Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

N.O. Palazzo will enter a plea of GUILTY

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Some good news:

Press Release

New Orleans Medicaid Fraud Psychiatrist Palazzo to Plead Guilty for

Paxil Clinical Trial Fraud

NEW ORLEANS - New Orleans psychiatrist Carmen Palazzo, previously

convicted for Medicaid fraud, will now enter a plea of guilty on counts

41-55 regarding clinical trial fraud for failure to prepare and maintain

records required under 21 U.S.C. § 355(I), and 21 C.F.R. § 312.62(B).

These charges involve not keeping adequate and accurate case histories

on adolescents administered the GlaxoKline antidepressant Paxil

during her clinical drug study . The arraignment is set for Thursday,

August 19, 2010.

A jury previously convicted Palazzo of Counts 1-15 and 17-40 (April 16,

2008) of the same indictment for Medicaid fraud and she was sentenced to

87 months in prison followed by a three-year term of supervised release

along with forfeiture verdict of $655,260.97. The clinical trial fraud

sections 41-55 were not accepted at the time but were eventually

reinstated. The case has been tried by the Eastern Louisiana US

Attorney's Office.

This is the latest conviction of a clinical investigator. This May,

Massachusetts anesthesiologist Dr. Reuben was convicted of similar

charges of clinical reserach fraud. He received 6 months jail-time, and

6-months home confinement to be held concurrently with a 3-year

probation. He was ordered to repay $361,932 in restitution, forfeit

$50,000 and pay a $5,000 fine. The prosecutor on the Reuben case,

Massachusetts A/US Attorney M. Sternberg called for a longer jail

sentence in his Sentencing Memorandum while stating, " cientific

misconducts in research and publishing persists - particularly in

pharmacological and medical research... An incarcerative sentence would

have profound general deterrence impact on the medical community... "

1 of 1 File(s)

Palazzo_08_13_2010_pleads guilty.pdf

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Some good news:

Press Release

New Orleans Medicaid Fraud Psychiatrist Palazzo to Plead Guilty for

Paxil Clinical Trial Fraud

NEW ORLEANS - New Orleans psychiatrist Carmen Palazzo, previously

convicted for Medicaid fraud, will now enter a plea of guilty on counts

41-55 regarding clinical trial fraud for failure to prepare and maintain

records required under 21 U.S.C. § 355(I), and 21 C.F.R. § 312.62(B).

These charges involve not keeping adequate and accurate case histories

on adolescents administered the GlaxoKline antidepressant Paxil

during her clinical drug study . The arraignment is set for Thursday,

August 19, 2010.

A jury previously convicted Palazzo of Counts 1-15 and 17-40 (April 16,

2008) of the same indictment for Medicaid fraud and she was sentenced to

87 months in prison followed by a three-year term of supervised release

along with forfeiture verdict of $655,260.97. The clinical trial fraud

sections 41-55 were not accepted at the time but were eventually

reinstated. The case has been tried by the Eastern Louisiana US

Attorney's Office.

This is the latest conviction of a clinical investigator. This May,

Massachusetts anesthesiologist Dr. Reuben was convicted of similar

charges of clinical reserach fraud. He received 6 months jail-time, and

6-months home confinement to be held concurrently with a 3-year

probation. He was ordered to repay $361,932 in restitution, forfeit

$50,000 and pay a $5,000 fine. The prosecutor on the Reuben case,

Massachusetts A/US Attorney M. Sternberg called for a longer jail

sentence in his Sentencing Memorandum while stating, " cientific

misconducts in research and publishing persists - particularly in

pharmacological and medical research... An incarcerative sentence would

have profound general deterrence impact on the medical community... "

1 of 1 File(s)

Palazzo_08_13_2010_pleads guilty.pdf

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Some good news:

Press Release

New Orleans Medicaid Fraud Psychiatrist Palazzo to Plead Guilty for

Paxil Clinical Trial Fraud

NEW ORLEANS - New Orleans psychiatrist Carmen Palazzo, previously

convicted for Medicaid fraud, will now enter a plea of guilty on counts

41-55 regarding clinical trial fraud for failure to prepare and maintain

records required under 21 U.S.C. § 355(I), and 21 C.F.R. § 312.62(B).

