Friday, May 23, 2008

Probably NOT the Kind of an Endorsement We'd Really Seek/Hope for -- but John McCain Dumped HIS Vytorin(!)


From the eagle-eyes of
Pharmalot, we note that
Senator, and presumptive Republican
Party Presidential-hopeful, John McCain
(R, AZ) has switched to generic Zocor,
post-ENHANCE, from Vytorin,
according to records released
this morning. Quoth Pharmalot:

. . . .he was taken off the med
after the results of the
controversial Enhance trial
were disclosed. . . . Instead,
he was given simvastatin, or
generic Zocor, which didn’t
reduce his cholesterol by as
much but was deemed "acceptable". . . .

Perhaps his doctors saw
that Condor-WebMedica ad. Heh. G'night!

[Graphical Update -- 05.24.08 AM.]

When Cobb v. Merck, et al. was filed, I predicted. . . .


. . .that it was only a matter of time, before these newer ERISA inherent-conflict-of-interest/breach of fiduciary duties allegations would find their way into a new, or amended, ERISA putative class action complaint against Schering-Plough, and its directors and some of its officers, personally.

It looks like that happened on May 19, 2008 [but it did not appear on the electronic docket of the US District Courthouse in Newark, New Jersey, as a filed case, until last night -- because counsel filed solely in paper format on the 19th, and was duly admonsihed about the federal rules on electronic filing on the 22nd. Heh. The original ERISA case, Gradone, is imaged, at right. Click it to enlarge.]

And so, as of last night, Oettinger, et al. v. Schering-Plough Corp., et al., Case No. 08-2436 (a putative Class Action Complaint, filed May 19, 2008) has fufilled that prophecy -- a case alleging those new theories (related to the inherent, unresolvable conflicts of interest endemic in situations such as those Merck, and Schering created, vis-a-vis the ERISA plans of each).

The Oettinger case also alleges personal liability violations of ERISA against CEO Fred Hassan, the entire Schering-Plough Board of Directors, and "John/Jane Does 1 through 10" -- the non-director, but Schering-employed Plan Fiduciaries, inside the company, serving in "dual roles" -- one role, for the ERISA plan(s), and the other role, for the company itself. Bob Bertolini is mentioned here.

This is how -- from a small spark, back in early March 2008 -- a bon-fire seems to begin.

We Seem to be Attracting the Oddest Assortment of Attention, Here. . . .


Okay, readers, some more throw-away junk, for a Friday night's entertainment value, mostly -- this one will probably take just a little explaining. Could they be visiting to prepare a case study, or could they be visiting because they've been retained? [Note that the firm does not provide client lists, or business-won stories. Ooh! -- very "hush hush, that"!]

So, several of my pages were visited repeatedly today -- and for substantial chunks of time -- by the below, via my statcounter.com applet. And the same visitor has been running seaches on keywords here. Hmmmmm. . . . [What a handy friend I have here in statcounter, no? Click to enlarge.]:



Now, just who are these guys? Well, here's their front page -- they are located in DC:



Fascinating, no? And, check-out that copy: "High-stakes communication consultancy. . . . Damage control. . . . Why everything you know about crisis management is wrong." Wow.

I really couldn't. make. this. stuff. up. Even if I tried.

I bet they are preparing a case study, that's what I bet. R-i-i-i-i-i-ght. Heh. [I actually do doubt Schering-Plough has hired the firm. Covington & Burling? Not likely; they'd do it "the old-fashioned way". Individual executives? Nah, too pricey. Hans Becherer? Ira T. Kay? Again, I am shrugging.]

But as I've come to learn, "the truth is usually far stranger. . . ." As ever, we shall see. G'night, one and all!

"One Major Airline Crash, Every Day, of Every Year, in America. . . ."


New 30-second-long VIDEO -- of Dennis Quaid's May 14, 2008 soundbite -- from his testimony: "100,000 people die from medical errors every year, in America. . . ."

A Very Compelling Transcript Section: Dennis Quaid -- on Preventing Medical Errors, via Bar-Coding. . . Another Good Idea


The preliminary PDF copy of the May 14, 2008 House Oversight Committee hearing, chaired by Rep. Henry Waxman (D, CA) is now available online. [We're still holding out for the higher-res, editable, video feed, here, Rep. Waxman [and kind tech-staffers!]. Hint. Hint. A low-res, dodgy-connection realmedia feed in a new window from CSPAN.org has been available for a while now.] I found Mr. Quaid's analogy, here, offered a common-sense framework for assessing the issue [emphasis supplied]:

HEARING ON: SHOULD FDA DRUG AND
MEDICAL DEVICE REGULATION BAR
STATE LIABILITY CLAIMS?


