• Welcome to The Corporate Insider

    Welcome to The Corporate Insider, a website for workers, consumers, shareholders, academics and members of the press. This site is the internet's resource center for all who are impacted by corporate conduct.

    Recent history has demonstrated that wrongful conduct by corporate insiders can have a devastating impact on corporate stakeholders and observers. From securities fraud which adversely impacts the value of stock to short cuts in the manufacturing process that result in defective products being injected into the marketplace, corporate conduct can be devastating. Yet, it is not so much the conduct of the corporation itself that can be problematic as much as it is the conduct of the corporate insiders who, often times guided by their own self-interest, abuse their corporate mandate to the detriment of stakeholders. In addition to shareholders and consumers, workers lose out when basic wage and hour, benefit, and job safety laws are skirted. Insider wrongdoing has eroded the integrity of many publicly traded corporations, and layoffs and plant closings have caused rising unemployment and the destruction of local economies.

    Why do corporate insiders skirt the law and their obligations to stakeholders? One answer is that misguided executive compensation plans often reward insiders for short term corporate performance as measured by the value of the stock. If not paying workers overtime pay or cutting corners on product safety means profits in the short term, executives who want to see larger year-end bonuses will take the short cuts. While executive compensation plans should be written to properly incentivize insiders, stakeholders can have a real impact by knowing the laws that regulate corporations and taking action to enforce them. These laws range from securities laws to consumer and labor laws. With this in mind, this site has been developed with the intent of providing an overview of the laws that regulate corporate conduct.

and another thing . . .

The Tragedy of the Clemens
Federal prosecutors have indicted former baseball star pitcher, Roger Clemens, for lying to Congress about his alleged use of steroids.

Whether Roger Clemens took steroids and whether, if he took steroids, his statistics need to be placed in a different light undoubtedly is proper banter for the sports pages.

This country has...
Read more...
 

Latest Stats

  • Consumer Price Index
    Unemployment Rate
    Payroll Employment
    Avg. Hourly Earning
    Producer Price index
    Employment Cost index
    Productivity
    U.S. Import Price Index
    Unemploy. Initial Claims
    UI Claims 4-Week Avg.
    Federal Min. Wage

    +0.3%
    9.6%
    -54,000
    +$0.06
    +0.2%
    +0.5%
    -0.9%
    +0.2%
    472,000
    485,500
    $7.25

    7/10
    8/10
    8/10
    8/10
    7/10
    2Q 10
    2Q 10
    7/10
    8/28/10
    8/28/10
    Current

 
Articles:
  • Corporate Integrity Agreements: Asking the Companies to Police Themselves, Please
    The use of a corporate integrity agreements (“CIA”) in resolving the prosecution of pharmaceutical and medical companies is commonplace. As part of a deferred prosecution agreement, the U.S. Department of Justice, or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General, will ask the defendant corporation to enter into a CIA to police its behavior and, in part, ensure compliance with the terms of the settlement.
    Read more...

Corporate Insider News:
California AG Recovers $209 Million in Taxpayer Money in 2009 Medi-Cal Fraud Cases PDF Print E-mail
Sacramento, C.A., March 12, 2010 - Attorney General Edmund G. Brown Jr. today announced that last year, his office recovered more than $209 million in "hard-earned taxpayer dollars" and secured 139 criminal convictions by aggressively investigating and prosecuting Medi-Cal fraud cases.

Brown also reported that in 2009, his Bureau of Medi-Cal Fraud and Elder Abuse returned more than $12 million to victims of elder abuse and secured 47 criminal convictions in elder abuse cases.
"In these tough budget times, the state can't afford to lose millions in hard-earned taxpayer dollars from people who try to cheat and steal from the system," Brown said. "Thanks to the tireless work of DOJ investigators, we protected our most vulnerable citizens and recovered critical public health dollars."

Brown's Bureau of Medi-Cal Fraud and Elder Abuse (BMFEA) investigates and prosecutes those who cheat taxpayers out of millions of dollars each year and divert scarce healthcare resources from the needy. The Bureau also protects patients in nursing homes and other long-term care facilities from abuse and neglect.

Combined, Brown recovered more than $221 million in Medi-Cal fraud and elder abuse cases. The amount recovered last year is more than six times the BMFEA's $33.1 million operating budget. This represents a recovery of $36 for every $1 expended from the state's general funds.

The recoveries stem from restitution obtained in Medi-Cal fraud, elder abuse, and patient fund cases. Patient fund cases occur when a disabled person's finances are being controlled by a trustee who steals from the patient's trust account. Annually, the BMFEA conducts more than 1,500 investigations.

Medi-Cal Fraud

Last year's $209 million recovery stemmed from civil lawsuits Brown's office filed against companies and individuals that billed the state's Medi-Cal fund for unnecessary services or for services that were never performed.

In one such case filed in October 2009, Brown's office arrested the former manager of a Mount Shasta-based medical clinic after she billed Medi-Cal $2.2 million for services never performed. Denise Fairhurst, 57, of Redding, filed false Medi-Cal claims with the state to help cover the medical clinic's operations and management costs. In addition, she used $33,492 of the funds to pay personal credit card bills. Fairhurst is scheduled to be sentenced on March 24 in Siskiyou County Superior Court.

Some of the fraud is perpetrated by criminal fraud rings. In May 2009, Brown filed criminal charges against six individuals who paid healthy seniors to be admitted into a hospice for the terminally ill and then billed state healthcare programs more than $1 million for procedures never performed. Some of the individuals used the proceeds of the scheme to purchase expensive cars, designer clothing, and luxury homes. Four of the defendants have pled guilty, and the state has recovered the $1 million.

A number of Medi-Cal fraud cases are institutional. In December 2009, Brown reached a $21.3 million settlement with pharmaceutical giant Schering-Plough Corporation, resolving allegations the company deliberately inflated the price of Albuterol and other drugs, overcharging Medi-Cal millions of dollars in pharmacy reimbursement.

Most of the funds recovered go back into the state's Medi-Cal fund, which provides medical payments for nearly 20 percent of California's children, lower income individuals and families, the elderly and disabled.

Elder Abuse

Although elder abuse can take many forms, the majority of cases involve abuses at California's skilled nursing facilities. Brown's office uses its civil, administrative and criminal enforcement powers to bring poorly performing care facilities into compliance with federal and state laws.

A few elder abuse cases Brown's office prosecuted include:
- Mary Louise Wilson, who was sentenced to nineteen years and four months in prison for setting multiple fires at Southern California nursing homes, including the beds of elderly patients who were unable to get out of bed without assistance;
- Pamela Ott, who was charged with eight felony counts of elder abuse in September 2009 for allowing staff to forcibly administer psychotropic medications to patients for their own convenience, rather than for their patients' therapeutic interests; and,
- Leander Jackson, who was sentenced to three years, eight months in prison for identity theft and grand theft for operating several unlicensed skilled nursing facilities and neglecting to provide the proper care to the residents. Jackson used the identities of the patients to obtain cash loans and car leases.
 
< Prev   Next >