These charges involve not keeping adequate and accurate case histories

on adolescents administered the GlaxoKline antidepressant Paxil

during her clinical drug study . The arraignment is set for Thursday,

August 19, 2010.

A jury previously convicted Palazzo of Counts 1-15 and 17-40 (April 16,

2008) of the same indictment for Medicaid fraud and she was sentenced to

87 months in prison followed by a three-year term of supervised release

along with forfeiture verdict of $655,260.97. The clinical trial fraud

sections 41-55 were not accepted at the time but were eventually

reinstated. The case has been tried by the Eastern Louisiana US

Attorney's Office.

This is the latest conviction of a clinical investigator. This May,

Massachusetts anesthesiologist Dr. Reuben was convicted of similar

charges of clinical reserach fraud. He received 6 months jail-time, and

6-months home confinement to be held concurrently with a 3-year

probation. He was ordered to repay $361,932 in restitution, forfeit

$50,000 and pay a $5,000 fine. The prosecutor on the Reuben case,

Massachusetts A/US Attorney M. Sternberg called for a longer jail

sentence in his Sentencing Memorandum while stating, " cientific

misconducts in research and publishing persists - particularly in

pharmacological and medical research... An incarcerative sentence would

have profound general deterrence impact on the medical community... "

1 of 1 File(s)

Palazzo_08_13_2010_pleads guilty.pdf

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Some good news:

Press Release

New Orleans Medicaid Fraud Psychiatrist Palazzo to Plead Guilty for

Paxil Clinical Trial Fraud

NEW ORLEANS - New Orleans psychiatrist Carmen Palazzo, previously

convicted for Medicaid fraud, will now enter a plea of guilty on counts

41-55 regarding clinical trial fraud for failure to prepare and maintain

records required under 21 U.S.C. § 355(I), and 21 C.F.R. § 312.62(B).

These charges involve not keeping adequate and accurate case histories

on adolescents administered the GlaxoKline antidepressant Paxil

during her clinical drug study . The arraignment is set for Thursday,

August 19, 2010.

A jury previously convicted Palazzo of Counts 1-15 and 17-40 (April 16,

2008) of the same indictment for Medicaid fraud and she was sentenced to

87 months in prison followed by a three-year term of supervised release

along with forfeiture verdict of $655,260.97. The clinical trial fraud

sections 41-55 were not accepted at the time but were eventually

reinstated. The case has been tried by the Eastern Louisiana US

Attorney's Office.

This is the latest conviction of a clinical investigator. This May,

Massachusetts anesthesiologist Dr. Reuben was convicted of similar

charges of clinical reserach fraud. He received 6 months jail-time, and

6-months home confinement to be held concurrently with a 3-year

probation. He was ordered to repay $361,932 in restitution, forfeit

$50,000 and pay a $5,000 fine. The prosecutor on the Reuben case,

Massachusetts A/US Attorney M. Sternberg called for a longer jail

sentence in his Sentencing Memorandum while stating, " cientific

misconducts in research and publishing persists - particularly in

pharmacological and medical research... An incarcerative sentence would

have profound general deterrence impact on the medical community... "

1 of 1 File(s)

Palazzo_08_13_2010_pleads guilty.pdf

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You bet!! Got me grinning! Now if only Biederman,

Wagner, Nemeroff etc

could go down also!

Jim

On 8/17/2010 6:41 PM, nandtbearden@... wrote:

Woohoo! Thanks for the positive tidbit!

T.

Sent via BlackBerry by AT & T

From: Jim <mofunnow@...>

Sender: SSRI medications

Date: Tue, 17 Aug 2010 18:39:44 -0500

Bryce<jeremybryce1953@...>;

SSRI medications <SSRI medications >

Reply SSRI medications

Subject: N.O. Palazzo will enter a

plea of GUILTY [1 Attachment]

 

Some good news:

Press Release

New Orleans Medicaid Fraud Psychiatrist Palazzo to Plead

Guilty for

Paxil Clinical Trial Fraud

NEW ORLEANS - New Orleans psychiatrist Carmen Palazzo,

previously

convicted for Medicaid fraud, will now enter a plea of guilty

on counts

41-55 regarding clinical trial fraud for failure to prepare

and maintain

records required under 21 U.S.C. § 355(I), and 21 C.F.R. §

312.62(B).

