On April 20, three weeks after the advisory panel vote, and one
week after Dr. Scher’s missive appeared in The Cancer Letter,
Forbes journalist Matthew Herper published
a story arguing that there was a good chance the FDA would not
approve Dendreon’s cancer treatment outright. “If the
agency wants to ask Dendreon for more data, it certainly has some
outs,” Herper wrote. “The FDA changed the wording of
the question…”
Three days later, Dr. Maha Hussain, one of the panel doctors who
had quickly voted “No” on the bogus question, wrote
a letter to the FDA arguing that Dendreon’s treatment
should not be approved. This letter, like Dr. Scher’s, was
addressed to FDA commissioners and was presumably confidential. And
this letter, like Dr. Sher’s, found its way to The Cancer
Letter, which
posted it for all to see just three days after it was
written.
Dr. Hussain’s arguments were precisely the same as those
employed by Dr. Scher and the whispering folks on Wall Street.
“The recommendations for approval…are based on data
that can only be characterized as best as ‘suggestive’
of possible benefit,” she wrote. “From the scientific
and procedural aspects, in general, it would seem that at the end
of the day what should determine a positive verdict in any
therapeutic trial is the strength of the evidence as critically
reviewed by an Advisory Committee…with clear guidance on
the question posed to the committee within the framework of
the regulatory guidelines and requirements of the FDA for
approval.” [Italics mine]
That is, Dr. Hussain—like Dr. Scher, the singing Sendek,
and whoever was feeding the journalist Matthew Herper–was
suggesting that the FDA panel had voted on the “wrong
question.”
Meanwhile, Jonathan Aschoff, the physician-impersonating
financial analyst who’d set a target for Dendreon’s
stock price to reach a mere $1.50, was
telling journalists that the FDA panel would not have voted to
approve Dendreon’s treatment if it weren’t for the
“substantial” rewording of “the question.”
On April 25, Aschoff issued another damaging report, this one
asserting, once again, that the FDA would ignore its panel because
the panel had voted on the “wrong question.”
By this time Dendreon supporters were busily circulating
transcripts showing that the FDA panelists had, in fact, voted on
the legal question. The supporters had also discovered Dr.
Scher’s ties to Novacea, Cougar Biotechnology, Proquest, and
Michael Milken, and began explaining to all and sundry that
ProQuest and Novacea would cash in if Dendreon were not approved.
Moreover, the supporters had revealed that Dr. Hussain, the second
letter writer, had also done work for the Milken-invested
Novacea, and was a member of the “Therapeutic
Consortium” of Milken’s Prostate Cancer Foundation.
On April 26, Matthew Herper of Forbes published another
article – this one repeating the arguments in Dr.
Hussain’s letter. Herper, who had been told about
Scher’s conflicts of interest, had apparently decided to
investigate. This investigation seemed to have involved nothing
more than asking Dr. Scher if he had any conflicts of interest. In
his April 26 article, Herper reported that Scher’s
spokesman said “that Scher had nothing to do with his letter
leaking [and appearing in The Cancer Letter], and that he knew of
no family members who would benefit financially either way if
Provenge were approved.”
To reinforce Scher’s credibility, and to make
Dendreon’s supporters look silly, Herper added that the
supporters had alleged that “Scher’s wife works for a
hedge fund that might be short Dendreon…This is not true.
She works in human resources for a nursing home company that could
not conceivably benefit materially from any news about
Dendreon.”
Aside from ignoring Scher’s ties to Milken’s
ProQuest Investments, which would profit handsomely if Dendreon
were not approved, Herper misconstrued the information about
Scher’s wife. The truth was, Dendreon’s supporters had
revealed that Scher’s wife had a cousin, Barry Lafer, who was
a hedge fund manager. Phone records legally obtained by Deep
Capture show that Scher called Lafer, at his office, on April
23, while Herper’s article was in the works.
But the main point of Herper’s article was that “all
this debate” (i.e. the Wall Street whispering and the
conjectures of two conflicted doctors) made “Dendreon an even
riskier stock than other biotechs.” Herper added that
according to unnamed “others,” Dendreon’s
“studies do not rise to the level usually required for
approval.”
Besides being false, this was another way of suggesting that the
FDA panelists, all experts in their field, voted in favor of
Dendreon because they had misunderstood the standards for approval.
They had been asked the “wrong question.”
On April 29, Bloomberg News reported that Dendreon’s
shares were being sold at “a record pace” as investors
“bet the company’s experimental prostate-cancer drug
will fail to win approval from U.S. regulators.”
Then, on May 4, there was yet another letter. This one was
from a University of Washington biostatistician named Dr. Thomas
Fleming. It is perhaps noteworthy that Fleming had
done work for Gerson Lehrman, an outfit that is owned by former
hedge fund managers.
Gerson Lehrman has a remarkable business model which can
best be described as “institutionalized bribery.”
