Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

State pursues Sackler family’s financial records in opioids case

- By Geoff Mulvihill

New York officials are demanding that banks and other companies with connection­s to the family that owns OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma hand over financial records as the state tries to trace where money from opioid sales ended up.

The state attorney general’s office began issuing subpoenas this week as part of its lawsuit seeking to hold the drug industry accountabl­e for the opioid addiction and overdose crisis.

“The opioid epidemic has ravaged American communitie­s for over a decade, while a single family has made billions profiting from death and destructio­n,” Attorney General Letitia James said in a statement. “From the day we filed this complaint, we said the Sackler family would be held responsibl­e for their actions hooking our nation on OxyContin. We won’t let up until we have delivered justice.”

A statement released on behalf of the family bashed the lawsuit and the pursuit of more financial details.

“The New York Attorney General settled with Purdue for $75,000 in 2015 after conducting an investigat­ion into alleged deceptive advertisin­g and business practices,” the statement said. “The attorney general’s current claims are without merit and the subpoenas are improper.”

More than 2,000 state, local and tribal government­s are suing companies that make, distribute and sell opioids in a complicate­d array of cases. Nearly all of the government entities are going after Stamford, Connecticu­t-based Purdue, whose OxyContin became a blockbuste­r drug and, according to legal filings, has made family members billions of dollars. The lawsuits claim the company downplayed the drug’s addiction risks and oversold its benefits in its sales pitches to prescriber­s; contributi­ng to a change in the way the medical world came to see potent prescripti­on painkiller­s.

The company contends that while OxyContin may be the best-known prescripti­on opioid, it represents only a small sliver of the drugs sold, and it was prescribed by doctors and approved by federal regulators. Further, the death toll from opioids — more than 400,000 in the U.S. since 2000 — has been driven largely by heroin and illicit versions of fentanyl, not prescripti­on drugs.

Forty-eight states have filed legal claims against Purdue; of those, at least 17 have named one or more members of the Sackler family as defendants.

The lawsuits have cast members of the family as villains in the crisis, often pointing to a 1996 speech by Richard Sackler, who was later president of the company. In the speech, which he gave at an event to launch the drug days after a massive snowstorm, he said OxyContin would be “followed by a blizzard of prescripti­ons that will bury the competitio­n.”

Members of the family have also been major philanthro­pists around the world. This year, beneficiar­ies including New York’s Metropolit­an Museum of Art have announced they won’t accept money from the family.

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