These charges involve not keeping adequate and accurate case

histories

on adolescents administered the GlaxoKline antidepressant

Paxil

during her clinical drug study . The arraignment is set for

Thursday,

August 19, 2010.

A jury previously convicted Palazzo of Counts 1-15 and 17-40

(April 16,

2008) of the same indictment for Medicaid fraud and she was

sentenced to

87 months in prison followed by a three-year term of

supervised release

along with forfeiture verdict of $655,260.97. The clinical

trial fraud

sections 41-55 were not accepted at the time but were

eventually

reinstated. The case has been tried by the Eastern Louisiana

US

Attorney's Office.

This is the latest conviction of a clinical investigator. This

May,

Massachusetts anesthesiologist Dr. Reuben was convicted

of similar

charges of clinical reserach fraud. He received 6 months

jail-time, and

6-months home confinement to be held concurrently with a

3-year

probation. He was ordered to repay $361,932 in restitution,

forfeit

$50,000 and pay a $5,000 fine. The prosecutor on the Reuben

case,

Massachusetts A/US Attorney M. Sternberg called for a

longer jail

sentence in his Sentencing Memorandum while stating,

"cientific

misconducts in research and publishing persists - particularly

in

pharmacological and medical research... An incarcerative

sentence would

have profound general deterrence impact on the medical

community..."

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You bet!! Got me grinning! Now if only Biederman,

Wagner, Nemeroff etc

could go down also!

Jim

On 8/17/2010 6:41 PM, nandtbearden@... wrote:

Woohoo! Thanks for the positive tidbit!

T.

Sent via BlackBerry by AT & T

From: Jim <mofunnow@...>

Sender: SSRI medications

Date: Tue, 17 Aug 2010 18:39:44 -0500

Bryce<jeremybryce1953@...>;

SSRI medications <SSRI medications >

Reply SSRI medications

Subject: N.O. Palazzo will enter a

plea of GUILTY [1 Attachment]

 

Some good news:

Press Release

New Orleans Medicaid Fraud Psychiatrist Palazzo to Plead

Guilty for

Paxil Clinical Trial Fraud

NEW ORLEANS - New Orleans psychiatrist Carmen Palazzo,

previously

convicted for Medicaid fraud, will now enter a plea of guilty

on counts

41-55 regarding clinical trial fraud for failure to prepare

and maintain

records required under 21 U.S.C. § 355(I), and 21 C.F.R. §

312.62(B).

These charges involve not keeping adequate and accurate case

histories

on adolescents administered the GlaxoKline antidepressant

Paxil

during her clinical drug study . The arraignment is set for

Thursday,

August 19, 2010.

A jury previously convicted Palazzo of Counts 1-15 and 17-40

(April 16,

2008) of the same indictment for Medicaid fraud and she was

sentenced to

87 months in prison followed by a three-year term of

supervised release

along with forfeiture verdict of $655,260.97. The clinical

trial fraud

sections 41-55 were not accepted at the time but were

eventually

reinstated. The case has been tried by the Eastern Louisiana

US

Attorney's Office.

This is the latest conviction of a clinical investigator. This

May,

Massachusetts anesthesiologist Dr. Reuben was convicted

of similar

charges of clinical reserach fraud. He received 6 months

jail-time, and

6-months home confinement to be held concurrently with a

3-year

probation. He was ordered to repay $361,932 in restitution,

forfeit

$50,000 and pay a $5,000 fine. The prosecutor on the Reuben

case,

Massachusetts A/US Attorney M. Sternberg called for a

longer jail

sentence in his Sentencing Memorandum while stating,

"cientific

misconducts in research and publishing persists - particularly

in

pharmacological and medical research... An incarcerative

sentence would

have profound general deterrence impact on the medical

community..."

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You bet!! Got me grinning! Now if only Biederman,

Wagner, Nemeroff etc

could go down also!

Jim

On 8/17/2010 6:41 PM, nandtbearden@... wrote:

Woohoo! Thanks for the positive tidbit!

T.