[Preliminary Transcript]

Wednesday, May 14, 2008,

House of Representatives,
Committee on Oversight and
Government Reform

Washington, D.C.


. . . .Mr. QUAID. Yes, sir. Also, to answer Mr. Souder as far as the makeup of the panel, I, myself, have considered myself to be a Republican most of my life, but I am on the other side of this issue.

Mr. TIERNEY. That may not be conservative enough for Mr. Souder. You may want to talk about that. . . [Loud laughter.]

. . . .Mr. MCHENRY. Because I think beyond this issue I think medical errors and making sure hospitals and the medical industry updates in terms of technology, I think a lot of us can work together.

Mr. QUAID. This is doable.

Mr. MCHENRY. Yes.

Mr. QUAID. This is something that would actually wind up saving the American public money. This is something that eventually I think the insurance companies, themselves, would welcome because it would lower their liability, because fewer mistakes would be made.

I relate it to the airline industry, one of our safest [industries]. Why is it so safe? It is because every time there is a crash the NTSB goes out and they find out the exact cause of that crash, and usually always whether it is design, or pilot [error] or whether -- it comes down to human error somewhere along the way, and they minimize the impact of human error in aviation, to where it is the safest form of travel, today.

But if you relate it to what is going on with how many patients die needlessly every year because of medical mistakes, it is 100,000 patients. That is the equivalent of one major airline crash A DAY, every single day of EVERY YEAR, in America alone. But because it happens over such a broad, disconnected area, the public isn't really aware of it, but it is something that if people were realIy aware of, we would not tolerate.

Mr. MCHENRY. Thank you, sir.

Mr. QUAID. Thank you. . .

I'll have much more, from this hearing transcript shortly -- but I wanted to rush this bit right out.

UPDATED: Low-res -- but Dennis Quaid's 30 second video clip:

And -- Speaking of "Long Times" -- Improve-It 2012


I forgot to note that overnight, the outcomes study on Vytorin crossed another major milestone -- IMPROVE-It is now less-than 1,500 days away from completion.

Well, that ought to ease investors' minds, eh?

Yep -- take a look at the count-down clock in the lower-left margin -- 1,499 days, and counting. . . . counting. . . .

Then we'll know whether Vytorin improves outcomes. It will have been on the market for about eight ten years (measuring from Zetia's original US FDA approval date -- kudos, Commenter No. 1!) by the time we know whether it really works -- works to improve patients' odds of avoiding heart-attacks.

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Gee -- 11 Hours and 57 Minutes is Kinda' a Long Time -- On One Site -- no?


Or, belay that: 11 Hours and 57 Minutes 24 hours and 12 minutes is Kinda' a Long Time. . .

I gather the lawyers at Covington & Burling had a lot to look at, though, when they stopped by my little shack (once again!), around 8:30 a.m. EDT, this morning. . . . but they didn't leave until about 8:30 p.m., EDT [it looks like they ordered out for pizza, too! j/k] -- that's a pretty full day, no? Fascinating1. As ever, click to enlarge:


Also, as ever. . . more, almost certainly is to come, here. G'night, one and all.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~
FOOTNOTE 1.: This morning, the 23rd, the firm is back, this time conducting various word and phrase searches -- now pushing through 24 hours of total-connected-time.

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

It Could be a Very Long Summer for Schering-Plough's Securities Lawyers. . .


. . .As they wait to read, right here, and elsewhere on the web, how independent, unaffiliated experts view their advice -- before, and during this ENHANCE study results fiasco. Perhaps even more pointedly, previously, many may wonder exactly what happened during the 2007 public offering, and firmly-underwritten sale (then-priced at $27.50 per share!), of about $3.8 billion of registered equity securities (more, if one totes up the euro, and US, debt offerings during that time-frame) in August, and September of 2007 -- all while Dr, Kastelein was trying (in vain) to schedule meetings to move forward on finalization, and publication of those long-overdue ENHANCE results. "What really happened, on all of those (eight, or more) due-diligence calls?" We'll have to wait to find out.

