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Lawyers fight over diet drug settlement
AP | 9/27/03 | DAVID B. CARUSO

Posted on 09/27/2003 9:19:47 AM PDT by kattracks

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Auditors reviewing the medical records of people slated to receive a share of a $3.75 billion trust fund for people who took the fen-phen diet drug have found "a huge number" that may not have suffered heart-valve damage as claimed, and shouldn't be paid, according to an attorney for the trust.

More than 100,000 people have filed the paperwork and presumably telltale echocardiograms that would entitle them to a portion of the settlement fund, set up by Wyeth Inc. to resolve claims related to the recalled fen-phen drugs Pondimin and Redux.

But payments to hundreds have been tossed out since last fall, when a federal judge, bothered by sample audits that found a high percentage of unjustified claims, ordered a total review.

"A huge number were problematic," said Richard L. Scheff, an attorney for the Philadelphia-based trust handling the distribution of the settlement. "There is an enormous task to be done to separate the wheat from the chaff."

U.S. District Judge Harvey J. Bartle III, who is overseeing the settlement, barred two New York law firms from collecting shares of the settlement after ruling that they had submitted unjustified claims.

The trust sued a Kansas City doctor who had been assisting with the filing of claims, saying she diagnosed thousands of people as being ill without properly evaluating their health.

Trust officials also set up a toll-free hotline for people to report fraud, threatened to turn over evidence of wrongdoing to prosecutors and asked lawyers to have doctors reevaluate thousands of cases to confirm their diagnoses.

The trust has also continued to make payments — more than $1 billion has been distributed so far. But some lawyers with clients who applied for a share of the settlement have been surprised by the ferocity of the crackdown.

Booneville, Miss., attorney Joseph Langston, who represents about 2,000 clients in the settlement, said he plans to have all of his claims re-examined to avoid running into problems with the auditors.

"We're instructing our cardiologists to read these echocardiograms again, and only certify cases where there is no question that the person suffered some damage," Langston said. "We are going to do this more strictly, more narrowly."

A group of lawyers upset at the new audit rules unsuccessfully asked a judge this summer to fire the trust's lead legal team, saying it had become too cozy with Wyeth.

"I've probably got 800 or 900 clients whose claims have been on file for over a year, and there has been no progress. Not one has gotten a dime yet," said Houston attorney George M. Fleming, who was part of the group that challenged the trust's management.

He said many of his clients chose to settle because the trust allowed them to bypass the emotional burden and potential risk of a trial, only to find that the settlement process is equally intense and risky.

Under the original terms of the settlement, the trust largely left the work of determining who had been hurt by the drugs to cardiologists hired by the law firms, and only 15 percent of the claims submitted were audited. The rest were to be paid without question or review.

"The assumption was that everyone would be honest," Scheff said.

Now, every claim must go through the audit process. Scheff declined to say what percentage of claims was being rejected, but he described the number as "zillions."

Wyeth spokesman Lowell Weiner declined to comment on the audit.

About 6 million people took Pondimin and Redux before they were pulled from the market in 1997. Wyeth has already paid more than $13 billion in claims related to the drugs.



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: fenphen
"We're instructing our cardiologists to read these echocardiograms again, and only certify cases where there is no question that the person suffered some damage," Langston said.

Shouldn't this have been done before any claims were filed?

1 posted on 09/27/2003 9:19:47 AM PDT by kattracks
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To: kattracks
When will drug manufactuers get a clue and leave the USA?
2 posted on 09/27/2003 9:38:12 AM PDT by Voltage
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To: kattracks
As is typical in all of these class action lawsuits, the only people that get anything are the lawyers.
3 posted on 09/27/2003 9:44:05 AM PDT by sticker
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To: kattracks
"I've probably got 800 or 900 clients whose claims have been on file for over a year, and there has been no progress. Not one has gotten a dime yet," said Houston attorney George M. Fleming

I'm shocked.

4 posted on 09/27/2003 9:47:33 AM PDT by Hank Rearden (Dick Gephardt. Before he dicks you.)
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To: kattracks
"Shouldn't this have been done before any claims were filed?"

It sure seems like grounds for getting the judgement considerably lessened. The money the fraudsters do not get should be returned to the company - the victim here - and the fraudsters should EACH be fined.

5 posted on 09/27/2003 10:00:51 AM PDT by cake_crumb (UN Resolutions = Very Expensive, Very SCRATCHY Toilet Paper)
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To: kattracks
"U.S. District Judge Harvey J. Bartle III, who is overseeing the settlement, barred two New York law firms from collecting shares of the settlement after ruling that they had submitted unjustified claims"

The lawyers for those two firms should be prosecuted. "Unjustified claims". Any of US, as individuals, would be in trouble for that. Trial lawyers get a pass.

6 posted on 09/27/2003 10:07:20 AM PDT by cake_crumb (UN Resolutions = Very Expensive, Very SCRATCHY Toilet Paper)
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To: kattracks
I personally know someone who bragged that he got a $100,000+ settlement, then confided in me he never took Phen-fen!!

He DID get a prescription, but never took it. The vermin shysters moreover know full well that his case was a fraud. They sent him to their crooked doctors who created completely bogus test results.

This is the typical day to day operation of Trial Lawyers, Inc.

7 posted on 09/27/2003 11:50:15 AM PDT by friendly
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