WHISTLEBLOWERS EXPOSE A $7 BILLION NO-BID DEFENSE DEPARTMENT CONTRACT AND THE ILLEGAL MARKETING PRACTICES OF A PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANY PROMOTING AN ADDICTIVE OPIOID FOR TREATMENTS NOT APPROVED BY THE FDA, ON THE SEASON FINALE OF "WHISTLEBLOWER," FRIDAY, JUNE 28
"Bunny's War: The Case Against the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers / Opioid Lollipops: The Case Against Cephalon" - In 2005, Bunnatine 'Bunny' Greenhouse was selected for the top civilian post in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, responsible for approving all outside contracting. It was a far cry from her humble beginnings in rural Louisiana, but what should have been the pinnacle of her civil service career became something much darker.
Greenhouse spoke out about a $7 billion contract called 'Restore Iraqi Oil,' which was to help rebuild Iraq's oil infrastructure in the wake of the U.S. invasion of that country. Greenhouse felt that the contract, which was awarded to KBR, a subsidiary of the oil services company Halliburton, was uncompetitive and overly generous in budget and duration. In addition, there was documented evidence suggesting that the office of Vice President Dick Cheney - who had formerly served as the CEO of Halliburton, KBR's owner - had exerted influence in assigning the contract.
Greenhouse says that, because of her opposition to the contract, she was retaliated against, demoted and ultimately, in an act of physical intimidation, someone rigged a tripwire in her office, causing her to suffer a serious accident. Refusing to let the "good ol' boys" club get away with their violations, she filed a federal whistleblower lawsuit.
Host Alex Ferrer examines the case against the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and a second story about a pharmaceutical company that illegally marketed addictive opioids for treatments not approved by the Federal Drug Administration, resulting in serious danger to patients - allegedly including a number of fatalities - on the season finale of WHISTLEBLOWER, Friday, June 28 (8:00-9:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network.
Whistleblower Bruce Boise was a pharmaceutical rep for Cephalon Inc. who, in 2002, refused to follow company-ordered sales strategies to convince doctors to prescribe several drugs for "off-label" uses unapproved by the Federal Drug Administration. One of the drugs was a pain-killing lollipop called Actiq.
Actiq, whose active ingredient is the powerful opioid Fentanyl - implicated in the death of the musician Prince - is a lollipop that relieves extreme pain and is FDA-approved only for cancer patients in acute pain. Cephalon was pushing its reps to market it for off-label uses, such as treatment for migraines and lower back pain, to doctors who were not pain specialists.
Starting in early 2003, Boise agreed to wear a wire and do undercover work for the FDA's Office of Criminal Investigation (OCI) , gathering evidence of Cephalon's illegal, off-label marketing practices. Later that year, he was fired from his job and then blackballed in the pharmaceutical world. Divorced with three children, he was forced to sell his houses before they went into foreclosure and his cars were repossessed. To earn a living, he painted houses with his son before he injured both of his shoulders, did renovations, and ended up flipping burgers at county fairs.
In 2004, Boise filed a whistleblower lawsuit, alleging the company had violated federal law by illegally marketing pharmaceuticals off-label.
WHISTLEBLOWER is produced by CBS News Productions and CBS Television Studios. Alex Ferrer is the host. Susan Zirinsky is the senior executive producer. Anthony Batson, Alex Ferrer and Ted Eccles are the executive producers. Peter Bull is the senior producer. Alicia Tejada is the senior coordinating producer. Lincoln Farr, Ruth Reiss are the producers. Rashida Johnson, Eneida DelValle are the field producers. Marcus Balsam, James Taylor, Greg Socher, Maria Barrow, Pascal Akesson and Libby Fabricatore are the editors.
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