Tonight, the plaintiffs' lawyers, as well as the lawyers for the defendants [thanks to a friend of the blog for the clarifying edit, here!], in the putative securities fraud class action lead case, In re Schering Plough Corporation/ENHANCE Litigation, Case No. 08-397, (DMC), have agreed to extend the deadline for the plaintiffs' steering committee of lawyers to file an amended, and consolidated, securities law class action complaint -- to August 1, 2008.

Since both sides (plaintiffs, and corporate defendants) have agreed to this new, extended time-line, it is highly likely that either the magistrate for Judge Dennis M. Cavanaugh*, or Judge Cavanaugh himself, will sign the related agreed order -- and Schering will then wait most of the Summer of 2008 to see how many of the theories advanced on this blog, and throughout the wider web-universe, surface in that newly consolidated legal filing -- even now, it promises to be prodigious. Massive, in fact.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

* Last night (and perhaps once or twice, earlier) I think I offered an incorrect first name for this able jurist -- I have corrected that mistake eveywhere -- now that I've seen it. If anyone out there sees his name as "Kevin T.", rather than "Dennis M." on our site, please alert me. I'll change it over. My very sincere apologies.

Well -- Mr. Kingham Doesn't Really Answer Question 11, at all, Does he?


[UPDATED -- 05.21.08 8:53 PM EDT: once again, Ed, that gentleman scholar at Pharmalot, has linked us, on this. Cool!]

One more snippet from Covington & Burling's April 25, 2008 Vytorin ENHANCE study timeline letter of response [See my earlier posts, parts one, and two, below] on behalf of Schering-Plough (among other clients) -- now, in what way, exactly, is this responsive to the Chairmen of two Congressional Committees, men backed with the inherent authority to issue subpoenas, or proceed toward contempt of Congress, for non-responsive/evasive/non-compliant written answers to investigations?

Take a look at the answer given -- does it answer the question asked, at all? The question was "Who decided [authorized]. . .?" not "Was it routine. . .?" [Click to enlarge:]



Yep -- I think Dr. Peter Rost (via redacted) has it just about right, here:

WHY wasn't the November 2007 ENHANCE panel shown Dr. Bots' January 2007 Report?


This is from the middle of Covington & Burling's April 25, 2008 response to Congress, on behalf of Schering-Plough, among others. [The opening, and back-end, of that seven pager appears here, tinted in green. I posted it last night. This later snippet is the one you need to see, though -- I posted it after this one, on the 21st.]

First, note how generally non-responsive these "responses" are. Now, note particularly that there is no explanation as to why, in answer to Question Number 7, Dr. Bots' January 2007 report -- a report that concluded the "data were fine" -- was not shared with the newly "ENHANCED", November 2007 "independent expert" panel. And, note especially, here -- that was a conclusion reached, almost a full year earlier -- than when the November 2007 "new" panel finally was convened.

This is going to turn out to be significant in the now ongoing litigation, in my opinion. This "selective sharing of information" is troubling -- note also (in Response Number 8) the admission that Schering-Plough people prepared all the slide decks (do go look at those slides [at about the middle of that 70-page PDF]). That admission, in Response Number 8, may easily, and fairly, I think, be read as an attempt to predispose the November 2007 expert panel to ignore, or at least, discount, Dr. Bots' views. To "shade" what was already known, to be another, greener, hue (thus my tinting of these letter pages). As ever, click to enlarge:



As is often true when lawyers write letters on behalf of clients, what is not said -- what is left unwritten -- is far more important than what is said. The object-goal of the Congressional Committees' Question Number 7 is, in my opinion, to determine what information was, and was not, shared with the Novemebr 2007 panel -- it was already known by the Committees that Dr. Bots' report was not provided. And, perhaps surprisingly, Covington & Burling stepped right into it, here.

What Covington & Burling, and its client, Schering-Plough, did not do, was explain why such an important "piece of the ENHANCE puzzle" was not shared with the panel. To then immediately (and gratuitously) suggest that the panel "had the full benefit" of Dr. Bots' views -- simply because he attended the Novemebr 2007 panel session, is to answer a question not asked -- to answer far more than the firm, probably, ought to have answered.

It suggests, to my eye, a sense of defensiveness. It suggests, at a minimum, that there was very careful advance planning surrounding how much -- and how little -- to share with the November 2007 panel. And, given what we now know about the "ex post facto minutes" -- it suggests an agenda, going in, to move toward a change of end-points (and thus, additional delay) -- all in my opinion, of course.

