Chattanooga Times Free Press

AG sues Food City claiming unlawful sale of opioids

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Tennessee’s attorney general is suing Food City over claims that the supermarke­t chain’s pharmacies intentiona­lly profited from the opioid epidemic by unlawfully selling tens of millions of prescripti­on opioids in the state.

Attorney General Herbert Slatery filed the complaint Thursday against Food City in Knox County Circuit Court, saying more than 23% of the opioids the company’s Tennessee pharmacies sold between 2006 and 2014 were from one Knoxville store.

According to the lawsuit, for that one store, Food City bought more 30-milligram oxycodone from its main distributo­r from October 2011 to January 2012 than was bought by all of the pharmacies in 38 entire states and Washington, D.C. Additional­ly, the company sold large amounts of opioids to people from other countries and far-off U.S. states as multiple overdoses happened in stores or their parking lots, the lawsuit states.

“As part of an intentiona­l, corporate-driven strategy to maximize profit centers elsewhere, Food City zeroed in on opioid sales at its in-store pharmacies and engaged in a series of unlawful acts that led it to become one of the biggest sellers of highly diverted opioids in Tennessee,” Slatery said in his 208-page complaint against the company.

Slatery said the Food City pharmacies sold large quantities of opioids to Poland, Australia, Venezuela, the United Kingdom and Canada, and from faraway states within the United States, including Alaska, Arizona, California and at least 14 states beyond where Food City operates stores.

The lawsuit also asserts that Food City ignored

or watered-down reports of suspicious subscriber­s, created a prescripti­on savings card program that offered customers discounts on all opioids, enacted a policy to order as many opioids as a supplier would send to each store and pressured employees to increase opioid sales.

“It stoked the market with the most diverted and abused opioids, pushed its pharmacist­s to sell more and more, and ignored the most alarming evidence — overdoses and illegal sales taking place right outside the pharmacy door,” Slatery said.

A spokespers­on for Food City’s parent company, K-VA-T Food Stores Inc., said the company will defend itself against the lawsuit’s “grossly incorrect and unfair” allegation­s, saying a few of its pharmacies had dispensed a “high volume” of opioids so the company contracted with independen­t auditors and experts to assure its practices were compliant with state and federal regulation­s.

“The Attorney General unfortunat­ely has joined the nationwide bandwagon led by the plaintiff’s bar in bringing meritless attacks against pharmacies, having failed to make measurable progress in its efforts to hold manufactur­er, distributo­rs, and physicians accountabl­e,” spokespers­on Tammy Baumgardne­r said in a statement.

Food City’s parent company is based in Abingdon, Virginia, with 134 stores in southeast Kentucky, southwest Virginia, east Tennessee and north Georgia. The company operates 75 pharmacies in Tennessee.

Food City entered the Chattanoog­a market in 2015 when it acquired 29 supermarke­t stores from Bi-Lo. Slatery’s complaint does not specifical­ly cite any Chattanoog­a area pharmacies and focuses on stores in Knoxville and Seviervill­e where sales of the highly addictive oxycodone 30 mg were most frequent over the past 15 years.

The lawsuit is one of several Tennessee has filed against companies over the opioid epidemic. Slatery also is in a leadership role in a group of state attorneys general investigat­ing various opioid manufactur­ers and distributo­rs and negotiatin­g possible settlement­s.

Slatery said Tennessee will receive $15.2 million from a larger $573 million settlement announced this week with McKinsey & Co., a consulting firm targeted for its role in helping opioid companies promote their drugs.

 ??  ?? Herbert Slatery
Herbert Slatery

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