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The Washington Times Online Edition

Justices hear Vioxx arguments

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Investors have accused Merck & Co. of providing misleading information or omitting information about the risks of Vioxx, the blockbuster painkiller that was pulled from the market in 2004 because it doubled the risk of heart attack, strokes and death.ASSOCIATED PRESS Investors have accused Merck & Co. of providing misleading information or omitting information about the risks of Vioxx, the blockbuster painkiller that was pulled from the market in 2004 because it doubled the risk of heart attack, strokes and death.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Lawyers for Merck & Co. told the Supreme Court on Monday that investors waited too long and didn’t do all of the necessary investigations to sue the drug maker over whether it properly warned about the risks of its blockbuster painkiller Vioxx.

Whether the high court agrees with the drug maker will help clarify the legal standards for determining exactly when the clock starts running for the two-year window to sue a company accused of defrauding investors.

Merck wants the high court to overturn a decision by the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that will let proceed a class-action securities lawsuit related to the tens of billions of dollars in shareholder value lost overnight after Merck pulled Vioxx off the market.

The Whitehouse Station, N.J.-based company withdrew the drug from the market on Sept. 30, 2004, because it doubled the risks of heart attack, stroke and death.

Investors had accused Merck of providing misleading information or omitting information about the risks of Vioxx. After a widely publicized study — comparing Vioxx with naproxen, another pain reliever — found about five times more heart attacks in the patient group taking Vioxx, Merck officials argued repeatedly that was because naproxen protected the heart.

Experts have dismissed that.

“It would be the height of irony that for Merck’s success in concealing its fraud through the scientific uncertainty that was occurring with the naproxen hypothesis, that it would have this suit thrown out on statute of limitations grounds and never face the day in court that the investors here expect and deserve,” investor lawyer David C. Frederick said.

After it pulled Vioxx from the market, Merck was hit with a deluge of lawsuits from shareholders, patients and their survivors claiming Vioxx caused heart attacks and strokes, and from insurance plans seeking reimbursement for their costs for covering Vioxx prescriptions.

Merck says the investors should have known from public information there could be problems with Vioxx, because the regulatory Food and Drug Administration had issued warnings to Merck about Vioxx risks late in September 2001.

“There was sufficient information in the public domain,” Merck lawyer Kannon Shanmugam said.

Merck officials, in a statement released after arguments, said they think “the intense public discussion of data surrounding Vioxx had put investors on inquiry notice of the relevant issues.”

A U.S. district judge agreed and dismissed the November 2003 lawsuit, ruling it was filed after the two-year statute of limitations expired.

But the Philadelphia-based appeals court reversed that decision, allowing the many shareholder lawsuits, now consolidated in federal court, to proceed.

The court said the investors could not have known more than two years ahead of time of the possible wrongdoing by Merck. The court will make a decision on the case next year.

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