To: Shake From: Jeffrey Epstein Sent Tue 3/5/2013 11:10:13 AM Subject: Re: Billionaire Doctor Prescribes Small Teva Deals for Israeli Giant where are you „ will i see you in parisk 25? On Tue, Mar 5, 2013 at 4:06 AM, Shaher wrote: Billionaire Doctor Prescribes Small Teva Deals for Israeli Giant As American billionaire Phillip Frost prepared to take over as chairman of Tcva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. (TEVA) in March 2010, some investors fretted about what would become of Israel's crown jewel. Eli Hurvitz, a national icon who had won the government's Israel Prize for his lifelong contributions to the country, had set a patriotic tone at the world's largest generic-drug maker before stepping down that year to fight his own cancer. Workers enjoyed a kibbutzlike campus while Teva funded local health-care ventures. Israeli newspapers went as far as suggesting that Frost, a Miami philanthropist and major Teva shareholder, might uproot headquarters to the U.S., Bloomberg Markets magazine will report in its April issue. More from the April issue of Bloomberg Markets: • SLIDESHOW: Bloomberg 20 • BLOOMBERG 20: Best-Paid Investment Banks Frost didn't move the head office. He did hire Jeremy Levin, who had overseen a string of small and mid-size deals at New York-based Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. (BMY), to replace former Israeli army major general Shlomo Yanai as chief executive officer. Levin moved to Israel, where Teva predecessors once delivered drugs on camels and donkeys, to run the company from Petach Tikva, 9 miles (14 kilometers) east of Tel Aviv. "Teva is and always will be an Israeli company with strong Israeli roots," says Frost, 76, puffing on a Romeo y Julieta cigar in his Miami office overlooking Biscayne Bay. "Teva also must act like a global pharmaceutical company. There's a lot of nostalgia for the good old days when it was a family company and the board got together for a little lunch. That's not what Teva is nowadays." `Urgent