Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Sunday, December 7, 2014

Scheme


A new lawsuit claims CEO of Sanofi and other executives conducted a scheme to funnel tens of millions of dollars in kickbacks and other incentives to get the company's diabetes drugs prescribed and sold.

The whistleblower lawsuit also claims Sanofi CEO Christopher Viehbacher was fired by the company's board "in part, because he was involved in the aforesaid illegal and/or fraudulent activity," which allegedly went on "over the course of many years."

The suit says that Sanofi used contracts that appeared to be for legitimate purposes to direct money to hospitals, doctors and retail pharmacy chains to induce them to purchase and prescribe Sanofi's diabetes medication. It also claims that "approximately $1 billion is missing from Defendant Sanofi which has not been accounted for."

This come two years after the drug company reached an agreement with the Justice Department to settle claims that it engaged in kickbacks by giving doctors free samples of an arthritis drug as a way to encourage them to buy and prescribe that medication.
It impacts federal Medicare and Medicaid insurance programs, the tax payer wallet,
[CNBC-Dan Mangan]

Just a thought.             

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Bill Cosby.

For decades, Cosby was America’s ideal dad. His real life was more complicated.

The LA Times reported that Hayes is claiming that Cosby groped her breasts in 1973 while they were at a restaurant.

Chelan, said that Cosby drugged and sexually assaulted her at the Las Vegas Hilton in 1986 when she was just 17, the same location where Florida nurse Therese Serignese claims she was raped by Cosby 10 years prior.

According to the LA Times, Chelan [identified by her first name only] told press that Cosby gave her a blue pill to "help with a cold." After she took it, she found that she couldn't move or say anything and that he began sexually assaulting her before she blacked out. She said she awoke hours later to hear Cosby clapping his hands and saying, "Daddy says wake up." He gave her $1,500 to buy something nice for her and her grandmother, she told reporters at the news conference.

Feminist attorney Gloria Allred addressed Bill Cosby,  threw down the gauntlet, asking Cosby to either waive the statute of limitations on allegations that more than 20 women have brought against him, or set up a $100 million account for his accusers and let a panel of retired judges review the claims.

Statute of limitation has expired, accusation were very old, but the Media, all of a sudden, are excited about it. Here is a suggestion of using 100 million of his money to start.... many don't believe the accusation. Just a thought.

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Prices of Medication UP 500X

Elderly woman taking medication
 
The prices for some common generic medicines soared over the past 18 months, state and federal lawmakers are trying to find relief for patients struggling to pay.
 
A Senate panel convened to investigate price increases for generic drugs. Separately, Senators Amy Klobuchar and McCain will revive stalled legislation to allow some prescription imports from Canada. The State of Maine is testing out a hotly contested new law that allows its residents to buy drugs from overseas, flouting United States policy.
 
One half of generic medicines went up in price 10% less than a year; about 10 percent more than doubled in cost in that time, with some common medicines rising by over 500 percent, [Thyroid replacement hormone, the antibiotic doxycycline, the heart pill digoxin and the asthma pill albuterol].
 
The United States does not regulate drug pricing or negotiate prices nationally like other countries, generic medicines have long been a safety valve for American patients, at lower costs. Historically, after the patent expires, generic copies have entered the fray, bringing prices down, often sharply.
 
A 90-day supply of the generic heart medicine digoxin sells for $187 in New York; the branded version, Lanoxin, sells for $24.30 in Canada. A month’s supply of a generic steroid to treat inflammatory bowel disease sells for $1,625 in the United States, while the branded version sells for $155.70 in Canada. It is all in the laws.
 
We are robbing the elderly from their social securities to pay the exaggerated prices of medications.    It is time to do the right thing. Open Market condition will level the prices out.
See my patent application  #11/081,991.
 
Just a thought.

Saturday, November 22, 2014

Six Bullets...

grissomfamily1280.jpg

Tracey Grissom says that when she shot her ex-husband, Hunter, in Northport, Alabama, she feared for her life, a fear she'd felt many times before.
"He had hurt me. He had done a lot of things to me. I didn't want him to be dead

She met Hunter Grissom in 2003. Tracey was just 21, and had a  son going through a divorce. "He absolutely loved my son.  she said of Hunter.

It was love at first sight. "He was sucked in immediately,"
Hunter was two years younger than Tracey. When the couple eloped in 2004.

Eight months later, the marriage was in trouble. After threatening him with divorce, Hunter promised to stop using marijuana and their relationship improved so much that Tracey leveraged everything she owned so they could start a business together, all in Tracey's name.

We had tried to have a child for quite some time. We actually had five miscarriages before we had her," Tracey said. "She was premature. Her heart and lungs were not developed."

