Below the New York Times provides a summary of Crawford's selective disclosure and concealment of his financial holdings while he was Commissioner, noting Crawford's ignoble tenure:
The disclosure that former FDA Commissioner, Lester Crawford, a veterenarian, who headed the nation's powerful regulatory agency lied under oath about stock holdings in companies regulated by the FDA, encapsulates the culture of corruption at the FDA. The FDA's regulatory authority extends to industries as far ranging as: food, drugs, vaccines, medical products, cosmetics. See: detailed bill of particulars by the US Attorney's Office, Fraud and Public Corruption Section listing the numerous companies in these inudustries that Crawford and his wife had financial interests in: http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/docs/crawford-info/?resultpage=11& Below the New York Times provides a summary of Crawford's selective disclosure and concealment of his financial holdings while he was Commissioner, noting Crawford's ignoble tenure: "Dr. Crawford's rocky 18-month tenure as acting commissioner and then commissioner was marked by a series of controversies, including the withdrawal of the painkiller Vioxx from the market and an internal battle over whether the agency would approve the emergency contraceptive Plan B for over-the-counter sale." We would add as evidence of his inappropriate ruling, the approval of a non-consensual experiment on trauma patients who were put at increased risks of heart attacks and strokes by being exposed--without their knowledge or consent--to Northfiled's artificial blood product, PolyHeme. As documented in Senator Charles Grassley's letter of complaint to the Secretary of Health and Human Services, Lester Crawford would not even deign to discuss the concerns raised by the Office of Human Research Protections. See: www.ahrp.org/cms/content/view/108/55 Unequal justice meted out by the Department of Justice. Inexplicably, the Department of Justice is charging Crawford with "a misdemeanor" whereas Martha Stuart--who was not a public servant--got jail time for "insider trading" of stocks of a company she was not employed by. Congressman Maurice Hinchey issued a statement calling for "a serious overaul" of the FDA. "Senior officials at the FDA have led the agency down a dark road into a state of crisis. Today's court filing against Lester Crawford underscores the fact that the FDA, which is one of the most important protectors of public health and safety, is in need of a serious overhaul. By blatantly ignoring the law on financial holdings and conflicts of interest, Lester Crawford used his position as the head of the FDA to send all the wrong signals to other FDA employees and the American public. It is not possible for the FDA to fairly and impartially regulate the food and drug industries when the commissioner of the agency has a vested financial interest in the results. "We do not know the full ramifications of Lester Crawford's misbehavior, which is why it is imperative that the HHS Inspector General finalize his investigation. Based on Lester Crawford's apparent disregard for the law, we must find out what other improper actions he took while leading the FDA, which may not necessarily have been illegal, but were inappropriate or unethical. The American public has the right to know what else Lester Crawford may have done in office that could have lasting, detrimental effects on the FDA. " Contact: Vera Hassner Sharav
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/17/washington/17fda.html THE NEW YORK TIMES October 17, 2006 Former F.D.A. Chief Is Charged With Conflict By STEPHANIE SAUL
Lester M. Crawford, former chief of the Food and Drug Administration, was charged yesterday with conflict of interest and lying about stock he and his wife owned in companies the agency regulates. Dr. Crawford, who resigned abruptly in September 2005, just two months after his nomination had been approved by the Senate, is expected to plead guilty in federal court in Washington today, said his lawyer, Barbara Van Gelder. Each of the two charges filed against Dr. Crawford, 68, is a misdemeanor punishable by up to a year in jail, but Ms. Van Gelder said she expected him to be fined and placed on probation. It's his responsibility," she said, "and he accepts it." Senior employees of the food and drug agency are prohibited from owning shares in companies the agency regulates, and when Dr. Crawford became a deputy commissioner in 2002, the government's charging document says, ethics officials at the Department of Health and Human Services told him that he and his wife would have to sell stock in a dozen regulated companies. Those companies included several large pharmaceutical and medical device concerns, among them Johnson & Johnson, Merck, Pfizer, Medtronic and Boston Scientific. Dr. Crawford and his wife, Catherine, sold their holdings in nine companies, the government says, but retained shares in three others: the food companies Sysco and Pepsico, and Kimberly-Clark, a maker of consumer health care and other products. In addition, it says, Mrs. Crawford held shares in another regulated company, Wal-Mart, but her husband did not list those holdings in his 2002 financial disclosure. Prosecutors also say that Dr. Crawford, a veterinarian and pharmacologist, owned options to buy 41,500 shares in Embrex, an F.D.A.-regulated poultry biotechnology company where he formerly served as director. He exercised some of those options in 2003 and 2004, earning $8,150 in one transaction and $20,627 in another. He correctly reported those transaction on his federal tax returns but did not list them in disclosure filings at the time or disclose the remaining, unexecuted options he held in the company, the charges say. The government noted that during a period when the Crawfords held shares in Pepsico, a soft drink and snack food company, he was chairman of an F.D.A. Obesity Working Group that among other tasks was reviewing calorie content labeling for soft drinks. At the time, prosecutors said, the couple held 1,400 shares of Pepsico worth at least $62,000, as well as 2,500 shares of Sysco, which specializes in supplying food to restaurants and institutions, worth at least $78,000. When Dr. Crawford became acting commissioner of the agency in 2004, reviewers at the Department of Health and Human Services, the F.D.A.'s parent, again raised questions about his ownership of Sysco and Kimberly-Clark shares. Responding to that query, he wrote in an e-mail message to an ethics official at the department that "Sysco and Kimberly-Clark have in fact been sold." "In truth and in fact, as Crawford then knew, Crawford and/or his wife held shares" in both Sysco and Kimberly-Clark "throughout 2003 and 2004," according to the charging document. Dr. Crawford, now a senior staff member at the Washington lobbying and communications firm Policy Directions, could not be reached for comment. But his lawyer, Ms. Van Gelder, said the fact that the charges were misdemeanors reflected Dr. Crawford's having amended his financial forms after his departure, making a full disclosure. "One of the things I hope comes out is that he sold the Mercks and the pharmaceuticals," Ms. Van Gelder said. "The Syscos and Kimberly-Clark, one wouldn't ordinarily think, 'I've got to divest myself.' You wouldn't think Wal-Mart is in the same boat as Merck." Dr. Crawford's rocky 18-month tenure as acting commissioner and then commissioner was marked by a series of controversies, including the withdrawal of the painkiller Vioxx from the market and an internal battle over whether the agency would approve the emergency contraceptive Plan B for over-the-counter sale. Though his sudden resignation last fall so soon after his confirmation appeared unusual, he offered no detailed explanation. The office of Daniel Levinson, inspector general of Health and Human Services, told Congress, however, that it was investigating the circumstances of the commissioner's departure. Records obtained through the Freedom of Information Act several weeks later revealed that the department's ethics office had questioned Dr. Crawford's broker in August 2005, the month before he quit. A spokesman for Sysco said yesterday that the company had not been aware that Dr. Crawford was a shareholder. "We were totally unaware of it, and we really didn't have any real regulatory matters before the agency beyond routine matters," said the spokesman, John M. Palizza. A spokesman for Pepsico said compliance with government regulations concerning conflict of interest was clearly an individual responsibility. He referred additional questions to Dr. Crawford. 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