Clients, mostly hedge funds, hire Gerson to put doctors and other
experts on the payroll. In exchange for the payments, the doctors
agree to provide hedge funds with “insight” (some say
they provide inside information) about clinical trials of drugs
that are marketed by public companies. The doctors also agree to
talk to reporters (and perhaps also to the FDA) about these drugs.
In at least
one case it has been clearly established that these hired
sources lied (which could well explain, of course, why they were
hired).
Like the letters from Dr. Scher and Dr. Hussain, within days of
its creation Dr. Fleming’s
missive miraculously ended up in the hands of The Cancer
Letter, which eagerly
published it.
“Reportedly Scher felt motivated to write the letter after
being kept awake the night following the [advisory panel],”
wrote Dr. Fleming. “I also was kept awake the night following
the panel.”
In addition to knowing about Dr. Scher’s sleeping habits,
Dr. Fleming shared Dr. Scher’s concern that approving
Dendron’s treatment might derail Asentar, the drug that was
being developed by Milken’s Novacea. How “could one
defend internal consistency at FDA if [Provenge] were to be
approved before the [Asentar] trial?” Fleming asked.
By this time, Dendreon’s supporters (a rambunctious bunch)
were screaming and howling about the dishonesty of those who had
suggested that the advisory panel had been asked the “wrong
question.” So the party line changed a bit. Now it was that
the panelists who had voted in Dendreon’s favor must have
been somehow confused. Dendreon trials did not “provide
‘substantial evidence of efficacy’, Dr. Fleming wrote.
“Rather at best, these trials provide plausibility of
efficacy…”
I’ll leave it to the reader to parse the difference
between “plausibility” and “substantial
evidence.” But clearly, this letter was yet another strange
occurrence.
Four days later – May 8, 2007
— the FDA told Dendreon that it was rejecting the
company’s application for Provenge, a paradigm-shattering
vaccine for those terminally ill with prostate cancer.
* * * * * * * *
The SEC’s partial data shows that more than 12 million
Dendreon shares “failed to deliver” on May 10,
2007. Traders are given three days to produce stock before
their trades are registered as “failures to deliver,”
so it is clear that hedge funds had sold the 12 million shares of
phantom stock on May 7 — the day before the FDA made
its decision. This suggests that somebody was aware of this
imminent decision. We don’t know who engaged in that naked
short selling because, as far as the SEC is concerned, it’s a
big secret.
But we do know that a mere 10 hedge funds held large numbers of
put options (a bet that the stock price would fall) as of March 31,
a few days after the advisory panel’s nearly unanimous vote
in Dendreon’s favor. Obviously, these were hedge funds with
remarkable foresight concerning a long-shot event (the FDA’s
decision to go against the overwhelming recommendation of its
advisory panel to approve a drug for terminally ill cancer
patients). Seven of those hedge funds belong to a mischievous Wall
Street network that is known for its foresight – and for
attacking companies that, coincidentally, are victims of illegal
naked short selling.
Five of these hedge funds I have already named. All have ties to
Michael Milken or his close associates. Some have ties to the
Mafia. They are: Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities,
Perceptive Advisors, Millennium Capital, Steve Cohen’s Sigma
Capital, and Pequot Capital.
In preparation for naming the sixth, we need to hearken back to
September 2001, when two airplanes crashed into the twin towers of
the World Trade Center, one crashed into the Pentagon, and a fourth
dove into a field in Pennsylvania. On the day before that attack, a
short seller named Anthony Elgindy called his broker and ordered him to
liquidate one of his accounts, giving the explanation that a
big event was about to occur. Mr. Elgindy said that on the
following day (that is, on September 11, 2001) the market was going
to lose two-thirds of its value.
After the 9-11 attacks, that broker notified the FBI of
Elgindy’s eerie prediction, and the FBI launched an
investigation. In the course of this investigation, the government
learned that Elgindy had sold massive amounts of phantom
stock, and that he routinely blackmailed and threatened companies
that he was selling short. The government also learned that Elgindy
had ties to terrorist outfits in the Middle East, and for a time
prosecutors
argued in court that Elgindy had advance knowledge of the 9-11
disaster.
Ultimately, though, Elgindy was
convicted and sentenced to 11 years in prison for the more
demonstrable crimes of stock manipulation and paying bribes to two
FBI officials who fed him information from the FBI’s
National Crime Information System (one of those FBI agents
actually kept Elgindy informed of the progress of the investigation
into Elgindy’s connection to the 9-11 attacks). In June,
2009, it was learned that the SEC’s inspector general had
begun investigating SEC officials who are also alleged to have
collaborated with Elgindy, either by providing inside information
on commission investigations, or launching destructive, dead-end
investigations of companies that Elgindy was selling short.
Elgindy, like Bernard Madoff (the Dendreon short and Ponzi
schemer who helped write the SEC’s rules on naked short
selling), is believed to have ties to organized crime. He
once worked for a now-defunct Mafia-connected brokerage called
Blinder Robinson (known on the Street as Blind’em, Rob-em),
and a source close to the Elgindy investigation has
told Deep Capture that, shortly before Elgindy appeared
for sentencing, Russian mobsters forced Elgindy to saw off the tip
of one of his own fingers as a reminder not to squeal on other
members of his network.
