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WASHINGTON - Eighteen people have been indicted in California on racketeering and other charges for operating an internet business that illegally sold prescription drugs, the US Justice Department said.
Department officials said the 313-count indictment, returned by a federal grand jury in San Diego last week and unsealed on Thursday, charged the defendants with operating an online pharmaceutical distribution network known as Affpower in the United States and abroad.
The defendants included three physicians, two pharmacists, a pharmacy operator, an administrator, two recruiters of physicians and pharmacies, a credit card processor and eight affiliate website operators.
From August 2004 through June 2006, the network received more than 1 million internet orders for prescription drugs, generating more than $126 million ($NZ164 million) in revenues, the officials said.
According to the indictment, the network sold the drugs to customers who lacked prescriptions from a personal physician.
It paid doctors in the United States to issue prescriptions, based solely on health questionnaire answers the customers gave over the internet. In some cases, doctors did not even review the prescriptions, the officials said.
"The defendants ... provided little or no doctor review while prescribing possibly dangerous drugs, even as they generated millions of dollars in revenues for themselves," Assistant Attorney General Alice Fisher said in a statement.
The business located its administrative headquarters in Costa Rica and its computer servers in Cyprus.
It relied on foreign-based agencies, including RX Payments Ltd. of Tel-Aviv, to process credit card transactions, and used various bank accounts and an accounting firm in Cyprus in an attempt to conceal its illegal proceeds from US authorities, the officials said.
- REUTERS