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Firm Mired In Lawsuits Mounts IPO.


If American Pharmaceutical Partners Inc. proceeds this week as planned with its $165 million initial public offering, investors will be faced with a seemingly attractive prospect.

The Los Angeles-based manufacturer has more than doubled the sales of the American generic drug generic drug, a drug sold or prescribed under the nonproprietary name of its active ingredients or under a generally descriptive name rather than under a brand or trade name.  business it acquired in 1998 from Fujisawa Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd. of Japan, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 its prospectus.

It also has new generics in the pipeline, and, even more promising, it plans to license from its closely held A phrase used to describe the ownership, management, and operation of a corporation by a small group of people.

In a closely held corporation, the same people often act as shareholders, directors, and officers, and no outside investors exist.
 parent the patent for what it's calling an improved version. of Taxol, the world's best selling anti-cancer drug.

Big name Wall Street firms CIBC World Markets CIBC World Markets is the investment banking division of the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce. It helps governments, large companies, and other large institutions obtain capital and credit and is a primary dealer in U.S. Treasury securities. , Bank of America
See also:  and


Bank of America (NYSE: BAC TYO: 8648 ) is the largest commercial bank in the United States in terms of deposits, and the largest company of its kind in the world.
 Securities LLC (Logical Link Control) See "LANs" under data link protocol.

LLC - Logical Link Control
 and UBS UBS Union Bank of Switzerland
UBS United Bible Societies
UBS United Blood Services
UBS United Buying Service
UBS Used Bookstore
UBS University Business Services
UBS Universal Building Society (UK)
UBS Ulaanbaatar Broadcasting System
 Warburg are underwriting the offering, lending it luster.

But that is, at best, only half the story.

What the prospectus fails to make clear is the tortured legal history involving APP, its parent, American Bio-Science Inc., and the founder and chief executive of both companies, Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong. The particulars, not all of which are mentioned in the Securities and Exchange Commission filing, include:

* An investigation by the Federal Trade Commission for possibly engaging in anti-competitive practices.

* Both companies being jointly liable for a $24 million payment to an entity controlled Soon-Shiong's brother, Terrence, stemming from prior litigation An action brought in court to enforce a particular right. The act or process of bringing a lawsuit in and of itself; a judicial contest; any dispute.

When a person begins a civil lawsuit, the person enters into a process called litigation.
.

* American BioScience's involvement in a series of lawsuits over Taxol with the Food and Drug Administration, as well as with a Florida firm seeking to market the generic version of the drug and a health insurer.

* A federal judge's ruling that Soon-Shiong improperly applied for and received a patent for an experimental form of Taxol actually developed by scientists at Florida State University Florida State University, at Tallahassee; coeducational; chartered 1851, opened 1857. Present name was adopted in 1947. Special research facilities include those in nuclear science and oceanography. . The judge ordered the names of Soon-Shiong and two colleagues stripped from the patent.

The underwriters and securities attorneys involved in the offering declined all comment, noting the company is in a quiet period.

Beyond the specifics of Soon-Shiong's checkered dealings is the question of whether this soon-to-be-public company is releasing as much information as it should.

Attorney Joseph Coyne Jr., who has represented Soon-Shiong and his companies, said the filings follow SEC regulations -- that is, disclosing any lawsuits that could materially affect APP, not those that only name the parent.

He declined to make Soon-Shiong directly available for comment.

Trusting filings

"The underwriter wants to sell the stock, and the company wants the proceeds," said Irving Einhorn, the former director of the SEC's Pacific region and now a private attorney.

"There is this constant strain over how much disclosure there should be. The bottom line is that if there is potential financial liability it must be disclosed."

This is not the first time that Soon-Shiong has found himself in the spotlight. A former assistant professor of medicine at UCLA UCLA University of California at Los Angeles
UCLA University Center for Learning Assistance (Illinois State University)
UCLA University of Carrollton, TX and Lower Addison, TX
, Soon-Shiong made headlines in 1993 as a researcher at St. Vincent Medical Center St. Vincent Medical Center may refer to:
  • St. Vincent Medical Center — Los Angeles, California
  • Providence St. Vincent Medical Center — Portland, Oregon
 in Los Angeles.

He implanted insulin-producing islet cells in a long-time diabetic using a technology that encapsulated them in a seaweed gel. The gel was intended to protect them from the body's immune response immune response
n.
An integrated bodily response to an antigen, especially one mediated by lymphocytes and involving recognition of antigens by specific antibodies or previously sensitized lymphocytes.
, a perennial challenge in the effort to produce a so-called artificial pancreas.

Soon-Shiong reported great success, setting off a flurry of press reports, although the implants later failed and claims about their success were denounced as "hype" by the American Diabetes Association The American Diabetes Association, or the ADA, is an American health organization providing diabetes research, information and advocacy. Founded in 1940, the American Diabetes Association conducts programs in all 50 states and the District of Columbia, reaching hundreds of  the following year.

Still, the promise of the technology led Mylan Laboratories Inc., a Pittsburgh-based generic and brand drug company, to invest in VivoRx Inc. and VivoRx Diabetes Inc., the two L.A.-based companies Soon-Shiong formed with Terrence to capitalize on the artificial pancreas technology and other research. Mylan also was given a license to market and sell the diabetic treatment, then in trials with patients.

The agreement fell apart when Mylan began to suspect in 1998 that Soon-Shiong was diverting research funds toward two companies he had formed independently of his brother to pursue unrelated research, according to court documents.

Those companies were VivoRx Pharmaceutical Inc., ABI's direct predecessor, and APP. The research included what has become the new version of Taxol that APP is touting in its IPO (Initial Public Offering) The first time a company offers shares of stock to the public. While not a computer term per se, many founders, employees and insiders of computer companies have found this acronym more exciting than any tech term they ever heard.  prospectus.

