The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Lawyers seek to halt Purdue Pharma political contributi­ons

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OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma should not be able to make any more political contributi­ons without a judge’s permission, lawyers for its creditors said in a court filing.

The issue came up this week after it was reported that the company, which has a long history of influencin­g policymake­rs, made contributi­ons to national associatio­ns representi­ng state attorneys general and governors.

The money was sent after Purdue entered bankruptcy protection last year in an effort to settle thousands of lawsuits accusing it of helping spark an opioid addiction and overdose epidemic that has contribute­d to more than 400,000 deaths in the U.S. State attorneys general are among those trying to negotiate a nationwide settlement.

The committee of creditors that asked for recipients to return the money to Purdue said the contributi­ons represent a conflict.

“The Political Contributi­ons — $185,000 in donations to associatio­ns whose members include the very public servants with whom the Debtors are attempting to negotiate a consensual resolution of these cases — are precisely the sort of transactio­n that demand close scrutiny,” they said in a filing.

Parts of the legal skirmish had been resolved by the time lawyers filed a motion Friday night. The filing asked a federal bankruptcy court judge to require Purdue to seek permission before making more contributi­ons.

Purdue said it would stop giving money to the Democratic and Republican attorney general associatio­ns, and both of those groups agreed to return contributi­ons made since late last year. The Republican group said it would send back $60,000, while the Democratic organizati­on said a check was already in the mail to return the $25,000 it received.

The donation to the Democratic Attorneys General Associatio­n, along with $50,000 each to the associatio­ns representi­ng Democratic and Republican governors, were first reported by The Intercept, an online investigat­ive news outlet. The AP subsequent­ly found the Purdue contributi­on to the Republican Attorneys General Associatio­n.

The governors groups did not respond to messages Friday from The Associated Press and did not publicly commit to returning the money.

Ed Neiger, a lawyer who represents people with opioid addictions and their families in the case, said the contributi­ons are a big problem.

“I’m not sure that can be interprete­d as anything other than a bribe,” he said in an interview.

Purdue defended the payments, describing them as “membership­s,” although the only members of the organizati­ons are the elected attorneys general and governors.

“We have maintained long-standing membership in organizati­ons that allow us to follow key industryre­lated issues that are relevant to our wide range of products and pipeline,” the company said in a statement.

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