And honestly, that smells, smells like a wharf-house -- at low tide -- and that is not just my opinion. That is a fact.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Did the Covington and Burling response (for Schering) -- in part -- precipitate the Joint House Committee Chairmens' letters, tonight?


[UPDATED -- May 23, 2008 2 PM: The Pfizer-version of the Congressmens' (below white paper) letter is now in easy-view jpg format, over at Pharma Law's blog. Nice touch, Dr. Rost!]

Take a look, and decide -- click each to enlarge below -- did these largely evasive seven pages [and I'll have much more, tomorrow, on that April 25, 2008 seven-pager on non-answer-answers!], at least in part, lead the House Committee, and Sub-Committee Chairs to fire off these DTC letters, tonight?

Significantly, this may mean that the only Vytorin Ad on TV, in the US, in the very-near future, will be mine -- the ""Truth-i-ness"-Enhanced" DTC TV Ad!? If so, way. . . WAY Cool!



Did the below. . . lead to the above? I dunno. More to come, tomorrow, on the below. There are a few important things I must have missed in the below letter, the first time I saw it. Those items merit a separate post -- for the moment, I am displaying the Schering position (such as it is) on whether the joint venture will resume the Vytorin DTC "Food and Family" TV advertising campaigns. This non-answer, coupled with Mr. Deepak Khanna's non-answers, likely led, in part, to the above letters -- one went to each Pharma CEO, tonight.

Note also that it requires an "immediate. . . written response" from Mr. Hassan, personally -- to decide what role (Dudley DooRight, or Snidely Whiplash!) he'll be cast in -- at the second round of House DTC Hearings. Wow.



Now, if you really-miss seeing Vytorin on TV, feel free to partake of this (or, just click this same icon, in the left margin):

Cobb, et al. v. Merck, et al. ERISA case reassigned to Judge Cavanaugh


Just a quick follow-up note, here -- last night, Judge Garrett E. Brown, in Trenton, New Jersey, signed an order that reassigned to Judge Dennis M. Cavanaugh, the ERISA case captioned Cobb, et al. v. Merck & Co., Inc. et al., Case No. 3:08-cv-01974 (US Dist Ct NJ, Complaint filed April 21, 2008) -- a putative class action advancing new theories of recovery, on behalf of the plaintiffs.

Judge Cavanaugh, of course, is the very-able federal district court judge, in Newark, New Jersey, who is handling almost all of the 125 plus would-be class action cases now pending against Schering-Plough, the joint venture, and Merck & Co., Inc., related to all the topics I cover on this blog. Merck made special mention of this case in its most recent SEC Form 10-Q (at the bottom of page 43). An interesting discussion of the legal principles involved appears in the comments to this post.

Covington and Burling's DC Office is watching this one quite-closely.

That is all. Carry-on.

Monday, May 19, 2008

Curiouser. . . . and Curiouser.


[UPDATED -- 05.20.08 @ 8:50 AM EDT: Perhaps Ms. Wolf's remarks may be read to mean that since the time Mr. Hassan joined Schering-Plough, the stockholders have never approved a plan that allowed pay on "Market Capitalization" increases. And perhaps, we are then left to our own devices, by Ms. Wolf to infer, all by our lonesome-selves, that the 2006 proxy disclosed payments made under the 2002 Schering stock-based compensation plan, not the 2005 version. And while that 2002 plan did, in fact, allow "Market Cap" as a metric, it is -- to my eye -- the height of unbecoming sophistry, to write what she wrote -- on the clearly-loaded topic of executive compensation in what has now become a "turbulent" period in Schering's history.

What she wrote, when viewed from that entirely-stilted perspective, is accurate, insofar as it goes. But, in the land of good practice under the securities laws (making complete and accurate disclosures to the investing or voting public), the vast fields her comments of yesterday omitted -- rendered the small bit she wrote -- rather materially-misleading, for the lack of complete information, and context. Now, I am a student of these matters -- if it was opaque to me, how was an ordinary investor, or proxy-holder, to parse her game of hide-and-seek?

That is, a reader of Ms. Wolf's comments might fairly (but wrongly) infer that Mr. Hassan, and his executive officers at Schering, had never been paid for increases in "Market Capitalization". In fact, they were so paid, during the year 2006.

And so, Ms. Wolf's goofy "talking points" rather deftly, but deceptively, side-step the real issue -- by obscuring it -- the issue of whether Mr. Hassan, and Mr. Becherer, and Mr. Kay should have chosen against paying on "market cap" increases, at all (even if some prior, presumably tainted, plan allowed it) -- if they were, in fact, attempting to "clean up" disclosure practices, and compensation policies, at the then-"new" Schering Plough.

