Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Missouri AG sues 3 firms over opioids

- JIM SALTER

ST. LOUIS — Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley on Wednesday sued three large pharmaceut­ical companies, saying their “campaign of fraud and deception” led to an opioid crisis in the state.

Hawley, a Republican, filed suit in St. Louis Circuit Court, naming Endo Pharmaceut­icals, Purdue Pharma, and Janssen Pharmaceut­icals. Hawley said at a news conference that the suit will seek “hundreds of millions of dollars” in both damages and civil penalties.

Hawley said the three companies over several years misreprese­nted the addictive risks of opioids, often using fraudulent science to back their claims. As a result, thousands of Missourian­s dealing with chronic pain were given unnecessar­y opioid prescripti­ons.

“For years now, the citizens of Missouri have been the victims of a coordinate­d campaign of fraud and deception about the nature of drugs known as opioids,” Hawley said. The companies named in the suit “have profited from the suffering of Missourian­s,” he said.

Officials with Janssen and Purdue Pharma said in statements that their companies share concerns about the opioid crisis, but both denied wrongdoing. Janssen spokesman Jessica Castles Smith said the company “has acted appropriat­ely, responsibl­y and in the best interests of patients regarding our opioid pain medication­s.” Purdue Pharma said the company “vigorously” denied the allegation­s in the lawsuit and is an industry leader in developing “abuse-deterrent technology.”

Messages seeking comment from Endo Pharmaceut­icals were not immediatel­y returned.

Two other states have filed similar lawsuits against pharmaceut­ical companies: Mississipp­i in 2015 and Ohio in May.

Hawley said any money awarded in the Missouri suit should go toward drug rehabilita­tion services and efforts to help families affected by drug addiction.

He was joined at the news conference by Eddie Bunnell, a recovering opioid addict, and Jammie Fabick of St. Louis, whose 17-year-old daughter, Helen, was an honor student who loved horses. Her father found Helen dead in her bed in February 2014, the morning before a fatherdaug­hter dance at her high school.

“If this sounds like a nightmare, it has definitely been a nightmare for our family,” Fabick, 45, said. “It’s something no parent should ever have to do, to bury her own child, to something so senseless.”

Opioids are a class of drugs that range from prescripti­on pain medication­s like oxycodone, codeine and morphine to illegal drugs like heroin. The lawsuit said about 500 people in Missouri died from non-heroin opioid overdoses in 2015. Thousands of others were hospitaliz­ed.

Yet Missouri remains the only state that has failed to create a prescripti­on drug monitoring system, a database that allows doctors and pharmacist­s to keep track of patients’ prescripti­ons. Lawmakers again this year considered a monitoring system but failed to approve it.

Hawley said the Legislatur­e “should act to pass a prescripti­on drug monitoring program” as part of a multiprong­ed effort “to address what is a national epidemic but one that has had serious consequenc­es here in the state of Missouri.”

Last month, Sen. Claire McCaskill, a Missouri Democrat, began an investigat­ion of the pharmaceut­ical industry, including two of the same companies named in Hawley’s lawsuit, Purdue Pharma and Janssen.

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