Los Angeles Times

OxyContin maker wants suit dismissed

Purdue Pharma fights a Washington city’s effort to hold it financiall­y responsibl­e for opioid epidemic.

- By Harriet Ryan harriet.ryan@latimes.com Twitter: @latimeshar­riet

The manufactur­er of the powerful painkiller OxyContin on Tuesday asked a judge to dismiss a novel lawsuit by a city seeking to hold the company financiall­y responsibl­e for a raging opioid epidemic sparked by illicit traffickin­g.

In a motion filed in federal court in Seattle, attorneys for Purdue Pharma wrote that the suit by Everett, Wash., suffered from “multiple, independen­t legal failings” — including statute of limitation­s problems and a failure to demonstrat­e a close connection between the company’s conduct and the criminal acts of drug dealers and addicts.

“[T]here is no basis in law for a municipali­ty to bring such an action against a pharmaceut­ical manufactur­er,” Purdue’s lawyers wrote.

Everett, a blue-collar city of 100,000 people on Puget Sound, filed the first-of-itskind lawsuit in January, prompted by a Times investigat­ion of the company’s internal security team.

The newspaper revealed how lawyers, analysts and investigat­ors at Purdue’s Connecticu­t headquarte­rs had worked to identify corrupt physicians and pharmacies colluding with OxyContin trafficker­s and addicts but, in many cases, did not share the informatio­n with law enforcemen­t or cut off the flow of pills.

One Los Angeles ring tracked by Purdue and highlighte­d by The Times supplied large quantities of OxyContin to gang members and other criminals who trafficked the drug to a Crips leader in Everett from 2008 to 2010. That dealer sold the highly addictive pills to lowlevel dealers, who blanketed the entire region.

Many addicts later switched to heroin, a cheaper opioid.

By the time Purdue shared what it knew about the L.A. ring with law enforcemen­t years later, a million pills had spilled onto the black market, and the ringleader­s were under indictment.

Everett claimed in its lawsuit that the heroin crisis gripping the city “is directly attributab­le” to Purdue’s “callous and unconscion­able practices.” The city said the company should cover the costs of stepped-up policing, drug treatment, homeless outreach and other services — a figure the mayor estimated to be in the tens of millions of dollars.

Purdue was successful last month in moving the case from the state courthouse in Everett to federal court, traditiona­lly seen as a more friendly venue for corporatio­ns.

In the dismissal request Tuesday, company attorneys wrote that even if U.S. District Judge Ricardo S. Martinez accepted all of Everett’s allegation­s as true, the case still was legally defective and should be thrown out.

Everett lacked standing to sue, the lawyers wrote, in part because the U.S. Justice Department is responsibl­e for enforcing federal law governing narcotics manufactur­ers. Allowing other parties to go after drug companies would “create disarray with respect to the federal regulatory framework governing prescripti­on medication­s,” they wrote.

In addition, Purdue’s lawyers said that Everett should be barred from seeking damages because OxyContin traffickin­g into the city had occurred outside the four-year statute of limitation­s for consumer protection violations alleged by the city.

They also contended that the role Everett accused Purdue of playing in criminal traffickin­g was too removed for the company to pay the city’s costs. A whole range of other parties, from wholesaler­s to pharmacist­s to trafficker­s to street dealers to addicts, also were part of the chain, they noted.

“Simply put, this theory of causation is, as a matter of law, too attenuated and remote to meet the legal requiremen­ts of proximate cause,” they wrote.

They also argued that the suit was flawed because law enforcemen­t, aware that black-market OxyContin was a problem, had been investigat­ing the L.A. ring and the Everett Crips leader during some of the years in question.

As The Times reported last year, the company’s security team possessed a trove of highly detailed evidence of illicit OxyContin sales — including prescribin­g data, pharmacy sales records, field reports and surveillan­ce informatio­n — that allowed Purdue to quickly identify problems.

Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion agents who helped bring down the L.A. ring and local investigat­ors in Everett who arrested the gang leader there did not have that informatio­n and told the paper it would have aided their work.

In a statement, an Everett spokeswoma­n said officials “look forward to presenting our arguments to the court refuting Purdue’s position.”

 ?? Elaine Thompson Associated Press ?? MAYOR Ray Stephanson of Everett, Wash. The city’s lawsuit alleges that a heroin addiction crisis gripping Everett is “directly attributab­le” to Purdue Pharma.
Elaine Thompson Associated Press MAYOR Ray Stephanson of Everett, Wash. The city’s lawsuit alleges that a heroin addiction crisis gripping Everett is “directly attributab­le” to Purdue Pharma.
 ?? Liz O. Baylen Los Angeles Times ?? OXYCONTIN maker Purdue Pharma says Everett has “no basis in law ... to bring such an action.”
Liz O. Baylen Los Angeles Times OXYCONTIN maker Purdue Pharma says Everett has “no basis in law ... to bring such an action.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States