Doctor Should Face Trial over Insys Opioid Kickbacks Despite Bankruptcy, U.S. Says
A Florida doctor accused of taking kickbacks from Insys Therapeutics to prescribe its fentanyl spray should face a civil trial despite his recent bankruptcy, federal prosecutors are arguing, even as a judge delayed it from going forward, Reuters reported. In a filing Wednesday in Tampa federal court, lawyers for the Middle District of Florida U.S. Attorney's Office said their civil lawsuit against Edward Lubin stems from the government's "police or regulatory power," and so was not automatically paused like most legal claims against a newly bankrupt debtor. They noted that federal appeals courts in other cases have ruled that lawsuits brought by the government under the federal False Claims Act, like the one against Lubin, are examples of police or regulatory power. Lubin had notified the court of his chapter 11 bankruptcy earlier on Wednesday, saying it should halt the case. His lawyer did not immediately respond to a request for comment. U.S. District Judge Thomas Barber, who is presiding over the case, said in an order on Thursday that he would wait for the bankruptcy court to decide whether the trial can go forward. For now, he put the Aug. 2 trial date on hold.
