Health | meningitis Mass. Pharmacy Chief Fired Over Meningitis He ignored complaint that it was selling drugs illegally By Kevin Spak Posted Nov 8, 2012 8:56 AM CST Copied A vial of injectable steroids from the New England Compounding Center is displayed in the Tennessee Department of Health in Nashville, Tenn., Oct. 8, 2012. (AP Photo/Kristin M. Hall) Massachusetts has fired the director of its Board of Pharmacy for failing to follow up on a complaint against the New England Compounding Center—the facility behind the recent meningitis outbreak. Colorado's pharmacy board had complained that the center was illegally selling medicine to Colorado hospitals without prescriptions, and demanded it be shut down, the Wall Street Journal explains. Director James Coffey forwarded that complaint to a board lawyer, but that lawyer took no action, and Coffey never followed up. The state's interim health commissioner called that "incomprehensible" given that concerns had been raised about the NECC in the past, so Coffey is out of a job. The lawyer he forwarded the complaint to has been placed on administrative leave. Read These Next Trump says Iran has sent the US a 'very big present.' Air Canada's CEO is in hot water for his post-crash remarks. Moms, this is not how to handle someone bullying your child. Iran thumbs its nose at America's 15-point proposal. Report an error