So, the above sort of mendacious-sophistry is very unbecoming -- and leaves me wondering: "In exactly what way, Ms. Wolf, does such parsing about CEO compensation help "earn trust, every day"?

Again, I am shrugging, here.

We are talking about a man who received $30.2 million in compensation last year (and $29.6 million in 2006), to preside over a full-on-fiasco of a study -- on a product generating at least 60 percent of all of Schering-Plough's 2007 profits.

And to deflect attention from these facts, his lawyers are sent-out to go dance about, like angels on the heads of pins, here? Deeply-disappointing, that.

~~~~~~~~~~~

Earlier, the "Sir Lancelot" of that "kingdom far, far away" called Pharmalot.com has hat-tipped this piece! Cool!]

It seems that Schering's "designated" Compensation Consultant, Ira Kay (pictured below, left), of Watson, Wyatt, on behalf of his patron, Hans Becherer, the Chairman of the Compensation Committee of Schering-Plough's Board of Directors (pictured, at right), has recently decided to entirely remove "Growth in Market Capitalization" as one of the general metrics upon which Executive Compensation levels were judged, in 2007.

Why would he do that?

Back on April 25, 2008, that question set me to thinking through a few structural puzzles about the way Schering -- as opposed to many other companies its size -- discloses pay, and actually pays, its executives. And then I blogged on them -- kinda' too-wonkishly, in fact. Looking back, I buried the headline, back then. Until today.

Yesterday's surreal (and apparently inaccurate) denials from a high-ranking lawyer at Schering-Plough about the use (and/or non-use) of "Market Capitalization" as a metric for measuring performance has made me abidingly curious -- curious enough to re-write, and update that April 25, 2008 post -- so I'll not link to it here. This one supercedes that one.

Why would a lawyer -- a high-ranking corporate lawyer, one who signs one of the Schering cover-letters to each year's proxy statement (including the one filed with the SEC for the year ended December 31, 2006) -- so vehemently (and, it would plainly seem, erroneously) attempt to deny the existence, and use, of the very first compensation metric listed at the top of page 25 of that very same filing? Why?

Well -- I strongly suspect that I do know why. But let us first consider the continuing chain of unusual events, here. And to be clear, Ms. Wolf would be merely a foot-soldier in this particular campaign of curiosities. No, the really tough questions -- questions for which I cannot see many pleasant, or reasonable, answers -- are going to fall directly at the feet of the Chairman of Schering's Compensation Committee, and the consultant upon whom he relies for advice about setting compensation metrics, and levels. An example? I submit for your consideration:

Note that the 2005 Schering proxy, at page 42 -- omits mentioning "Market Capitalization" as one of the allowed metrics for measuring performance (and thus determining the levels of executive compensation). Take a look:

. . .the Compensation Committee may select under the Plan to include one or more of the following (in absolute values or relative to the performance of one or more comparable companies or an index of comparable companies):
• Net operating profit after taxes;
• Operating profit before taxes;
• Return on equity;
• Return on assets or net assets;
• Total shareholder return;
• Relative total shareholder return;
• Earnings before income taxes;
• Earnings per Share;
• Net income;
• Free cash flow;
• Free cash flow per Share;
• Revenue (or any component thereof);
• Revenue growth;
• Share performance;
• Relative Share performance;
• Economic value added; and/or
• Return on capital. . . .

So, in the 2005 proxy, the shareholders approved a stock-based compensation plan (as required by SEC rules, and NYSE listing standards applicable to Schering-Plough). That plan -- drafted by Schering's management, and put before the shareholders for approval -- does not, by its terms, allow the use of the performance metric called increase in "Market Capitalization".

And yet, we see that for the year ended December 31, 2006, according to the early 2007 proxy (see image, below, and page 25 of this SEC filing), executive compensation was considered, and paid, at least in part, on a measurement of the rate of increase in "Market Capitalization" -- from 2004 to 2006.

An image of that actual page-filing [click to enlarge!]:



That, my friends, is rather astonishing. I have to say that I have never seen that occur -- not in over 20 years of public company practice, inside of, or outside of the reputed-to-be wild and wooly pharma sector -- I've just. never. seen. it.

