The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Legal shield for Purdue Pharma owners is at heart of appeals

- By Geoff Mulvihill

The end of the Purdue Pharma bankruptcy case has left a bitter taste for those who wanted to see more accountabi­lity for members of the Sackler family.

The Sacklers will give up ownership of the company, go out of the internatio­nal opioid business and pay $4.5 billion in cash and charitable assets under the settlement. But they also will escape any future liability over the nation’s addiction and overdose crisis as part of the deal that was given preliminar­y approval this week by a federal bankruptcy judge.

Some state attorneys general and one federal government office are planning appeals.

The question at the heart of their arguments: Is it appropriat­e for members of a wealthy family that did not file for bankruptcy themselves to get such a broad protection?

Attorneys and victim advocates involved in a case that included lawsuits from some 3,000 government­s and other entities said the members of the Sackler family who have owned Purdue played instrument­al roles in overseeing the company and marketing OxyContin. Critics say the company’s best-selling prescripti­on painkiller helped fuel the opioid crisis in the U.S.

“They get to retain literally billions of dollars they took out of Purdue Pharma while it was causing addiction and death all across our country and all across the world,” Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh told The Associated Press in an interview.

Frosh said he was considerin­g an appeal.

Lawyers for Connecticu­t, the District of Columbia, Washington state and the U.S. Bankruptcy Trustee, an arm of the federal Department of Justice tasked with protecting the bankruptcy process, have said they intend to appeal.

Under the settlement, Sackler family members are getting what’s known in the bankruptcy world as a “third-party release.” It’s one of the most contentiou­s issues in bankruptcy law.

The releases have been used in complicate­d bankruptcy cases involving multiple parties to encourage settlement­s that might be difficult or impossible to reach otherwise. Dow Chemical, an owner of Dow Corning, was released from lawsuits in the 1990s over dangers of the latter company’s silicone breast implants. Owners of companies that produced asbestos were protected from lawsuits over cancer risks associated with their products that began in the 1980s.

Some federal appeals courts have rejected the releases, but the majority have accepted them. That includes the 2nd Circuit, which could handle appeals of decisions from U.S Bankruptcy Judge Robert Drain, who ruled in the Purdue case from his courthouse in White Plains, New York.

Longshot legislatio­n pending in Congress, titled “The SACKLER Act,” would ban third-party releases. Even if it were adopted, it would be too late to affect its namesake case.

In his preliminar­y ruling from the bench earlier this week, Drain discussed at length the reasons he was allowing the protection for family members as part of the settlement.

“I wish the plan had provided for more” from Sackler family members, he said, “but I will not jeopardize what the plan does provide by denying confirmati­on.”

The settlement forces the Sacklers to give up ownership of Purdue and turns it into a new company with a board of directors appointed by government officials. Money from the family, company accounts and future profits are to be used to pay some individual victims of the opioid crisis and to fund treatment, education programs and other efforts to combat the epidemic.

The crisis has been linked to more than 500,000 overdose deaths in the U.S. since 2000 involving either prescripti­on painkiller­s or illicit ones such as heroin or illegally made fentanyl.

Purdue Pharma, based in Stamford, Connecticu­t, has estimated that the settlement could be worth $10 billion, including the value of overdose antidote and addiction treatment drugs it’s been developing.

Sackler family members, whose combined wealth has been estimated at over $10 billion, have been clear that without protection from lawsuits, they would not contribute to the settlement.

During a hearing on the reorganiza­tion plan last month, experts said it could be impossible to force payments without a settlement because much of the family’s fortune is overseas. The bankruptcy judge said some family members are foreign citizens, potentiall­y putting their assets further out of reach.

A further complicati­on: Purdue pleaded guilty last year to federal criminal offenses, agreeing to a $2 billion forfeiture. Under their plea deal, the company has to pay only $225 million of that to the federal government as long as it settles its other opioid lawsuits and uses proceeds to fight the crisis.

If the bankruptcy settlement is upended, Purdue would have to pay the federal government another $1.7 billion — and that would leave far less money to divide between the states, local government­s and opioid victims.

“If they continue to appeal, if they win, what do they get?” said Lindsey Simon, an assistant law professor at the University of Georgia School of Law who teaches bankruptcy law. “The answer is, probably complete chaos and less money.”

That’s a view that many state government lawyers have adopted.

About half the nation’s state attorneys general, including nearly every Democrat to hold the office, initially opposed the settlement.

 ?? MARK LENNIHAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? An image of federal Bankruptcy Judge Robert Drain is installed by protesters in front of Purdue Pharma’s headquarte­rs, in Stamford, Conn., Sept. 1. The end of the Purdue Pharma bankruptcy case has left a bitter taste for those who wanted to see more accountabi­lity for the Sackler family.
MARK LENNIHAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE An image of federal Bankruptcy Judge Robert Drain is installed by protesters in front of Purdue Pharma’s headquarte­rs, in Stamford, Conn., Sept. 1. The end of the Purdue Pharma bankruptcy case has left a bitter taste for those who wanted to see more accountabi­lity for the Sackler family.

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