By Jon Kamp 
 

Cardinal Health Inc. (CAH) said Wednesday that the government is seeking information in a process that could lead to civil fines following a recent settlement over allegations the drug wholesaler didn't do enough to stop misuse of prescription painkillers from a Florida distribution hub.

The Dublin, Ohio, company reached the settlement with the Drug Enforcement Administration in mid-May over the Lakeland, Fla., center. Cardinal agreed to a two-year suspension of its license to ship controlled substances from that facility and also agreed to improve its procedures.

Cardinal didn't pay a fine in May, but the deal "did not foreclose the possibility of the U.S. Department of Justice seeking civil fines for historical conduct covered by the settlement agreement," Cardinal said in a regulatory filing Wednesday.

"In that regard, we are responding to civil subpoenas from two local offices within the DEA and the U.S. Department of Justice related to our distribution of controlled substances," the company said.

Cardinal also said it is not yet possible to "reasonably estimate a range of possible loss."

The government has been closely scrutinizing the nation's pharmacy-supply chain, including drug wholesalers and retail pharmacies, amid a soaring problem with prescription painkiller abuse. In 2008, Cardinal was blocked from shipping out controlled substances at three facilities due to DEA allegations the company wasn't doing enough to spot illegitimate purchases. Cardinal eventually paid a $34 million settlement payment but did not admit any wrongdoing.

ISI Group analyst Ross Muken noted that the 2008 fine "related to a much broader suit than they may face today," and he sees "minimal financial impact" if Cardinal winds up paying a fine.

The company also noted in Wednesday's filing that the DEA confirmed, as part of May's settlement, that it wasn't planning further administrative actions at any other Cardinal facilities based on conduct prior to the settlement.

Cardinal competitor AmerisourceBergen Corp. (ABC) disclosed earlier this month that it received subpoenas from the U.S. Attorney's Office in New Jersey and the DEA seeking documents on the company's internal controls. In 2007 the DEA suspended all controlled-substance shipments for several months at an AmerisourceBergen facility in Orlando, Fla., until the company installed a more-robust order-monitoring program.

Cardinal shares recently traded down 0.7% to $39.60.

   Write to Jon Kamp at jon.kamp@dowjones.com 
 

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