Sent via BlackBerry by AT & T

From: Jim <mofunnow@...>

Sender: SSRI medications

Date: Tue, 17 Aug 2010 18:39:44 -0500

Bryce<jeremybryce1953@...>;

SSRI medications <SSRI medications >

Reply SSRI medications

Subject: N.O. Palazzo will enter a

plea of GUILTY [1 Attachment]

 

Some good news:

Press Release

New Orleans Medicaid Fraud Psychiatrist Palazzo to Plead

Guilty for

Paxil Clinical Trial Fraud

NEW ORLEANS - New Orleans psychiatrist Carmen Palazzo,

previously

convicted for Medicaid fraud, will now enter a plea of guilty

on counts

41-55 regarding clinical trial fraud for failure to prepare

and maintain

records required under 21 U.S.C. § 355(I), and 21 C.F.R. §

312.62(B).

These charges involve not keeping adequate and accurate case

histories

on adolescents administered the GlaxoKline antidepressant

Paxil

during her clinical drug study . The arraignment is set for

Thursday,

August 19, 2010.

A jury previously convicted Palazzo of Counts 1-15 and 17-40

(April 16,

2008) of the same indictment for Medicaid fraud and she was

sentenced to

87 months in prison followed by a three-year term of

supervised release

along with forfeiture verdict of $655,260.97. The clinical

trial fraud

sections 41-55 were not accepted at the time but were

eventually

reinstated. The case has been tried by the Eastern Louisiana

US

Attorney's Office.

This is the latest conviction of a clinical investigator. This

May,

Massachusetts anesthesiologist Dr. Reuben was convicted

of similar

charges of clinical reserach fraud. He received 6 months

jail-time, and

6-months home confinement to be held concurrently with a

3-year

probation. He was ordered to repay $361,932 in restitution,

forfeit

$50,000 and pay a $5,000 fine. The prosecutor on the Reuben

case,

Massachusetts A/US Attorney M. Sternberg called for a

longer jail

sentence in his Sentencing Memorandum while stating,

"cientific

misconducts in research and publishing persists - particularly

in

pharmacological and medical research... An incarcerative

sentence would

have profound general deterrence impact on the medical

community..."

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You bet!! Got me grinning! Now if only Biederman,

Wagner, Nemeroff etc

could go down also!

Jim

On 8/17/2010 6:41 PM, nandtbearden@... wrote:

Woohoo! Thanks for the positive tidbit!

T.

Sent via BlackBerry by AT & T

From: Jim <mofunnow@...>

Sender: SSRI medications

Date: Tue, 17 Aug 2010 18:39:44 -0500

Bryce<jeremybryce1953@...>;

SSRI medications <SSRI medications >

Reply SSRI medications

Subject: N.O. Palazzo will enter a

plea of GUILTY [1 Attachment]

 

Some good news:

Press Release

New Orleans Medicaid Fraud Psychiatrist Palazzo to Plead

Guilty for

Paxil Clinical Trial Fraud

NEW ORLEANS - New Orleans psychiatrist Carmen Palazzo,

previously

convicted for Medicaid fraud, will now enter a plea of guilty

on counts

41-55 regarding clinical trial fraud for failure to prepare

and maintain

records required under 21 U.S.C. § 355(I), and 21 C.F.R. §

312.62(B).

These charges involve not keeping adequate and accurate case

histories

on adolescents administered the GlaxoKline antidepressant

Paxil

during her clinical drug study . The arraignment is set for

Thursday,

August 19, 2010.

A jury previously convicted Palazzo of Counts 1-15 and 17-40

(April 16,

2008) of the same indictment for Medicaid fraud and she was

sentenced to

87 months in prison followed by a three-year term of

supervised release

along with forfeiture verdict of $655,260.97. The clinical

trial fraud

sections 41-55 were not accepted at the time but were

eventually

reinstated. The case has been tried by the Eastern Louisiana

US

Attorney's Office.

This is the latest conviction of a clinical investigator. This

May,

Massachusetts anesthesiologist Dr. Reuben was convicted

of similar

charges of clinical reserach fraud. He received 6 months

jail-time, and

6-months home confinement to be held concurrently with a

3-year

probation. He was ordered to repay $361,932 in restitution,

forfeit

$50,000 and pay a $5,000 fine. The prosecutor on the Reuben

case,

Massachusetts A/US Attorney M. Sternberg called for a

longer jail

sentence in his Sentencing Memorandum while stating,

"cientific

misconducts in research and publishing persists - particularly

in

pharmacological and medical research... An incarcerative

sentence would

have profound general deterrence impact on the medical

community..."

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...