

Instead, Judge Brian Cogan granted Lilly's motion and told Mr. Gottstein's attorney that his client, "deliberately aided and abetted Dr Egilman in getting these documents released from the restriction that they were under, under the protective order. He knew what he was doing, and he did it deliberately."

Judge Cogan went on to tell the attorney, "your client should be on notice that of this moment, he is under a mandatory injunction to return those documents ... to take them down from any websites that he may have posted them on, and to take any reasonable effort to recover them from any sites or persons to which he has delivered them."

On December 18, 2006, at an earlier telephone conference in Brooklyn, Judge Roane Mann also did not utter one word about Lilly's illegal conduct, but instead admonished Mr. Gottstein for not playing fair with poor Eli Lilly in making the information about Zyprexa public, stating:

"I personally am not in a position to order you to return the documents. I can't make you return them but I can make you wish you had because I think this is highly improper not only to have obtained the documents on short notice without Lilly being advised of the amendment but then to disseminate them publicly before it could be litigated. It certainly smacks as bad faith."

These judges apparently believe that an expert, such as Dr David Egilman, who is hired to review documents in a case and subsequently learns that people are being seriously injured and killed should be forced to keep that knowledge a secret if a judge issues a protective order.

There is something very wrong with this picture. It begs the question of how can an ethical doctor not speak if he knows that patients are being harmed

The reason always cited for the need to keep documents under seal is the claim that the information contains trade secrets. However, just as Lilly has done here, drug companies have for too long been abusing the process by using protective orders to hide illegal conduct by concealing documents that show the company is illegally promoting the off-label use of a drug or that a drug can cause serious injuries or that a drug does not work.

In a case like this, if a court truly does not have a choice and is required to seal documents even when they show blatant illegal conduct on the part of a drug company, then Congress had better get busy and pass a law to stop the use the US court system to protect what could very easily be described as corporate murder.

In response to an earlier article on this issue, reader Larry Bone wrote and asked this author, "Is the corruption on this so widespread that no one would dare prosecute?"

"It is criminal behavior," he points out, "on a huge scale that is being virtually totally ignored by the authorities responsible for the public safety."

"I just feel," Mr. Bone wrote, "that there has to be an attorney or someone in a judicial or ethical capacity who would have the guts, and persistence to prosecute Lilly."

"It seems incredibly ridiculous," he states, "let alone obscene, that such blatant wrongdoing seemingly continues to be ignored by the legal authorities with jurisdiction over these sorts of cases."

"If these companies believe they have done nothing wrong," he says, "then let them prove their innocence in court."

Ellen Liversridge also wants a criminal investigation of Lilly. She lost her 30-year-old son, Rob, to the adverse effects of the drug. "He gained almost 100 pounds while taking Zyprexa," Ellen says.

"Rob lapsed into a coma," she recalls, "and died of profound hyperglycemia four days later on October 5, 2002."

"I believe that the people who did this should have a criminal trial," Ellen says. "Enron executives went to prison for wiping out people's life savings," she points out.

"Lilly executives should go to prison," she says, "for knowingly being responsible for people's deaths, shattered families; ruined and grieving families."

Ellen has nothing but praise for the New York Times and its source. "I am grateful to Jim Gottstein for making available this awful truth and hope it results in justice being done."

"If there can ever be justice for a crime as heinous as this," she adds.

Daniel Haszard, of Bangor Maine, feels the same way. In 1996, he was prescribed Zyprexa off-label to supposedly treat Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, and he remained on the drug for four years.

Although he paid $250 a month for the drug, Mr. Haszard says the drug did not relieve his symptoms of PTSD at all and in early 2000, he was diagnosed with diabetes.

He was shocked to hear the diagnosis, he said, because there was no history of diabetes in his family. Just as thousands of other Zyprexa victims, Mr. Haszard did not make the connection between his diabetes and the drug until he saw a commercial for a law firm in December 2005.

Zyprexa causes diabetes, he says, and public health programs are left to pick up the tab for the medial expenses. According to Mr.. Haszard, "there are now 7 states going after Lilly for fraud and restitution," related to the promotion of Zyprexa for off-label use and the concealment of its risks.

Dr Stefan Kruszewski, MD, a Harvard-trained certified psychiatrist in adult, adolescent, and geriatric psychiatry from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania also finds Lilly's conduct appalling.

"Neither health professionals nor consumers," he states, "can accurately provide information about the risk and benefits of a drug like Zyprexa -- or any drug for any condition -- without a comprehensive awareness of the risks and benefits."

"If the clinical research data regarding effectiveness, efficacy or safety is sequestered or misrepresented from observation studies, randomized drug trials or meta-analyses," he says, "then it is not possible for any provider to give any patient what he or she needs to make an informed consent."

"At that point," Dr Kruszewski says, "individuals receive drugs that may or may not help them, but always at their own peril."

"Zyprexa causes both a severe metabolic syndrome consisting of obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular problems," Dr Kruszewski advises, "at the same time that it continues to cause neurological side-effects like the older antipsychotics."

"Zyprexa and its antipsychotics cousins," he explains, "were marketed to be safer and easier to tolerate because the pharmaceutical companies said that the newer drugs caused fewer neurological injuries, like restlessness or 'akathisia,' and tardive dyskinesia."

Those assertions are false, he says, and "what we have now is a drug whose massive revenues and promotion are based upon faulty disclosures by Eli Lilly."

Evelyn Pringle is a columnist for OpEd News and an investigative journalist focused on exposing corruption in government and corporate America. She can be reached at: evelyn-pringle@sbcglobal.net

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