KEY POINTS
  • Counterfeiting lifesaving medications is a lucrative criminal enterprise, part of a $431 billion worldwide fraud, according to an estimate from the World Health Organization.
  • Gilead Sciences and Johnson & Johnson sued pharmacies, wholesale pharmaceutical distributors and others over a counterfeiting operation that targeted the companies' HIV drugs. The suits are pending.
  • Criminals are targeting other lifesaving drugs, as well, and law enforcement officials say investigations are ongoing.

In Las Vegas, Lazaro Hernandez was a flamboyant, jet-setting poker player shown in televised tournaments with stacks of colorful chips. But the casually dressed gambler spotted on security cameras with wads of cash at the casino cage was hiding a secret life.

And federal investigators say he was gambling with people's lives. Hernandez, they say, oversaw a nationwide $230 million scheme to counterfeit prescription medications, particularly lifesaving HIV drugs, in which pill bottles were altered and sold back to pharmacies at a huge discount.