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Arizona Fraud Suit Opens New Front in the Legal War against Theranos

by | Jan 23, 2017 | Enforcement-lir, Essential, Industry Buzz-lir, Inside the Lab Industry-lir, Laboratory Industry Report, Top of the News-lir

The Arizona Attorney General’s Office (AGO) recently issued a request for proposal signaling a new legal battle for Theranos: state consumer fraud lawsuits. The AGO indicated in its request that it was initiating a law suit against Theranos and its subsidiaries alleging violations of the Arizona Consumer Fraud Act for representations related to its blood testing equipment and its Wellness Centers. This is the latest litigation threat to the company previously hyped for its technology that promised to disrupt the diagnostic blood testing industry. In July 2016, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services imposed sanctions against Theranos and excluded its CEO, Elizabeth Holmes, from operating a blood testing lab for two years. Thereafter, the company shifted its focus to developing technology—namely the miniLab (a compact 2.5 cubic feet device containing a mini-robot processing single use cartridges, "Our ultimate goal is to commercialize miniaturized, automated laboratories capable of small-volume sample testing, with an emphasis on vulnerable patient populations, including oncology, pediatrics, and intensive care," the company’s Oct. 5 statement explained. The legal troubles continued beyond CMS’s regulatory enforcement actions, with civil lawsuits, including a class action fraud suit by investors and a breach of contract claim by Walgreens. (See "Walgreens […]

The Arizona Attorney General's Office (AGO) recently issued a request for proposal signaling a new legal battle for Theranos: state consumer fraud lawsuits. The AGO indicated in its request that it was initiating a law suit against Theranos and its subsidiaries alleging violations of the Arizona Consumer Fraud Act for representations related to its blood testing equipment and its Wellness Centers.

This is the latest litigation threat to the company previously hyped for its technology that promised to disrupt the diagnostic blood testing industry. In July 2016, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services imposed sanctions against Theranos and excluded its CEO, Elizabeth Holmes, from operating a blood testing lab for two years. Thereafter, the company shifted its focus to developing technology—namely the miniLab (a compact 2.5 cubic feet device containing a mini-robot processing single use cartridges, "Our ultimate goal is to commercialize miniaturized, automated laboratories capable of small-volume sample testing, with an emphasis on vulnerable patient populations, including oncology, pediatrics, and intensive care," the company's Oct. 5 statement explained.

The legal troubles continued beyond CMS's regulatory enforcement actions, with civil lawsuits, including a class action fraud suit by investors and a breach of contract claim by Walgreens. (See "Walgreens Terminates Contract with Theranos," LIR, July 7, 2016.) But the Arizona consumer fraud case is the first by a state government. And it could spawn more consumer fraud suits from other states, including California where Theranos is based. (For more on the Theranos saga, see "Theranos Shifts Focus from Labs to Technology," Diagnostic Testing & Emerging Technologies, Oct. 26, 2016.)

The company, however, continues to put on a brave face with releases in January noting that a reengineering of its operations and streamlining of staff with a "core team of 220 professionals" to pursue its business plan including commercialization of the miniLab. It explained this "restructuring follows a period of significant change at the company that has included the building out of its executive team with substantial additional regulatory, compliance and operational expertise." As late as January 17, 2017, the company also announced formation of an eight-member Technology Advisory Board that will "work alongside Theranos' leadership and internal research and development teams in various areas, including advising the company on peer-reviewed publication submissions and on presentations at scientific meetings."

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