Skip to content

License Reinstated for Canadian Pharmacist Who Sold Counterfeit Cancer Drugs to the US

Canadian internet pharmacist Kristjan Thorkelson had his license reinstated by the College of Pharmacists of Manitoba only days after the regulatory authority suspended him, according to a report by CBC News. The sudden reversal reinforces LegitScript's assertion that Canadian regulation of these internet pharmacies is inadequate for protecting US consumers.

The Canadian regulatory authority confirmed to CBC News that the sanction was lifted in late December 2017 but offered no additional details. Thorkelson, who is the president of CanadaDrugs.com, had his license suspended less than a week previous because, according to the College's Complaint Committee, "his conduct presents or is likely to present a serious risk to the public."

Canadian rogue internet pharmacies such as CanadaDrugs use the defense that Canadian regulation is sufficient to protect consumers, both in the country where they operate and in other jurisdictions, such as the US. But the lightning speed with which Thorkelson's license was reinstated illustrates just how impotent these regulations are in safeguarding US consumers. Because CanadaDrugs didn't commit a violation of Canadian law and didn't harm Canadian citizens, regulatory authorities in that country have little cause or means to sanction the operator, even for crimes as egregious as selling counterfeit drugs.

In 2017, Thorkelson and five others were arrested last year and extradited to the United States for selling fake cancer drugs online. US federal prosecutors accused the men of illegally importing and selling $78 million worth of unapproved, misbranded, and counterfeit drugs to the US between 2009 and 2012.

Under a tentative plea agreement, which was detailed in US court documents filed in late December, Thorkelson would pay a $250,000 fine and serve six months of house arrest, followed by four and a half years of probation. The plea agreement would also have CanadaDrugs and two subsidiaries plead guilty, pay a $5 million fine, and forfeit $29 million. Were Thorkelson tried and convicted, he could face up to 20 years in prison.

According to CBC News, the presiding judge in a US district court in Montana must still accept the plea agreement. A date for that proceeding has been set for April 2018.

 

David Khalaf is a writing, communications, and marketing professional with specialties in media, investigations, content strategy, and writing instruction. His 20 years of writing, media, and communications work have included two top-tier universities (USC and UCLA), print and digital magazines, consulting firms, and technology companies.

His current work involves content strategy and development at LegitScript, a company that helps the world's leading search engines, payment service providers, and internet platforms and marketplaces do business with legitimate, legally operating entities in more than 80 countries and 15 languages around the world. LegitScript specializes in risk and compliance for highly regulated industries including CBD/cannabis, online gambling, cryptocurrencies, drugs, financial trading, online adult, scams and fraud, and more.

Recent Blog Articles

Addiction Treatment Advisory Committee

Harnessing Collaboration: Highlights from LegitScript’s First Advisory Committee Meeting of the Year

Last year, LegitScript set out to relaunch its Addiction Treatment Certification Advisory Committee in order to strengthen avenues of communication and ensure the continued improvement of its Certification solutions. On March 27, 2024, the revitalized committee convened for the first time. Keep read...

Emerging Threat: Melanotan, Repackaging, and Online Sales

Despite continued regulatory action and potentially dangerous health effects, a social media trend promoting Melanotan II - an illicit tanning drug - continues to prevail in the market. LegitScript has observed that in an attempt to skirt account termination and regulatory scrutiny, merchants common...

Problematic Product Spotlight: Tianeptine

LegitScript has observed a recent rise in both the popularity and regulatory scrutiny of tianeptine, an unregulated substance commonly sold in gas stations and online - and often marketed with unproven claims to be a cognitive enhancer as well as an alternative to opioids. As such, manufacturers hav...
CBD Hemp oil, Hand holding droplet of Cannabis oil against Marijuana buds. Alternative Medicine

What You Need to Know About CBD Product Labeling Regulations

From CBD product labels that claim to diagnose, cure, mitigate, treat, or prevent disease to truth-in-advertising requirements - LegitScript explores the regulatory environment of CBD as it exists today. Then download our CBD Compliance Resource Guide or create an account to apply for your CBD Certi...