$69M damages award in antitrust case

Date : 01/25/2008 @ 6:11PM
Source : TFN
Stock : Cambrex Corp (CBM)
Quote : 4.36  0.27 (6.60%) @ 8:00PM
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$69M damages award in antitrust case

        BOSTON (AP) - A federal court in Washington has awarded damages of $69
million to four health insurers nearly three years after a jury found that Mylan
Laboratories Inc. violated antitrust laws by overcharging for two generic
versions of popular anti-anxiety drugs.
    In June 2005, a federal jury in the District of Columbia ordered Mylan to
pay at least $12 million to Blue Cross Blue Shield plans in Massachusetts and
Minnesota, as well as Owatonna, Minn.-based Federated Mutual Insurance Co. and
Health Care Service Corp.
    The awards stemmed from allegations that Pittsburgh, Pa.-based Mylan
increased prices by up to 2,000 percent for lorazepam and clorazepate, generic
versions of the drugs Ativan and Tranxene, after exclusive agreements that kept
other generic competitors from obtaining needed raw materials.
    The jury found Mylan's actions were willful, which allowed lawyers for the
insurers to seek triple damages. On Thursday, Washington, D.C.-based U.S.
District Judge Thomas Hogan awarded triple damages.
    The court awarded Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts $58.5 million;
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota, $5.3 million; Federated Mutual Insurance
Co., $1.2 million; and $4.3 million for Health Care Service Corp., the
Chicago-based operator of Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans in Illinois, New
Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas.
    "Our clients are extremely pleased at this long-awaited outcome," said W.
Scott Simmer, a Minneapolis attorney who represented three of the plaintiff
health plans.
    The triple damages award "sends a strong message to Mylan that their
violations were unacceptable," Simmer said.
    A spokesman for Mylan did not immediately return a phone message seeking
comment Friday.
    The order requires Mylan to share responsibility for paying damages with
Cambrex Corp., a subsidiary of Profarmco that supplied materials to Mylan to
make the drugs; and Gyma Laboratories, a distributor.
    The case grew out of exclusive licensing agreements among the defendants
dating to 1997 that allegedly led Mylan to raise prices for the medication. The
agreements were terminated in December 1998 after the Federal Trade Commission
announced an investigation into Mylan's actions. The FTC subsequently entered
into a $100 million settlement with Mylan Laboratories, which now uses the
corporate name Mylan Inc.
    
Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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