And, as I wrote on April 25, 2008, I still think it is difficult to overstate the ramifications, here: Should all that compensation from 2006, and 2007, and now part of 2008, be re-assessed, and re-calculated, to exclude any amounts awarded in reliance on the impermissible (or double-weighted), factors? Is this why Matt Herper's Forbes headline of yesterday asked about the "return" of Hassan's 2006 compensation?

I don't know -- but all those plaintiffs' lawyers will definitely have a view on this.

To round out this particular series of very odd events, I must also remark on the silence of the current Schering proxy statement -- the proxy employed to solicit votes for the just completed Annual Shareholders' Meeting, in Memphis.

It utters not one peep about "Market Capitalization." And it utters no peep about where it went -- why it went -- or why it was never listed as one of the factors for awarding executive compensation, as presented to, and approved by the shareholders -- at management's direction. Similarly, and puzzlingly, the proxy simply makes no mention of whether the 2006 compensation was paid, in part, in error.

What has transpired since that time (the ENHANCE fiasco, and the steep decline in stock prices, and the granting of even-cheaper stock options to high-management than were apparently granted to middle management, in early January 2008), simply must be considered "material information related to a voting decision". So, how can it be that the mistaken-payment of compensation on a factor not approved by shareholders, for at least the year 2006, escapes all mention?

How can that be, Mr. Becherer? Mr. Kay? Mr. Colligan? Mr. Hassan? Mr. Sabatino?

What if Those Vytorin Ads were more like the "TheTruth.com" Anti-Cigarette Ads?


That is the rather-impertinent question I set out to answer, this evening -- Heh! By taking the video (and audio) bits from that consumers'-rights-champion Rep. Bart Stupak (D-MI), and the DTC Advertising US House Sub-Committee Hearing held on May 8, 2008 -- I came up with some "TheTruth.com"-style guerilla advertising -- it appears immediately below.

If you cannot view the Blip.tv feed-inline (some Mac users for whom flash runs a little dodgily), click here. All others, just press the little triangle below to play the video -- it is only one minute, and 26 seconds long:



[Ed. Note: Of course, when Rep. Stupak speaks of now knowing (from ENHANCE) that "Vytorin has no effect on cholesterol", he speaks in a sort of short-hand -- he means, I think, that Vytorin has no additional salutory effect on the build-up of arterial plaque, compared to a solely-statins-regimen. . . . Just to keep it fair, here.]

Enjoy! -- and be very careful out there. . . something bigger, in the morning, is a-comin'! -- NOW, IT IS HERE.

Either Susan Ellen Wolf is "Mistaken" or. . . (Wait! -- she SIGNED that proxy!) she is. . . "shading" the truth, here.


[UPDATED -- 05.20.08 8 AM EDT: This post has caused me to set out a broader inquiry into the way Schering discloses pay -- and actually pays -- its executives. Take a look.]



Ms. Wolf, the Corporate Secretary, Vice President - Governance and Associate General Counsel of Schering-Plough (her letter, covering the 2007 proxy, is above), just wrote a comment over at Pharmalot.com, in response to the Forbes story, mentioned earlier today on this blog -- which contained the following assertion (see last sentence of the tenth paragraph, in her comments -- also posted at Forbes.com):

. . . .Market capitalization, which the writers focus upon, was not a performance metric for any incentive plan since Fred joined Schering-Plough. . . . [Emphasis supplied.]

Mr. Hassan worked at Schering-Plough during 2006, right? Right. Trust me, he did.

Let us then take a look at the text of page 25 of the proxy describing compensation policy, for that year (the proxy to which Ms. Wolf's letter, imaged above, was attached):
. . . .General Performance Metrics Used
by the Compensation Committee in
considering total compensation levels

Three-Year Growth in Market Cap.
Increased by $9.7 billion or 38%.



January 1, 2004 — $25.5 billion

December 31, 2006 — $35.2 billion. . . .

[Emphasis supplied.]

Ahem. It is actually the first metric listed for that year, Ms. Wolf. [More on why that is entirely-inappropriate, appears here.]

An image of that actual page-filing [click to enlarge!]:



It would seem, Ms. Wolf -- that even though you very-likely prepared, filed and signed-off on this proxy statement -- Messrs. Becherer and Hassan (to say nothing of Mr. Thomas J. Colligan, then the Chairman of the Board's Audit Committee) -- might beg to differ with yours, to Pharmalot.com (and to Forbes.com).

My comment box is open, here. So, Please feel free to correct me if I am mistaken, Ms. Wolf.