Tracey says around 10 p.m., Hunter took her to the bedroom, bound her legs, raped her and then threw her against the bathtub......

Tracey had emptied her entire gun, six shots. Then she called 911. She was convicted.

Watch and learn. Just a thought.

On Edge-Ferguson.

Missouri Governor Declares State of Emergency and Curfew in Ferguson

Missouri governor declares state of emergency ahead of ruling by Grand Jury. Security has been beefed up, with National Guard troops and extra FBI agents.

One activist protester tells CNN that there won't be any violence.
Two men suspected of buying explosives they planned to detonate during protests in Ferguson, Mo, were arrested on Friday and charged with federal firearms offenses.
If I can't open my doors every morning, I can't feed my kids in the evening," the mother of two tells CNN. She hopes her store will not become a target during protests, which potentially could become violent.

This is a country that allows everybody to express their views, allows them to peacefully assemble, to protest actions that they think are unjust," Obama told ABC.
"But using any event as an excuse for violence is contrary to rule of law and contrary to who we are."
Note: To disturb people's life for months, use violence against the police, rob stores and destroy it, hinder businesses and commerce, is far criminal than what happened. Destroy livelihood, prevent children from going to school, elderly from buying food, patients to see their doctors , and communities from feeling safe is criminal.

So stop it....... Go back to do some work and let others build their and their children's lives. The Grand jury will make its decision anyway they see fit.

Just a thought.

Friday, November 21, 2014

You too-Uber?


think stock

A top executive of the ride service reportedly described a Nixonian plan to dig up dirt on journalists who criticize it and sully their reputations.

A Buzzfeed reporter wrote that when she attended a meeting with an Uber executive in New York, he was monitoring her arrival in one of the company’s cars.

The author Peter Sims said his personal travel information was apparently shown on a wall at an Uber launch party, and the anecdotal evidence that the company has played fast and loose with its customers’ data is pretty compelling.

A writer for San Francisco Magazine said sources inside the company warned her that the company might monitor her rides.

The Uber public relations debacles spread across other areas: reports of Uber officials ordering cars from competitor Lyft in order to poach its drivers; a sexist promotion for its service in Lyon, France.

The company has renounced the thuggish campaign of targeting critics that its senior vice president for business, Emil Michael, described in a dinner party attended by the BuzzFeed editor Ben Smith.

So, Grow up.       Just a thought.

Sunday, November 16, 2014

Greed or just ...?

Gold Ingots 3D Graphics

A minor Chinese official rose to infamy after anticorruption detectives discovered more than $20 million worth of renminbi in cash, 37 kilograms of gold bars and 68 property ownership documents in his family home, according to The New York Times' Sinosphere blog. Ma Chaoqun was arrested with his brother in February, and five other family members also have been apprehended.

But the official's mother, said her son is honest and that the bounty belonged to her deceased husband, a doctor who accrued the wealth by dabbling in side business ventures.

She said her son was the victim of a vendetta plot, planned by his boss to prevent him from exposing an alleged embezzlement scheme. The mother said she packed the cash into more than 40 boxes after her husband died in 2012 and stored them in a closet in the family home. "My husband thought it was too much trouble going to the bank to get money," Zhang said, "Some of the money hadn't been touched for years and was growing moldy,".

Ma was the general manager of a state-run water supply company in northern China. He had a negative reputation among the locals who depended on water service. Residents told Xinhua that Ma demanded money for water services. If the payment was too low, water would be cut off. 

A low level official, huh. You'll be the judge.

Just a thought.

Saturday, November 15, 2014

Scoop...?

Plane Wi-Fi Signal

The Wall Street Journal has learned of a new federal law enforcement program that uses cell signals to track criminal suspects.

The Justice Department is scooping up data from thousands of mobile phones through devices deployed on airplanes that mimic cellphone towers, a high-tech hunt for criminal suspects, according to people familiar with the operations.

The U.S. Marshals Service program, fully functional since 2007, operates Cessna aircraft from at least five metropolitan-area airports, with a flying range covering most of the U.S. population.

The technology in the two-foot-square device enables investigators to scoop data from tens of thousands of cellphones in a single flight, collecting their identifying information and general location, and activities.

Phone companies are cut out in the search for suspects. Law enforcement has found that asking a company for cell-tower information to help locate a suspect can be slow and inaccurate.

Calling it "a dragnet surveillance program," Christopher Soghoian, chief technologist at the American Civil Liberties Union, said: "It's inexcusable and it's likely - to the extent judges are authorizing it - they have no idea of the scale of it."

Whatever it is, we need to know all about it. Its success and failure.

Just a thought.