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Omnicare Inc. Agrees to $8M Settlement in False Claims Act Case

New Jersey

The U.S. Attorney’s Office of the District of New Jersey, the U.S. Department of Justice and 28 states have reached an $8 million settlement with Omnicare Inc. resolving allegations arising from a whistle-blower suit filed under the False Claims Act. The agreement was announced today by Acting U.S. Attorney William E. Fitzpatrick.

The United States alleged that Omnicare, in an effort to increase business efficiency and profit, designed and implemented an automated label verification system at certain locations that utilized a less specific drug code – known as “MEDID” – during its automated Stage II pharmacist verification process, instead of the more specific National Drug Code (NDC).

This system resulted in the submission by Omnicare of claims for generic drugs different from those actually dispensed to Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries. It also resulted in the dispensing of drugs with patient-specific labels displaying the incorrect manufacturer or NDC. 

The government alleged that the false manufacturer and NDC information on the labels, and within Omnicare’s electronic dispensing information, affected Omnicare’s ability to properly track and, if necessary, conduct patient-level recalls of such drugs.

“Ensuring accuracy in the dispensing of and billing for medication in the Medicare Part D and Medicaid Programs, especially to long-term care patients, is vital to public safety,” Acting U.S. Attorney Fitzpatrick said. 

The relators, or whistler-blowers, in the underlying qui tam will receive more than $2 million as their statutory share of the recovery and to resolve their employment based claims in accordance with the False Claims Act.

The civil lawsuit was filed in the District of New Jersey and is captioned U.S. et al. ex rel. Elizabeth Corsi and Christopher Ezzie v. Omnicare Inc.

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