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West Virginia Record

WEST VIRGINIA RECORD

Saturday, November 23, 2024

McGraw's attorneys want to explore timeline beyond Eli Lilly plea

McGraw

NEW YORK - Private attorneys hired by state Attorney General Darrell McGraw are appealing a federal magistrate's decision that prevented them from further exploring the guilty plea to which Eli Lilly & Co. entered in January.

The State has already dropped its claims for damages done to its Medicaid program and for civil penalties for any actions occurring before 2002. Lilly pleaded guilty to federal charges of off-label marketing of its prescription antipsychotic Zyprexa, but only from Sept. 1999-March 31, 2001.

West Virginia's attorneys sought to depose those who are most knowledgeable about the terms of the guilty plea. U.S. Magistrate Judge Roanne Mann issued a protective order in February preventing any such discovery. The appeal was filed March 2.

"Although Judge Mann found the information sought was relevant, she found that the guilty plea and related documents were themselves the best evidence of the nature of Lilly's conduct and any further discovery would be cumulative to discovery previously undertaken in the (mass district litigation)," wrote H. Blair Hahn, of Richardson, Patrick, Westbrook & Brickman in Mt. Pleasant, S.C.

"Further, she found the attorney-client privilege issues were unavoidable and thus rendered the deposition a burden to Lilly and the Court... Judge Mann's order denying the State's motion for protective order is clearly erroneous and contrary to law because the discovery sought by the State is not unreasonably cumulative or duplicative and because the burden of the proposed discovery does not outweigh its likely benefit..."

In January, Eli Lilly agreed to pay $1.4 billion to settle federal civil and criminal claims. The payment also benefited the Medicaid programs of more than 30 states that collectively received approximately $362 million.

Consumer protection claims by 33 attorneys general were settled for $62 million last year, and 12 states still have claims pending against the company.

West Virginia is seeking only civil penalties for any unlawful activities occurring after 2002 because that's all the four-year statute of limitations allows. It filed suit in 2006.

It also dropped its Medicaid claims after Eli Lilly requested records associated with the program.

The State's appeal notes that the guilty plea says that "the conduct which forms the basis for this plea agreement... continued past March 31, 2001."

"While the plea itself and accompanying documents may be some admissible evidence the trial court can consider, Lilly has not agreed to the admissibility of the plea or those documents," the appeal says. "Under these circumstances, Judge Mann's conclusion that the plea itself is enough evidence is clearly erroneous and contrary to law."

The State claims the extent of the discovery performed so far in the case has been large, so its deposition request isn't burdensome. It also says Lilly has experienced attorneys who can handle it.

However, it appears Mann may be getting fed up with the different disputes going on in the West Virginia case and others.

"The Court has received a deluge of filings on discovery issues in these related Zyprexa cases," she wrote Tuesday.

"Going forward, briefing on discovery disputes shall be limited to a letter-motion, a response and a reply. Absent prior authorization from the Court, any submission received beyond a reply shall be stricken."

In October, U.S. District Judge Jack Weinstein told the parties to take 30 days off from the case to try to work out a settlement. It did not work.

"While most states have settled their cases against Lilly for a few million dollars each, the states with cases now pending in this court -- Connecticut, Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana, New Mexico and West Virginia -- are seeking, on essentially the same theories and evidence, many billions of dollars in damages in fines," Weinstein wrote.

Eli Lilly has also paid $1.2 billion to settle more than 30,000 individual lawsuits.

Also representing West Virginia are Charleston's Jerri Janeen Legato and Charleston's Troy Giatras, whose political action committee Equal Justice gave $1,000 to McGraw's campaign in 2004.

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