Pubdate: Wed, 11 Jun 2008 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Page: A19 Copyright: 2008 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Alicia Mundy CONGRESS PRESSES FDA ON INVESTIGATIONS WASHINGTON -- The criminal-investigations wing of the Food and Drug Administration is in hot water with Democrats and Republicans in both the Senate and the House. The Office of Criminal Investigations, or OCI, has operated largely autonomously in recent years, emphasizing a crackdown on illegal abuse of drugs such as Oxycontin. Its budget doubled to $42.8 million from fiscal 2000 to fiscal 2009, even as FDA officials were conceding that funds for assuring the quality of imported drugs weren't adequate. Monday, the Bush administration announced it would ask Congress for an extra $275 million to beef up FDA inspections. In May, Rep. Joe Barton of Texas, the ranking Republican on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, demanded information from OCI that would explain why its arrests and convictions in fiscal 2006 were 20% lower than in fiscal 2000, according to numbers on the agency's Web site. During the same period, the number of investigators jumped nearly 50%. The FDA says unpublished statistics for this year show arrests moving upward. Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa has asked the Government Accountability Office, or GAO, to review whether OCI dropped some cases because of direction from other FDA officials. Sen. Grassley's request follows questions raised by Democrats on the House Energy and Commerce Committee in February during a hearing on Ketek, the antibiotic made by Sanofi-Aventis SA. OCI agents testified about their unsuccessful efforts to initiate a task force on Ketek that would have looked at whether Sanofi's executives knew that an outside contractor had used fraudulent data in a clinical trial of the drug. Rep. Bart Stupak (D., Mich.), who leads the Ketek investigation in the House, wrote in a release that "OCI management did not follow through on the line agents' work, and recommendations to expand fraud investigations were ignored." The company says it acted in good faith and didn't know the clinical-trial data were fake. An outside researcher went to federal prison. FDA officials say they acted appropriately. In November, a year after Mr. Grassley began an investigation into Ketek, the FDA sent a warning letter to Sanofi about its lax oversight of that study. Mr. Grassley has already cut into OCI's autonomy. For nearly a decade, OCI worked under a little-known memorandum of agreement that gave OCI precedence over the Inspector General's office at Health and Human Services Department in conducting internal-affairs cases. That authority was withdrawn at the end of 2007 after Mr. Grassley complained that OCI selectively investigated FDA whistleblowers. The FDA will cooperate with any GAO review, said Julie Zawisza, an FDA spokeswoman. Mr. Barton is concerned that OCI may be too focused on abuse of drugs such as Oxycontin or ingredients for methamphetamine, where the FDA agency's efforts may duplicate those of the Drug Enforcement Administration, FBI and local police, a spokeswoman for Mr. Barton says. Mr. Barton wants the OCI to say how many cases it started on its own, she said. OCI's longtime director, former Secret Service agent Terry Vermillion, has hired many former police officers, FBI and Secret Service agents. Mr. Vermillion hasn't been made available for interviews. He came under fire from Democrats and Republicans last year when news reports revealed that large bonuses pushed his take-home pay for 2006 to $198,000, more than that of a member of Congress or a Supreme Court justice. Margaret Glavin, the FDA associate counsel for regulatory affairs, said OCI's drug-abuse cases are "very much a part of our mission." She disputed Mr. Barton's concerns about the drop in productivity, saying unpublished numbers for fiscal 2007 are "trending upward," with 501 arrests and 350 convictions. Carl Nielsen, a former OCI official, said, "You can generate a case by merely being part of a task force," he said, adding that cases translated into overtime, which drove the justification for constant increases in the budget. Mr. Barton has asked for information on OCI's overtime and a breakdown of cases involving outside agencies. In an earlier interview, FDA officials said they don't break down OCI cases by outside-agency participation. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake