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Veterinarians Cheated by Florida
Broker of Pet Products
Author: Edie Lau
afloridapi@gmail.com
A rising number of
veterinarians who engaged in the controversial practice of
diverting dog and cat flea-prevention products maintain that
they have been cheated by a Florida-based broker of pet
products, W.T.F. Wholesale Suppliers Corp.
Mike Mittelman, a
private investigator hired by some of the parties to try to
recoup their money from WTF, says he has been contacted
separately by more than 100 diverters, almost all veterinarians,
who contend that they are owed thousands of dollars in unpaid
merchandise. He said the product that most supplied to WTF is
Frontline Plus, a popular topical non-prescription treatment
used to prevent flea and tick infestations in dogs and cats.
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“There’s an
ever-growing group that grows by about two victims a
week,” Mittelman told the VIN News Service. The amount
each claims to be owed varies, but most are in the realm
of $25,000 to $35,000, he said.
At least four veterinarians filed lawsuits recently
against WTF in the Circuit Court of Volusia County,
Fla.; Mittelman said he expects many more to do so in
coming days.
After lawsuits
surfaced, WTF officials stopped operating under that
name, disconnecting telephone numbers posted on the
company website. They informed their suppliers that the
business is continuing under the name True Lines
Distributing Co. Reached at True Lines last Tuesday,
company representative Kay Carpenter would not respond
to allegations against WTF. |
“We’re no longer
WTF,” Carpenter said. “There is no more WTF Wholesale.”
Carpenter said she would pass along a message from the VIN News
Service seeking information on WTF’s operations and standing,
but the call was not returned.
However, the lawyer representing WTF against the veterinarians’
legal claims, Kelly Parsons Kwiatek, responded by email that WTF
closed its operation at 1620 S. Clyde Morris Blvd. in Daytona
Beach on Aug. 19 due to a combination of circumstances.
“While WTF saw great success as an early adopter of the
veterinarian-grade flea treatment, 2011 marked an unprecedented
year in the history of the organization,” she wrote. “Same-store
sales seeing considerable loss of sales due to extended drought
conditions, the overall poor state of the economy as a whole
thereby diminishing consumer spending, and the introduction of
generic equivalents (of flea products) in mass retailers led to
the current situation.”
Asked why, if business conditions are poor, company officials
are able to continue the operation under a different name,
Parsons Kwiatek said, “I have never heard of True Lines
Distributing Corp.”
In response to questions about unpaid debts to suppliers and
whether the lack of payment is part of a calculated scheme to
defraud, Parsons Kwiatek said:
“WTF adamantly denies that it deliberately lured veterinarians
into a relationship of trust with the company, paying upfront
initially and then delaying or ceasing payments over time.
However, the policies, procedures and practices at the shipping,
receiving, purchasing and accounting levels have, upon occasion,
created a non-payment issue with a few vendors who sent product
to WTF outside of its typical model. At this time, WTF is in the
process of marshalling its assets and determining its
liabilities so that as many vendor issues can be resolved as
smoothly as possible.”
Clandestine operations revealed
The claims against WTF have opened a window into the secretive
realm of pet-product diversion, a practice that may be legal,
depending on the product involved, but is nonetheless considered
unethical in veterinary circles. Where diverted products are not
prescription drugs — Frontline brand products are classified by
federal regulators as a pesticide — rules controlling the sale
and distribution of pharmaceuticals appear not to apply.
But the veterinary community frowns upon diversion because it
violates an understanding between most manufacturers and
veterinarians that distribution should be limited to
veterinarians dispensing directly to pet owners to ensure the
products’ safe and effective use. Moreover, parasiticides
represent a major, if dwindling, source of revenue for
veterinary hospitals, one that practitioners have come to rely
on for decades.
With the exception of Bayer Animal Health, major players in
veterinary pharmaceuticals — Merial, Novartis, Pfizer and Elanco,
for example — have policies of selling their products only to
licensed, practicing veterinarians.
Despite that, a variety of pet parasiticides are readily
available directly to consumers through online vendors such as
PetMed Express and Amazon.com and from retail chains including
Costco, Walmart and Target.
Veterinary pharmaceutical companies, suspected by many
veterinarians to be complicit
in the so-called gray market, usually point the finger back at
practitioners, saying it is they who are diverting product to
retail outlets.
Based on his research, Mittelman said, he believes a large
number of veterinarians are involved in diverting, and that
pharmaceutical companies, if not openly facilitating such
activity, are knowingly letting it happen.
“I don’t know if there’s a lot of hypocrisy or what, but I’m
telling you, there are a lot of vets who do this ... ” Mittelman
said. “I’m not talking a couple hundred vets. I’m talking
thousands.”
As for the
pharmaceutical companies, Mittelman said he was told by one
veterinarian that the veterinarian’s account representative and
the representative’s boss would call periodically “begging the
vet to move large volumes of the non-prescription product that
they need to get rid of. Obviously,” Mittelman said, “they have
to know the vet is diverting this large volume of product.”
He speculated that taking big orders probably personally
benefits account representatives as much as diverters. Comparing
the situation to the market for mortgages in the United States
before the housing sector imploded, Mittelman noted that loan
officers, “weren’t checking references or anything because they
were getting commissions.” He suspects the same of
pharmaceutical company account representatives but added, “Maybe
some account reps have more integrity than others;
who knows?”
Dr. Zack Mills, head of U.S. companion animal sales for Merial,
maker of Frontline, told the VIN News Service that he became
aware of the WTF issue about six months ago when some of
Merial’s veterinarian customers reported having trouble with
their bills because they had not been paid for product they
resold to WTF.
While Merial does not condone or support diversion, Mills said,
the company is giving to those who explain their situation
extended time to settle their bills.
“Our interest is in settling these matters amicably, not in
turning their accounts over to collection agencies,” Mills said.
“That said, our sales policy has not changed. We continue to
sell only to practicing veterinarians and we will not sell to
identified diverters. These accounts have violated our sales
policy and have probably lost the ability to purchase Frontline
in the future.”
Profession condemns diversion
Publicly admitting involvement with WTF is difficult for the
typical veterinarian because diversion is regarded by the
profession as a shameful secret. Mittelman said that of the 100
or so diverters who have contacted him, about 75 did so
anonymously. They wanted him to know that they, too, had bad
experiences with WTF but would not divulge their names and opted
not to pursue payment. “They are willing to walk away from their
losses ... because they fear being shunned by their peers,”
Mittelman said.
Of the remainder - 25 veterinarians and one drug sales
representative who obtained product for WTF through veterinarian
clients - Mittelman said most are hurting financially and cannot
afford to walk away.
One may soon declare
bankruptcy;
another is on the verge of
divorce. A
couple of them say they may lose their practices due to the
unpaid debt, Mittelman said. Hearing their stories has given the
former law-enforcement
officer an appreciation for the financially tenuous state of
many veterinarians — a professional group that he previously had
assumed was well-to-do.
“A lot had gigantic loans to pay back from college and on top of
that, rent, electricity, plus the veterinary practice they owe a
lot for,” Mittelman said. “And here comes a company like WTF
saying, ‘Hey, if you buy flea and tick product and send it to
us, we’ll pay you anywhere from 3 percent to 10 percent above
what you paid. This vet, who may have hundreds of thousands of
dollars in loans, sees an opportunity to make a few bucks
diverting flea and tick product. You think, ‘What’s the big
deal?’ ”
But as one veterinarian who wrote about her experience with WTF
in a message board of the online community Veterinary
Information Network (VIN) found, diversion is a big deal among
her colleagues.
When the veterinarian posted queries on June 21 and August 8
looking for others who had sold Frontline Plus to WTF and not
been paid, she elicited a storm of responses, many poking fun at
her predicament or expressing scorn.
One of the gentler jibes was this from Dr. Katie Thompson, a
Florida clinic owner: “As my momma says, you lie down with dogs,
you get up with fleas.”
Dr. Shelley Lenz, a practice owner in North Dakota, suggested
that the diverting veterinarian was as much a crook as the
company she accused. “Hopefully you’ve learned there is no honor
code among thieves,” she wrote. “You are one of them...”
The criticism cut deeply. Although the veterinarian used her
full name when she posted her experience on the members-only VIN
discussion board, she asked not to be identified in this article
for fear of retaliation by fellow veterinarians and the
potential impact her involvement could have on finding work in
the future.
In an interview, she said the view that she had stolen from
other veterinarians by helping to make Frontline Plus available
through retail channels resonated with her. “I never thought
about it that way (before),” she said.
The veterinarian, who has practiced for more than 20 years and
currently serves as a relief doctor in Illinois, said she always
understood that diversion was considered unethical. However,
she’s known veterinarians who have successfully engaged in the
activity for years. When she walked into a PetSmart store one
day to buy dog food and saw a large display of Frontline Plus in
the entrance, she figured refraining from diversion was
pointless.
About the same time, she was having trouble paying bills because
she had undergone surgery for breast cancer and was unable to
work for several months. She had received solicitations
regularly, once or twice a year, from companies inviting her to
sell them flea-prevention products. When the next letter came,
she accepted.
She started out small, ordering $5,000 worth of Frontline Plus.
Since she doesn’t own a clinic, the product came to her house.
WTF supplied her with shipping labels, she said, so she could
send the product to the company. She did not ask to be paid
before shipping the product, which she now realizes was a stupid
mistake. However, the company would wire payment into her bank
account within 21 days so she didn’t worry.
Within two years, the veterinarian said, she sent five shipments
of product with a total value of nearly $90,000, for which she
earned $2,700, or 3 percent. Payment on the fifth shipment took
nearly 60 days, which caused the veterinarian to consider ending
the deal with WTF. But the veterinarian said her contact, Kay
Carpenter, persuaded her to make another $25,000 order by
pointing out that Merial had a promotion offering discounted
pricing, so the veterinarian could earn more money than usual.
That shipment went out in August 2010.
With the last shipment, the veterinarian said, payment never
came. Carpenter “was full of excuses,” the veterinarian
recounted. “She said they had issues with cash flow. They had
ordered a lot of product from vendors and were having trouble
getting their receipts sorted out.”
When the veterinarian received an overdue notice from Merial,
she explained her situation to an account representative at the
company. After some negotiation, Merial agreed not to send her
to collections if she would make payments of $100 to $500 per
month.
Meanwhile, the veterinarian said, she continued to call and
email Carpenter every week. “I would call, I would beg, I would
plead,” she said. “She would say, ‘Yes, it’s coming. Yes, it’s
coming.’ ” The veterinarian tried to reach other people at WTF,
as well, but always was routed back to Carpenter.
In time, she couldn’t reach Carpenter on the telephone either,
she said, and her emails to the woman began bouncing.
The veterinarian acknowledges erring in diverting but disagrees
with the critics who say she — and others in the same situation
— deserve what’s happened. “None of us should have to be
responsible for this level of debt because the product was
stolen from us,” she said. “It is our responsibility that we
ordered it from Merial. Nobody is contesting that. But the fact
that it was stolen, we didn’t do that. We just got (caught) in
the con.”
The American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA)’s Principles
of Veterinary Medical Ethics identifies as an unethical act the
diversion of “ethical products.” Such products are defined as
those “for which the manufacturer has voluntarily limited the
sale to veterinarians as a marketing decision.” AVMA members who
fail to comply with the ethics principles may be disciplined,
according to spokeswoman Sharon Curtis Granskog. Discipline may
include censure, suspension, probation and/or expulsion.
But from a legal standpoint, the veterinarian in Illinois who
diverted has not violated state codes, according to Susan Hofer,
a spokeswoman for the Illinois Department of Financial and
Professional Regulation, which oversees licensing of
veterinarians and distribution of drugs, among other things.
Diversion of a pesticide product such as Frontline “is not
expressly against the law in Illinois,” Hofer said. Noting that
the state veterinary practice act requires that a licensee “be a
person of good moral character,” she added, “I suppose somebody
could make the case that reselling product is not showing good
moral character.”
Practitioners file suit
In Circuit Court in Volusia County, at least four veterinarians
in four states filed claims recently against WTF Wholesale.
Dr. Cynthia Maravich of Ohio filed suit on June 7 asserting that
WTF owes her $26,455.20 for an order of Frontline Plus shipped
to the company in July 2010. The complaint states that Maravich
made her first purchase for WTF in September 2006 and continued
to place orders for the company about every three months
thereafter. Maravich declined to be interviewed by the VIN News
Service.
On Aug. 23, Maravich voluntarily dismissed the suit with
prejudice, precluding herself from filing another suit with the
same claim. WTF attorney Parsons Kwiatek said the claim was
settled. She declined to disclose the settlement terms.
Royer Veterinary Services in Indiana filed a complaint on July
18 claiming that WTF owes the clinic $22,995.60 plus interest
for Frontline Plus products delivered in September. Clinic owner
Dr. Scott Royer did not respond to a telephone message left with
a clinic staff member by the VIN News Service.
Dr. John McQuown, a retired veterinarian in California, filed
suit on July 25, seeking to recover from WTF payment of
$32,022.90 for product he said he supplied to the company in
August 2010. McQuown did not respond to a telephone message left
with his wife by the VIN News Service.
Dr. David Kulhavy, a relief and emergency veterinarian in Texas,
filed suit Aug. 16 in pursuit of $25,148 he said WTF owes him
for product he supplied to the company in August 2010.
Parsons Kwiatek said she has been in contact with lawyers for
Roger, McQuown and Kulhavy and that WTF “hopes to resolve all
accounting matters in the near future.”
In an interview, Kulhavy said he began diverting Frontline Plus
to WTF in 2006, two years into his career. As a recent
veterinary school graduate trying to get established in the
profession, the extra income was attractive.
“I don’t know if they target new vets or what ... but right
then, it was like, ‘Great. This is a huge bonus,’ ” Kulhavy
said.
At the outset, Kulhavy recounted, the deal went like this: “They
start off with a small order of, like, $10,000 and they pay you
10 percent, kind of a teaser rate. The rate kind of went down a
bit - it fell in line with the economy slowing down - so I was
like, 'Whatever.' ” Even at 5 or 6 percent, Kulhavy said, “It
was very, very, very easy money to make so ... I’m not going to
walk away from it.”
Two other conditions changed over time, as well. The company
began requesting larger orders, and paying for them more slowly,
Kulhavy said. Initially, he was paid before shipping. Later, he
said, payment came after delivery, and at continuously longer
intervals. Kulhavy said he had six months interest-free in which
to settle hisaccount with Merial, so the time lag wasn’t a great
concern at first.
When by January he hadn’t been paid for $42,000 in product
shipped last August, Kulhavy said he contacted Carpenter, who
told him that an accounting error led some veterinarians to be
paid twice while others went unpaid. Kulhavy said he didn’t
believe it, and as the due date on his Merial bill approached,
he contacted a lawyer.
WTF eventually paid a portion of what he was due, Kulhavy said,
leaving a balance of slightly more than $25,000. At this point,
Kulhavy said, he’s working off his Merial bill with monthly
payments.
Kulhavy doesn’t apologize for reselling a non-prescription
product. Of colleagues who criticize the activity, Kulhavy said:
“My theory is that those are all practice owners, and they’re
mad because other vets are making money off the product. ... I
don’t see why anyone has a concern or care because it’s a
non-prescription product. It’s not illegal. ... It’s no
different from a convenience store ordering a bunch of Tylenol
and putting it on the shelf. The only reason it’s sold
exclusively to vets is because that’s what the drug companies
choose to do.”
As in Illinois, veterinarians in Texas are not prohibited by law
from reselling pesticide products such as Frontline, according
to state officials. Nicole Oria, executive director of the Texas
State Board of Veterinary Medical Examiners, said the board has
disciplined a practitioner in the past for reselling
antibiotics. But Frontline Plus, regulated by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency as a pesticide, falls into a
different category.
In addition to Frontline Plus, the private investigator
Mittelman said that a few of the veterinarians he works for sold
to WTF the flea product Capstar. Like Frontline, Capstar does
not require a prescription, but unlike Frontline, Capstar is
regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as a drug. As
such, diversion of Capstar may be illegal, at least in some
states.
WTF previously accused of deceit
WTF is not the only company that solicits veterinarians to
resell flea and tick products for pets. Mittelman said one of
his clients diverts for multiple brokers and reportedly has had
difficulty only with WTF.
Records at the Florida Department of State Division of
Corporations show that WTF has been in business since at least
2001, originally under the name W.T.F. Wholesale Inc., then,
beginning in April 2003, under the name W.T.F. Wholesale
Suppliers Corp.
Todd Stefaniak is listed as the registered agent and officer for
W.T.F. Wholesale Inc. He also is listed as the officer of W.T.F.
Wholesale Suppliers Corp. Stefaniak could not be reached for
comment. Palmetto Charter Services Inc. is listed as the
registered agent for W.T.F. Wholesale Suppliers Corp. An entry
for Palmetto Charter on manta.com, an online directory for small
businesses, lists John P. Ferguson, attorney, as Palmetto’s
contact. A telephone message left for Ferguson with a staff
member at his law office went unanswered.
In paperwork sent to one veterinarian, WTF Wholesale describes
itself as “a sales and distribution firm providing retail
outlets hard-to-find veterinary products.” It goes on: “Our
customer base of thousands consist (sic) primarily of retail pet
stores, groomers and farm & feed stores in the Central Florida
area. The WTF Wholesale corporate offices and primary
distribution center is located near Daytona Beach, Florida.”
WTF has been accused of deceit by not only veterinarians, but
others in the business of selling pet products. The Kong
Company, LLC, maker of rubber chew toys for dogs, in a suit
filed in August 2010, alleged that Stefaniak and WTF obtained
product from Kong “under the guise that the product would be
distributed as gifts to veterinarians when in fact that product
was provided to Costco Wholesale Corporation for distribution
throughout the United States.”
The suit cites an e-mail sent by Stefaniak to Kong in May 2010
that begins: “My company partners with approximately 5,000
veterinarians across the country. It’s these veterinary
relationships that enable us to be the largest distributor of
Frontline branded products in the U.S.”
The message goes on to say that Stefaniak is considering
including Kong toys in a quarterly “thank you” package to its
veterinarian partners.
Kong responded by selling to WTF 20,736 large Classic Kongs at
the discounted price of $2.40 each, along with an equal number
of large liver snacks to be inserted into the chew toys at the
price of $1.75 each, according to the suit. (The retail price of
a large Classic Kong is $12.99.) A few weeks after it shipped
the order to Florida, the suit states, Kong discovered the
products had been sold to Costco and appeared in stores in
California and Texas.
“Kong products are distributed throughout the United States
primarily at specialty pet stores such as PetSmart and Petco.
Kong does not distribute its products through ‘warehouse’ stores
such as Costco,” the suit states.
The case was dismissed without prejudice in January over
jurisdiction: The suit was filed in U.S. District Court in the
Central District of California, but the defendants had shipped
the products to Idaho. Asked whether Kong would re-file the suit
in Idaho, a company spokeswoman said Kong regards the case as
closed and had no further comment.
Meanwhile, veterinarians who believe they are victims of theft
by WTF are posting about WTF, True Lines Distributing, Stefaniak,
Carpenter and other company officials on Internet sites such as
ripoffreport.com and merchantcircle.com with warnings to avoid
doing business with these parties.
Dr. Paul Pion, president and co-founder of VIN, said the
difficulties veterinary colleagues report with WTF illustrate
some of the risks of diverting. When some members of VIN
objected to the use of their professional forum as a means for
diverters to contact each other, Pion explained in a post that
he hoped open discussion of the issue “might deter other
colleagues considering making the same poor choice.”
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