Las Vegas Review-Journal

■ Attorney General Aaron Ford announced a $45 million settlement of Nevada’s opioid lawsuit.

It earlier opted out of 47 states’ settlement

- By David Ferrara Contact David Ferrara at dferrara@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-380-1039. Follow @ randompoke­r on Twitter. Staff writer Colton Lochhead contribute­d to this report.

Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford announced Monday that the state has agreed to a $45 million settlement with the consulting firm Mckinsey & Co. over its role in the deadly opioid epidemic.

In June 2019, Ford filed suit in Clark County District Court, accusing dozens of drug manufactur­ers and distributo­rs of propagatin­g the state’s opioid epidemic.

The complaint named more than 40 defendants, including prescripti­on drug makers Purdue Pharma and Teva Pharmaceut­icals, and distributo­rs CVS, Walgreens and Walmart.

Last month, when Mckinsey & Co. agreed to pay $573 million to 47 states to settle investigat­ions into its role in opioid sales, Nevada opted out of the agreement, and Ford said he would continue to pursue his investigat­ion.

On Monday, he said the state was offered roughly $7 million in that settlement.

Since then, Ford said, he had worked to “procure a settlement that was more appropriat­e for Nevadans” because the state suffered from the crisis more than many others.

The money is expected to be delivered to the state in two installmen­ts: $23 million in 45 days and $22 million in 120 days.

“Frankly, I felt that as a hardest-hit state, Nevada needed and deserved more than what was being made available to us in the multi-state settlement,” Ford said. “I made the decision to forgo the multi-state settlement and again to both prepare for litigation against and pursue separate discussion­s with Mckinsey. So we broke off from the multi-state group. We went it alone.”

A company spokesman responded to Ford’s announceme­nt of the settlement in an email to reporters.

“Mckinsey believes its past work was lawful and has denied allegation­s to the contrary,” the statement said, in part. “The settlement agreement with Nevada, like those reached in February, contains no admission of wrongdoing or liability.”

Ford said he and other state officials, including Gov. Steve Sisolak and lawmakers, were working to determine how the money from the settlement would be distribute­d.

The settlement­s in Nevada and other states were reached after documents showed that Mckinsey provided guidance to market opioids to increase sales in the midst of the crisis.

More than 40 states, including Nevada, reported an increase of opioid deaths throughout the 2020 pandemic, according to the American Medical Associatio­n. In November, the National Drug Helpline placed Nevada and several Western states on “red alert” for their increased risk of drug overdose deaths.

“The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbate­d the (opioid) problem, because of rising unemployme­nt, reduced access to healthcare and treatment programs, and increasing levels of social isolation,” the organizati­on’s website stated.

Nevada’s lawsuit accused drug manufactur­ers of pushing doctors to prescribe the addictive medication while downplayin­g the side effects.

Ford said the companies relied on fake science, fake experts, fake publicatio­ns and an army of salespeopl­e to push the pills in the name of greed as thousands died in the process.

Litigation in Nevada continues against others named in the 2019 lawsuit, with a trial date set for next year.

“We will not rest until everyone responsibl­e pays for the devastatio­n that they have caused Nevadans,” Ford said. “We intend to pursue that litigation to the end, and to prevail to bring much needed resources to our state to help address the opioid epidemic.”

 ?? Las Vegas Review-journal ??
Las Vegas Review-journal
 ?? Colton Lochhead Las Vegas Review-journal ?? Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford said he and other state officials are working to determine how $45 million from a settlement in a lawsuit over opioids will be distribute­d. More than 40 states, including Nevada, reported an increase of opioid deaths in 2020.
Colton Lochhead Las Vegas Review-journal Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford said he and other state officials are working to determine how $45 million from a settlement in a lawsuit over opioids will be distribute­d. More than 40 states, including Nevada, reported an increase of opioid deaths in 2020.

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