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Pharmaceutical Heists on the Wane in Number and in Value of Drugs Stolen. Why?

November 30, 2012

For one thing, security is no longer just a blue collar job. It has become a white collar profession requiring college-educated specialists. You can't depend on the retiree-age security guard at the front door. Most successful thefts are done by highly professional teams that do a lot of scouting, planning and surveillance.

Consider the case of the largest pharmaceutical theft in recent years. On a stormy Friday night, March 14, 2010, thieves scaled up the side of Eli Lily's Enfield, Conn., warehouse, cut a hole in the roof, rappelled down into the warehouse, and disabled the alarm system. For the next three and half hours, they filled a 53-foot trailer with about $76m of drugs (Prozac, Stattera, Cymbalta, Zyprexa, Gemzar, Alimta, and Efient). This same gang had already done heists at Bayer, GSK, and J&J, but those were all in the $3m to $10m range.

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Keywords supply chain risk management, pharmaceutical supply chain, security of pharma supply chain, thefts in pharmaceutical supply chain