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Showing posts with label Corruption. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Corruption. Show all posts

28 penitentiary officers dismissed for drugs

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Tue, 02/22/2011

Twenty-eight penitentiary officers were dismissed last year for involvement in drug cases, an official said Tuesday.

“Some of them used drugs, some sold them and some others helped smuggle drugs into the penitentiaries,” said Bambang Sumardyono, head of the Ministry of Law and Human Rights prevention and enforcement sub-directorate within the directorate general of correctional affairs.

Most of the dismissed officers were from North Sumatra and Jakarta, Bambang said in Jakarta, as quoted by Antara. 

He said that their cases had been transferred to the police for legal processing.

In anticipation of such offenses, Bambang said that the directorate had established a task force in 2006 involving the police to conduct operations in penitentiaries.

Devices to bar cellular phones and sound recorders were also used to prevent criminal activity, he added.

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111 charged in Medicare scams worth $225 million

AP, KELLI KENNEDY, Associated Press,   Feb. 17, 2011

MIAMI (AP) — Federal authorities have charged more than 100 doctors, nurses and physical therapists in nine cities with Medicare fraud as part of a massive bust.

More than 700 law enforcement agents fanned out to arrest 111 people accused of illegally billing Medicare more than $225 million.

The arrests are the latest in a string of major busts in the past two years as authorities have struggled to pare the fraud that's believed to cost the government between $60 billion and $90 billion each year.

Stopping Medicare's budget from hemorrhaging that money will be key to paying for President Barack Obama's health care overhaul.

Authorities say the scams included billing for toenail removals that were unnecessary and hemorrhoid removals that were never performed.

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Police install CCTVs and fingerprint scanners in detention centers

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 11/17/2010 5:47 PM

The National Police have said they have upped security measures at their detention centers, including the one in Kelapa Dua, Depok, West Java, that high-profile graft suspect Gayus Tambunan unlawfully vacated several times after bribing his prison officers.

"We have installed CCTV [closed circuit television] cameras and fingerprint identification devices at the center," National Police Detectives Chief Comr. Gen. Ito Sumardi said as quoted by Tempointeraktif.com on Wednesday.

"We guarantee that no one unauthorized will be able to enter the centers' premises now," Ito said.

Security at police detention centers became a hot issue when a bribery scandal implicated nine police officers for allegedly allowing detainee Gayus permission to leave his cell at least once a week.

Gayus was spotted by journalists watching an international tennis match in Nusa Dua, Bali.

Aside from giving special treatment to Gayus, Comr. Iwan Siswanto, the former head of the Kelapa Dua detention center admitted he had also unlawfully allowed other high profile inmates, including Comr. Gen. Susno Duaji and former Sr. Comr. Wiliardi Wizar, a convicted murder, to leave their cells.

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Drug companies pay 17,000 U.S. doctors, report finds

Reuters, WASHINGTON | Tue Oct 19, 2010 2:09pm EDT
(Reuters) - More than 17,000 doctors and other healthcare providers have taken money from seven major drug companies to talk to other doctors about their products, a joint investigation by news organizations and non-profit groups found.

More than 380 of the doctors, nurses, pharmacists and other professionals took in more than $100,000 in 2009 and 2010, according to the investigation released on Tuesday. The report said far more doctors are likely to have taken such payments, but it documented these based on information from seven drugmakers.

The payments are not illegal and usually not even considered improper. But the investigation by journalism group ProPublica, Consumer Reports magazine, NPR radio and several publications showed doctors were sometimes urged to recommend "off-label" prescriptions of drugs, meaning using them for conditions they are not approved for.

And the report points to several studies showing that even small gifts and payments to doctors can affect their attitudes, and many companies have stopped giving out once-common gifts such as pens, cups and other objects carrying drug brand names.

"Tens of thousands of U.S. physicians are paid to spread the word about pharma's favored pills and to advise the companies about research and marketing," the group says in its report, available here

The groups used information from seven drugmakers -- AstraZeneca, Cephalon, GlaxoSmithKline, Johnson & Johnson, Eli Lilly, Merck and Pfizer.

"Some of the companies were forced to disclose this information as a result of legal settlements; others released it voluntarily," Consumer Reports said.

It said more than 70 other pharmaceutical companies have not disclosed payments made to doctors, although the healthcare reform law passed in March will require them to do so by 2013.

"This investigation begins to pull back the shroud on these activities," Dr. John Santa, director of the Consumer Reports Health Ratings Center, said in a statement.

"The amount of money involved is astounding, and the ProPublica report's account of the background of some of the physicians is disturbing."

Drug companies often say they pay expert physicians to educate their peers about drugs and conditions. These sessions are often seminars held alongside major medical meetings but sometimes they involve briefings at vacation resorts.

ProPublica said a review of state medical board disciplinary records found more than 250 of the doctors paid to speak had been sanctioned for activities such as inappropriately prescribing drugs or having sex with patients.

It said 40 others had been warned by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for research misconduct, had lost hospital privileges or were convicted of crimes.

(Reporting by Maggie Fox; Editing by Julie Steenhuysen and Eric Beech)

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Batam Prosecutor Pulled After Failing to Drop Case

Jakarta Globe, Heru Andriyanto, May 04, 2010

The chief prosecutor in Batam has been removed from his post after he refused to abandon a case investigating alleged graft in the local government, although the Attorney General’s Office insisted on Tuesday that it was merely a routine transfer.

Prosecutor Tatang Sutarna said in a telephone interview that his office had been investigating the alleged misappropriation of about Rp 4.5 billion ($500,000) from the Batam city budget.

According to a preliminary investigation by prosecutors, the funds had been allocated for places of worship and orphanages from Rp 23 billion intended for social assistance programs. But the money never reached the recipients despite receipts presented by city officials.

Prosecutors suspected corruption was involved in the case and began a formal investigation, at which time the Batam administration responded by sending an official request for prosecutors to halt the probe.

Tatang refused to comply with the request, citing that the investigation had already been upgraded, but on Monday received notice that he was being transferred to a new post at the AGO, which he declined to elaborate on.

“The decree for my removal was issued after I refused a request from the Batam city government to drop the corruption case,” Tatang said.

“The case will continue until my replacement formally takes over my job. After that, it’s up to my successor to decide to continue with it. But if he follows procedures, he too must continue with the investigation.”

Deputy Attorney General Darmono denied suggestions that Tatang’s transfer had been based on his refusal to drop the case.

“We routinely rotate our prosecutors,” he said. “The reports [linking the removal with the case] are not valid. Instead, the AGO is encouraging the completion of the case.”

The transfer was also not a demotion, because Tatang would still retain his chief prosecutor position in his new posting, Darmono added, although declining to say where Tatang would next be posted.

In a similar case several years ago, a senior prosecutor with the Jakarta prosecutors’ office, Faried Haryanto, was sidelined after he refused to drop a corruption case related to the sale of a sugar factory in Gorontalo province in Sulawesi by the now-defunct National Banking Restructuring Board (BPPN). The case was eventually abandoned by the AGO.

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