Mylan sued each brother separately, while VivoRx and Terrence sued Soon-Shiong, American BioScience and APP claiming his brother allowed the diabetes research to lie fallow fallow

a pale cream, light fawn, or pale yellow coat color in dogs.
 as he pursued his own work.

The lawsuit labeled it "betrayal, arrogance, greed and personal aggrandizement ag·gran·dize  
tr.v. ag·gran·dized, ag·gran·diz·ing, ag·gran·diz·es
1. To increase the scope of; extend.

2. To make greater in power, influence, stature, or reputation.

3.
 that resulted in corporate misconduct of enormous proportions."

In the end, Mylan settled its suit with Soon-Shiong and his two companies. The settlement included a $9.2 million payment to Mylan exchange for the company giving up an equity interest it had taken in American BioScience, according to documents Mylan filed with the SEC.

Soon-Shiong settled his legal dispute with VivoRx and his brother this past February.

According to court documents, Soon-Shiong defended his actions by saying all parties knew he was pursuing his own research and co-mingling some of the research funds pending a reimbursement arrangement.

'Unusual' involvement

Coyne said it is not uncommon for entrepreneurs and their investors to have legal disputes, though he acknowledged the brother's involvement was "unusual."

He added that an arbitrator absolved his client of any wrongdoing wrong·do·er  
n.
One who does wrong, especially morally or ethically.



wrongdo
 and the payments were simply a way for two brothers to part their business interests. However, Coyne refused to provide the arbitrator's report. Charles Kreindler, Terrence's attorney, also refused to make the document available or comment for this story. Terrence, who lives in London, could not be reached.

"I recognize the allegations are fraud this, fraud that," Coyne said. "But Patrick is the typical brilliant doctor who did not know much about business."

And despite the litigation, American BioScience and APP took off.

In 1998, APP bought the generic drug product line of Fujisawa USA Inc., the U.S. subsidiary of Fujisawa Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd. a Japanese drug company. (Terrence's lawsuit claimed the diversion of research funds made the leveraged buyout leveraged buyout, the takeover of a company, financed by borrowed funds. Often, the target company's assets are used as security for the loans acquired to finance the purchase.  possible.)

At the time the terms of the deal were undisclosed, but according to APP's SEC filing related to the IPO, the company acquired Fujisawa's U.S. business for $75 million. What APP got from the deal was a catalogue of drugs, as well as manufacturing plants in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 and Illinois and a research facility.

FDA FDA
abbr.
Food and Drug Administration


FDA,
n.pr See Food and Drug Administration.

FDA,
n.pr the abbreviation for the Food and Drug Administration.
 approvals

In the process, it more than doubled sales. APP attributes the success to increasing market penetration. It also notes receiving 26 new generic product approvals from the FDA. The company says it produces over 100 generic injectable drugs, with a primary focus on cancer, infection and critical care.

Funds from the IPO are intended to grow the generic side of the business, pay off $35 million in debt and pay for a license of $45 million to $60 million to American BioScience for the new version of Taxol.

Soon-Shiong holds 80 percent of the capital stock of American BioScience, which after the IPO will hold 67 percent of the common stock of APP, leaving him firmly in control of both companies.

American BioScience's version of Taxol, paclitaxel paclitaxel /pac·li·tax·el/ (pak?li-tak´sel) an antineoplastic that promotes and stabilizes polymerization of microtubules, isolated from the Pacific yew tree (Taxus brevifolia); , is now entering the last phase of clinical trials. However, technology underlying the new drug is part of a wide-ranging paclitaxel patent American BioScience received in 1999 that has drawn the company into a dispute over potential collusion by major drug companies to keep generics off the market.

American BioScience filed lawsuits in federal court last year against both the FDA and Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., the original patent holder on Taxol, in an effort to get the patent registered with the FDA.

Under the complexities of federal drug law, the registration interfered with the expected sale of a generic version of Taxol by a Miami firm called Ivax Corp. American BioScience and Ivax are suing each other in Los Angeles federal court over the patent.

Coyne said that by taking court action, American BioScience was trying to protect potential future rights to sell its own generic form of Taxol, especially if its improved version should ultimately not be brought to market.

But Ivax has accused American BioScience of conspiring with Bristol-Myers, since any delay meant that the giant pharmaceutical company could continue selling its higher priced branded drug without generic competition.

Two months ago, Cobalt Corp., a Milwaukee health insurer, filed its own lawsuit against Bristol-Myers and American BioScience, also accusing the two of conspiring, thereby costing it and other insurers money by forcing it to pay the full price for the branded Taxol. The lawsuits are in various stages.

Coyne dismissed the Taxol litigation as another example of the kind of patent litigation that is rampant in the industry. "It's the nature of the beast Nature of the Beast is the ninth episode of The WB television series Birds of Prey. The episode aired on December 18, 2003. Summary
When Al Hawke, her mother's killer, is hunted by The Specialist - a metahuman assassin with the ability to pass through solid
," he said.

He stressed that despite all the litigation, none of it is stopping APP in its efforts to bring its new version of Taxol to market -- a key impetus of the IPO. Nor should it obscure the fact that Soon-Shiong has built a growing company that should be attractive to investors.

"I know there is a lot of smoke out there, but there is also a very positive story for L.A. business," Coyne maintained.
COPYRIGHT 2001 CBJ, L.P.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:American Pharmaceutical Partners Inc.
Comment:Firm Mired In Lawsuits Mounts IPO.(American Pharmaceutical Partners Inc.)
Author:Darmiento, Laurence
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 17, 2001
Words:1494
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