There is evidence – including transcripts of
Elgindy’s private Internet message board – that shows
that Elgindy routinely attacked public companies in collaboration
with certain hedge fund managers. A significant number of these
hedge fund managers were part of the Milken network.
One of them was Jeffery Thorp, whose father once worked with the
Genovese organized crime family to develop a method for cheating
Las Vegas casinos. The government’s investigation of Elgindy
eventually led to Thorp, who was charged
in 2006 with providing fraudulent “death spiral” PIPEs
financing to 22 companies. The SEC’s case, one of the rare
instances in which the commission has identified a naked short
seller by name, makes it clear that Thorp sold massive amounts of
phantom stock, ultimately destroying the 22 companies that had
received his fraudulent PIPEs.
Recall that similar “death spiral” PIPEs were
arranged by Carl Icahn’s Ladenburg Thalmann, ending in the
phantom stock ruination of more than 20 companies. Icahn is the
“prominent” investor who owes his status as a
billionaire to Michael Milken and the Mafia-connected Zev Wolfson.
Icahn is also the “prominent” investor who, along with
Ziff Brothers and Steve Cohen, called ImClone immediately before
The Cancer Letter published the “leaked” news of an FDA
decision. Icahn is also the “prominent” investor
whose former employee was the last man to see Alain Chalem (a
Mafia-connected naked short seller) before Chalem’s head was
riddled with bullets by Russian mobsters.
Do you still not believe that this network has ties to the Mob?
Consider that Thorp’s father, in addition to working for the
Genovese organized crime family, was the
single most important player in the stock manipulation network
that Milken operated in the 1980s.
The father, Edward Thorp, ran a hedge fund called
Princeton-Newport. The FBI eventually raided that operation,
hauling away phone recordings and documents. Thorp was not
ultimately charged, but the evidence that the FBI retrieved that
day featured prominently in the prosecution’s 98-count
indictment of Milken. Indeed, people who worked on the case say
that the Princeton Newport evidence was far more important to the
prosecution than the testimony of Milken’s more famous
co-conspirator, Ivan Boesky.
Do you still not believe that people in this network employ
precisely the same ruthless tactics? Consider that when the FBI
investigated Elgindy, it also stumbled upon a hedge fund called
Gryphon Partners. One of Gryphon’s portfolio managers,
Jonathan Daws, was eventually charged
with participating in various short selling schemes hatched by
Elgindy and his bribed FBI agent. In pleading guilty, Daws said,
“others at Gryphon made trades in some of the relevant
stocks, independent of me, and not at my direction.” Daws was
convicted. No charges were immediately filed against
Gryphon.
However, in 2006, the SEC
sued Gryphon for providing fraudulent “death
spiral” PIPEs financing to 35 companies. Like Thorp and the
hedge funds introduced by Carl Icahn’s Ladenburg Thalmann,
Gryphon provided its PIPEs financing knowing that it would cause
stock prices to fall. The hedge fund then hammered the companies
with naked short selling, sending their stocks into “death
spirals.” Most of the 35 companies were destroyed.
So, at this point in the story, we have identified more than 70
companies that have been vaporized by “prominent”
investors, all part of the same network.
At any rate, Gryphon Partners, the Elgindy-connected,
PIPEs-financing, 35 company-destroying SEC-sued death spiral
finance house, was founded by G. Stacy Smith and Reid S. Walker,
two “prominent” investors who have since gone on to
greater things. They
now run a hedge fund called WS Ventures.
And WS Ventures is the sixth of our seven “colorful”
hedge funds that had the foresight to
own large numbers of put options in Dendreon at the end of
March 2007, just after the seemingly fantastic news that the
advisory panel had voted overwhelmingly in Dendreon’s favor,
and during the period when Dendreon was awash in illegal
naked short sales, and just before the disastrous news that
the FDA had rejected the advice of its own advisory panel.
A few months later, Dendreon, on the
verge of collapse and desperate for money to support its sabotaged
prostate cancer treatment, went ahead and signed a deal to receive
its first “death spiral” PIPEs finance.
* * * * * * * *
This is part 10 of a 15-part series.
The remaining installments will appear on Deep Capture over the
next several weeks, after which point the story will be published
in its entirety at DeepCapture.com. It is a
story about the travails of just one small company, but it
describes market machinations that have affected hundreds of other
companies, and it contains a larger message for anyone concerned
about the “deep capture” of our nation’s media
and regulatory bodies.
Mark Mitchell is a
reporter for DeepCapture.com. He
previously worked as an editorial page writer for The Wall Street
Journal in Europe, a business correspondent for Time magazine
in Asia, and as an assistant managing editor responsible for the
Columbia Journalism Review’s online critique of business
journalism. He holds an MBA from the Kellogg Graduate School of
Management at Northwestern University. Email:
mitch0033@gmail.com