GlaxoSmithKline confirms existence of Mark Reilly sex tape

Revelation latest twist in murky corruption investigation in China

Shanghai Roche Pharmaceutical’s headquarters in Shanghai. Photograph: Reuters/Aly Song/Files
Shanghai Roche Pharmaceutical’s headquarters in Shanghai. Photograph: Reuters/Aly Song/Files

British drug-maker GlaxoSmithKline has confirmed that it received a secretly filmed sex tape of its former China chief, Mark Reilly, in March last year, the latest twist in an increasingly murky corruption investigation in China.

Mr Reilly has been accused by the Chinese government of ordering staff to bribe doctors and hospital officials to use GSK products, using up to three billion yuan (€350 million) channelled through travel agencies.

Chinese police filed formal corruption charges against Mr Reilly last month.

Mr Reilly and two Chinese executives at Britain’s biggest drugmaker, Zhang Guowei and Zhao Hongyan, were also suspected of bribing officials in the industry and commerce departments of Beijing and Shanghai.

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The men could face decades in prison. Mr Reilly is barred from leaving China and his whereabouts are unknown.

“The issues relating to our China business are very difficult and complicated,” the company said in a statement, adding that it was continuing to co-operate with the Chinese authorities.

Britain’s biggest drugmaker said it was unaware of who shot the video of Mr Reilly and his Chinese girlfriend, or with what motivation, although it was apparently shot without his knowledge and mailed to senior executives at the company.

Investigators hired

According to a report in the

Sunday Times

, the video prompted Mr Reilly to hire Peter Humphrey, a former Reuters reporter and Kroll operative, and his American wife, Yu Yingzeng, to investigate.

The couple were subsequently arrested by Chinese authorities in August last year and have been accused of selling personal information of people to clients through research companies.

Mr Humphrey appeared on television last year in prison uniform apologising for his transgressions.

The charges against the British executive caused shock waves among the business community and sparked fear among foreign managers in China, who are worried they could be jailed and have asked their lawyers if they should temporarily leave the country, or even for good.

GSK has previously apologised for employees in China apparently acting outside of its internal controls, but has denied that the sums of money were anything like as high as those alleged to have been paid.

Biggest scandal

It is the biggest corruption scandal to hit a foreign company in China since the Rio Tinto affair in 2009, which led to four executives, including Australian Stern Hu, being jailed for between seven and 14 years.

Glaxo is the maker of the world’s top-selling drug, the asthma treatment Seretide.

The pharmaceutical giant is also facing a criminal investigation into similar allegations in Poland and other countries, and last month, Britain’s Serious Fraud Office launched a formal criminal investigation into GSK.

Clifford Coonan

Clifford Coonan

Clifford Coonan, an Irish Times contributor, spent 15 years reporting from Beijing