Blood Money by Chris Riedel - Book Tour + Giveaway
True Crime/Thriller
Date to be Published: 10/13/20
Publisher: Acorn Publishing
BLOOD MONEY is the true legal thriller of a terrifying David vs. Goliath fight against massive healthcare fraud by a brave Whistleblower. It includes attempted murder, extortion, money-laundering, fraudsters hiding money in the Cayman Islands, gold buried in a storage container in a CEO’s backyard, an Assistant Attorney General sabotaging her state’s case, and a corrupt Governor torpedoing litigation by his own Attorney General. From Silicon Valley to the Sunshine State, in a showdown that reads like a Hollywood movie, Chris Riedel survives to share it all. His actions have resulted in more than $550 million in settlements and a court verdict... and counting.
EXCERPT
Blood
Money is the story of how a Silicon Valley CEO became a fraud
fighter. It is an insider’s look at the David vs. Goliath struggle between a
whistleblower seeking to save his company and stop taxpayers from being
ripped-off, and healthcare companies engaged in massive fraud. Along the way, it exposes what it is like to
work with government prosecutors.
I
lived the Silicon Valley dream, founding my first company at twenty-four, and
then starting two others while I was still a young man. The first two companies
revolutionized how bacterial infections were diagnosed and treated—saving
hundreds of thousands of lives around the world.
My
third company, Meris Laboratories, jumped to another level entirely. Between
1988-90, it experienced the fastest growth among 2,000 labs in the industry,
and delivered the highest pre-tax profit margins. In 1991, we achieved the
ultimate Silicon Valley aspiration by leading the company through an initial
public offering (IPO). A secondary offering (SPO) followed six months later. A
month after the SPO, Business Week
selected Meris as the fortieth best small business in America — out of over 20
million registered small companies. We were deeply honored.
We
decided to celebrate our success in the best possible way: a few months after
the SPO, I retired after twenty-two years in healthcare. I was forty-five years
old. For someone who grew up in a lower middle-class family, you can only
imagine how proud I felt.
During
the 1990s, two labs (dubbed the “Blood Brothers” by Wall Street analysts) grew
to dominate the industry: Quest Diagnostics and Laboratory Corporation of
America (LabCorp). When my wife, Marcia,
and I came back into the industry 11 years after we retired, the California
laboratory industry had changed. Instead of walking into a level playing field
for all labs, what we found was a rigged deck, a broad pattern of corruption,
kickbacks, price gouging, and naked profiteering. This made it impossible for
honest competitors, like our Hunter Labs, to survive.
These frauds were not accidents. They
were core business plans, designed and sanctioned at the top. I learned of this
as the “big wink” that goes on every day in American healthcare. If you want to
be a big or mid-sized player in the healthcare arena, you quickly find out that
you must make a choice: join the fraud team or go home. One of the largest
pharmaceutical companies in the world, Merck, was described by an Assistant
U.S. Attorney at a Taxpayers Against Fraud conference as: “Organized crime
masquerading as a drug company.”
I
never imagined I would become a fraud fighter. My closest friends, also
successful businessmen, despised anyone who sued corporations—particularly
whistleblowers. This held throughout
corporate America, which views whistleblowers as pariahs instead of people who
stand for integrity and fair business and employment practices. Was I about to
become something they despised?
About the Author
CHRIS RIEDEL is a Silicon Valley entrepreneur who has founded five healthcare companies and served as the Chairman and CEO of all. Chris achieved the Silicon Valley dream when he took his third company public in 1991. A few months later, it was ranked by Business Week as the 40th best small company in America. Soon after founding a fourth company, his battle against healthcare fraud began. In 2011, he received the Taxpayers Against Fraud Whistleblower of the Year award.
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3 Comments
I appreciate getting to hear about your book. Thank you for sharing your great book!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing, this sounds great
ReplyDeleteSounds like a fantastic read, thanks for sharing it with me!
ReplyDeletePlease try not to spam posts with the same comments over and over again. Authors like seeing thoughtful comments about their books, not the same old, "I like the cover" or "sounds good" comments. While that is nice, putting some real thought and effort in is appreciated. Thank you.