Monthly Archives: October 2017

Sentenced for distribution of Counterfeit Human Growth Hormone (HGH)

George Patino, 57, of Houston, Texas, was convicted by a jury on Oct. 18th for conspiracy in the distribution of Human Growth Hormone (“HGH”) for unauthorized medical purposes, and smuggling. [Note: Counterfeit medicine is fake medicine that includes a wide spectrum including misbranded, contaminated, mislabeled, misbranded, unauthorized, and other fraudulent use or misrepresentation.]

Under federal law, doctors can lawfully prescribe HGH for several narrow medical uses, for example to patients with wasting diseases associated with AIDS or Prader-Willi syndrome. HGH cannot be prescribed to help patients with body-building, anti-aging, or weight loss treatments. From April 2014 through June 2015, the evidence showed at trial that Mr. Patino sent numerous packages of HGH to a local St. Louis, Missouri doctor and many local patients.

The HGH smuggled by Mr. Patino was misbranded in that the drugs’ dosage and use instructions were in Spanish not English, and the drugs came from a Korean drug manufacturer that had not been approved by the U.S. Government to sell this drug in the United States.

Mr. Patino now faces a maximum penalty of five years in prison for his conspiracy conviction, ten years in prison for his HGH distribution conviction, and twenty years in prison for the smuggling conviction, and/or fines up to $250,000 for each count. In determining the actual sentences, a judge is required to consider the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines, which provide recommended sentencing ranges.

“For drugs that enter the U.S. from outside the FDA-regulated distribution system, there is no guarantee that the drugs are safe and effective for patients to use,” said Special Agent in Charge, Spencer Morrison, FDA Office of Criminal Investigations’ Kansas City Field Office. “We will continue to work to protect the health of patients who rely on prescription drugs and to ensure the safety and effectiveness of those drugs.”

Patient Rick Roberts Describes The Effects Of Counterfeit HGH Medication He Received From An Unscrupulous Drug Supplier.

10th Annual Operation Pangea Targets Hundreds of Fake Pharmacies

The tenth annual Operation Pangea, an international week-long action organized by Interpol to tackle the sale of counterfeit and illicit medicines online, targeted hundreds of fake pharmacies. 197 police, customs and health regulatory authorities from a record 123 countries were involved. A record number of 25 million illicit and counterfeit medicines were seized worldwide. The action resulted in the launch of 1,058 investigations, 3,584 websites taken offline and the suspension of more than 3,000 online advertisizements for illicit pharmaceuticals. There were 400 arrests worldwide and the seizure of more than $51 million worth of potentially dangerous medicines.

Among the websites taken down was GlavMed, which used infected computers to send pharmaceutical spam directed to so-called “Canadian” pharmacies, and was selling oral chloramphenicol, a drug that was pulled from the U.S. market due to serious and potentially life-threatening side effects.

As part of Operation Pangea, the FDA and other federal agencies worked together at the International Mail Facilities in Chicago, Miami and New York to detain 500 packages of suspected illicit pharmaceuticals. Commissioner Gottlieb said that the FDA has “recently tripled the staff we have in the IMFs to improve our ability to inspect packages that are suspected of containing illegal drugs.”