From a marketing standpoint, Doroshin envisioned a strategy in which the group vaccinated local celebrities such as rapper Meek Mill to attract potential patients, with ambitions to vaccinate 500,000 to 1 million people.
“This is a wholly Elon Musk, shooting-for-the-heavens type of thing,” Doroshin said. “We’re gonna have a preemptive strike on vaccines and basically beat everybody in Philadelphia to it.”
“This is the juicy slide,” said Doroshin, clicking through to a screen on the financing plan. “How are we gonna get paid?” He walked the staff through the plan to get the vaccines for free from the federal government and bill insurance companies $24 a dose.
“I just told you how many vaccines we want to do — you can do the math in your head,” he said.
In the immediate aftermath of PFC’s fall from the city’s favor, even more concerning information regarding Doroshin’s leadership came to light.
While running its Jan. 23 clinic, PFC overbooked appointments for the day due to an error on the sign-up page, which resulted in elderly residents coming to the Convention Center and leaving in tears after being turned away.
But at closing time, some doses remained despite the assumption that there weren’t enough for everyone who had scheduled an appointment. In that situation, the clinic was supposed to turn over the leftover vaccines to the city.
However, Katrina Lipinsky, a registered nurse who was volunteering with PFC, witnessed Doroshin place about a dozen unused shots into his bag that night. Later that evening, a photo appeared on Snapchat of the CEO — who has no health care experience — administering a syringe off the clinic’s grounds at what appeared to be a private residence.
At first, Doroshin called those claims “baseless,” but on Jan. 28 in an interview with the “Today” show, he admitted taking vaccine doses home.
Doroshin also said he stood by that decision, calling it his own mistake, not a mistake of the organization.
During a press conference earlier in the week, Health Commissioner Farley described the allegation as “disturbing,” and that in retrospect, he wished that the city had not partnered with the organization.
“They had what looked like a good plan,” Farley said. “This other information came to light subsequently.”
Dr. Ala Stanford, the founder of the Black Doctors COVID-19 Consortium that has been providing coronavirus testing (and now vaccines) to communities of color for months, said her team was getting ready for a Feb. 1 vaccine rollout when PFC announced its Center City site.
“I’m not sure why they went to [PFC],” Stanford said. “We could have done what they did. We would have been the logical choice to ask. Haven’t we proven ourselves?”
What comes next: City Council, the public want answers
It’s unclear as yet who will take over running the Convention Center site. What is clear, though, is that City Council and many Philadelphians are angry about city officials’ lack of research into Philly Fighting COVID prior to giving it the keys to the vaccine rollout.
On Jan. 29, a day when local state legislators called for Health Commissioner Farley to resign over the department’s relationship with PFC, Mayor Jim Kenney was standing by him.
“I am disappointed by what has transpired with the organization Philly Fighting COVID. I know you share my concerns,” the mayor wrote in a letter to Farley. “You and your team have my confidence, and most importantly, the full force of the city government at your disposal to complete this latest, and vital mission.”
Kenney also called for an internal investigation into the start-up’s involvement with the Health Department, and for the findings to be released to the public within a month.
Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro called the group’s behavior “unethical,” while District Attorney Larry Krasner said his office is looking into possible crimes committed by the organization.
During Thursday’s City Council meeting, councilmembers said they want to hold hearings about the city’s relationship with PFC, with many alleging racist motivations in the city’s choice to work with the disgraced group, whose leadership is mostly white.
Councilmember Cindy Bass called the city’s blunder “totally unacceptable.”
“It really just makes my blood boil,” Bass said. “We really owe those in our communities who have a mistrust of the medical community — we owe them an explanation. We owe all citizens and taxpayers an explanation as to how this happened.”
Billy Penn’s Max Marin and WHYY’s Nina Feldman and Alan Yu contributed reporting.