PIP founder Jean-Claude Mas charged over breast implant scare

Fears over PIP implants spread globally late last year after French health
authorities advised 30,000 women to have theirs removed because of an
increased risk of rupture.

Between 400,000 and 500,000 women in 65 countries are believed to have
received implants from PIP, once the world’s largest silicone implant
producers.

A number of countries, including Germany and the Czech Republic, followed
France in recommending that the implants be removed as a precaution but
Britain has said it will not follow suit.

Thirteen countries in Europe and Latin America have also urged women to have a
checkup.

French officials have said that cancer, including 16 cases of breast cancer,
had been detected in 20 French women with the implants, but have insisted
there is no proven link.

Mas was arrested at his partner’s home in the south of France. Dallest said
police searched the residence, in the town of Six-Fours-les-Plages, for
evidence.

During earlier questioning, Mas has confirmed the implants were made with a
non-authorised silicon gel but rejected any suggestion that they posed a
health risk.

“I knew that the gel wasn’t approved, but I did it knowingly, because the
PIP gel was cheaper … and of much better quality,” Mas said,
according to the minutes of a police interview conducted in October, and
seen by AFP.

Philippe Courtois, a lawyer representing women who received the PIP implants,
said he was encouraged by Mas’ arrest but did not expect his story to
change.

“Considering the outrageous statements he has made in regards to all the
victims, we do not expect very much from this hearing,” Mr Courtois
said.

Representatives of two groups campaigning for women who received the implants
were to appear before the investigating judge on Friday.

Along with the manslaughter investigation, prosecutors in Marseille have
already concluded an aggravated fraud case in the implant scandal that is
expected to be brought to court by the end of the year.

Marseille prosecutors have received more than 2,500 complaints in the case,
which has sparked calls for wider European regulation and monitoring of
medical devices such as breast implants.

Mas, a former travelling salesman who got his start in the medical business by
selling pharmaceuticals, founded PIP in 1991 to take advantage of the
booming market for cosmetic implants.

He reportedly told investigators that he used fake business data to fool
health inspectors.

The substandard gel was in 75 percent of PIP breast implants, saving the
company about one million euros ($1.3 million) annually, according to an
ex-company executive.

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