
Walgreens Boots Alliance has agreed to pay$ 300 million to settle allegations that it filled millions of invalid prescriptions for drugs and other controlled substances and illegally billed federal programs such as Medicare for those medicines, the U. S. Department of Justice announced Monday.
The federal government had alleged that Deerfield, Illinois-based Walgreens filled treatments with “egregious dark colors, ” according to an amended complaint filed last year in U. S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. The government alleged that Walgreens filled treatments with high quantities of drugs, filled treatments for the medication to shortly, and filled treatments for a dangerous combination of three drugs, from late 2013 to early 2023, according to the problem.
The government had alleged that Walgreens pressured its professionals to complete the meds immediately, without giving them time to check if the prescriptions were true.
The state also alleged that Walgreens submitted the illegitimate prescriptions to national health insurance plans, including Medicare for insurance, in violation of the federal False Claims Act.
“Walgreens knowingly filled many invalid controlled-substances treatments that were either not issued in the normal course of professional discipline, not for a genuine health purpose, or both, ” the government had alleged, according to the settlement agreement. “Walgreens knew that such treatments raised significant problems and were very likely to be irrelevant. But Walgreens yet filled many such prescriptions without resolving the major concerns those prescriptions raised. ”
Walgreens has denied the allegations. The settlement agreement does not include any admission of wrongdoing or liability by Walgreens.
“We strongly disagree with the government’s legal theory and admit no liability, ” said Walgreens spokesperson Fraser Engerman in a statement Monday. “Our pharmacists are dedicated healthcare professionals who care deeply about patient safety and continue to play a critical role in providing education and resources to help combat opioid misuse and abuse across our country. ”
Engerman said the settlement allows “Walgreens to close all opioid related litigation with federal, state, and local governments and provides us with favorable terms from a cashflow perspective while we focus on our turnaround strategy that will benefit our team members, patients, customers, and shareholders. ”
As part of the settlement, Walgreens will also have to pay interest on the money, and it will have to pay an additional$ 50 million if the company is sold or merges with another company before fiscal year 2032. Walgreens announced last month that it had agreed to be sold to a private equity firm in a deal expected to close in the fourth quarter of the year. That sale announcement followed years of financial struggles for the retail pharmacy giant, which has been grappling with changing consumer habits, challenges related to medication reimbursement and a ill fated foray into primary care.
As part of the settlement agreement, Walgreens must also maintain policies and procedures requiring pharmacists to make sure controlled substances are valid before filling prescriptions for them, among other requirements.
U. S. Attorney General Pamela Bondi said in a news release Monday, “Pharmacies have a legal responsibility to prescribe controlled substances in a safe and professional manner, not dispense dangerous drugs just for profit. ”
The allegations against Walgreens were originally brought by whistleblowers who were former Walgreens employees, with the first of the whistleblowers filing a lawsuit in 2018. The U. S. Department of Justice intervened in the consolidated cases in August.
The federal False Claims Act allows whistleblowers to sue on behalf of the U. S. government and receive a share of any money recovered. The four whistleblowers will receive 17. 25 % of the settlement money, according to the Department of Justice.
The settlement announcement comes less than two months after Walgreens said it had agreed to pay a separate,$ 595 million settlement to a virtual care company over a dispute involving COVID-19 testing.
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