Reining
in the Beltway Bandits
By Phil Mattera in the Dirt
Diggers Digest
Havian,
however, highlights the little known power of federal agencies to exclude
individual executives from working in regulated industries, sometimes for life,
if they are shown to have engaged in unsavory practices. He argues that
bringing about such exclusions is much easier than prosecuting executives on
criminal charges, as the Justice Department says it plans to do more often.
This
is an intriguing idea but the problem is always the uncertainty as to whether
getting tough with executives, even high-level ones, will succeed in changing
corporate behavior. Ultimately, all individuals are expendable in large
corporations, so the desire to boost profits by breaking the rules is likely to
trump any inclination to behave properly to protect those in the executive
suite.
Following
the path blazed by the Project On Government Oversight’s Federal Contractor
Misconduct Database, we found that ten of the 100 largest federal contractors
are also among the 100 companies accounting for the most environmental, health
and safety violations since 2010 (the scope of the initial version of Violation
Tracker).
Four
of the group are pharmaceutical manufacturers (GlaxoSmithKline, Merck, Pfizer
and Sanofi); two are oil and gas giants (Royal Dutch Shell and Exxon Mobil) and
three are big military contractors (Honeywell, General Electric and Boeing).
Conglomerate Berkshire Hathaway is also on the list.
The
drug company penalties stem mainly from cases in which they had to pay big
settlements to resolve cases in which they were accused of marketing
medications for uses not approved as safe by the Food and Drug Administration.
GlaxoSmithKline, for instance, pled guilty to three criminal counts in 2012
and had to pay $3 billion to resolve allegations concerning the unlawful
promotion of Paxil and Wellbutrin, failure to report certain safety data to the
FDA, and false price reporting. That marketing allegedly included kickbacks
paid to doctors and other health professionals to get them to prescribe and
promote the drugs for those unauthorized uses.
In
FY2014 GSK was awarded federal contracts worth more than $780 million, mostly
from the Department of Health and Human Services and the Pentagon. Those
agencies apparently had no problems dealing with a corporate criminal.
The
penalty amounts attributable to federal contractors are likely to be much
greater when we expand Violation Tracker to include other offenses such as
false claims against government agencies. Such fraud is pretty much the basic
business model of many of the large military contractors, for example.
Federal
agencies need to use Havian’s exclusion idea, criminal prosecutions and all
other tools at their disposal to rein in the Beltway Bandits.