The Palm Beach Post

COUNTY TO SEEK LAWYERS FOR SUIT OVER OPIOIDS

- By Wayne Washington Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

WEST PALM BEACH — Want to represent Palm Beach County if it goes toe to toe with Big Pharma?

Law firms could soon have that opportunit­y. Commission­ers voted 7-0 Tuesday to have County Attorney Denise Nieman’s office begin crafting a request for proposals from firms that would represent the county should it decide to file suit against drug companies, manufactur­ers or pharmacies as part of its effort to combat the opioid crisis.

Nieman said she expects to have a request for proposal ready in early January with three finalists ready for commission­ers to choose from in mid-February.

At the suggestion of County Mayor Melissa McKinlay, whose former aide lost a daughter to the opioid epidemic, Nieman’s office compiled a report on the legal landscape of the epidemic. That landscape has been changing constantly.

Nieman’s report found that 14 firms had expressed an interest in representi­ng the county and that about 80 lawsuits had been filed against drug companies, manufactur­ers or pharmacies across the country.

By Tuesday, those numbers had changed, Assistant County Attorney Kim Pham told commission­ers. About 150 cases have been filed across the country, and the number of law firms interested in representi­ng Palm Beach County had grown to 16.

Pham also told commission­ers that Osceola County had recently become the first county in Florida to file suit. The city of Delray Beach has hired a law firm and announced its decision to sue, but it has not yet filed, Pham said.

Because of the number of firms that have already expressed an interest in representi­ng Palm Beach County if it decides to sue, Nieman urged commission­ers to have a competitiv­e selection process.

Based on comments from several commission­ers, one important element of that process is the degree to which a prospectiv­e firm would protect the county financiall­y.

Nieman’s report states that “based on the firms’ informal representa­tions, litigation would be pursued without county funding. Attorneys’ fees would be paid on a contingenc­y basis, with costs fronted by the firm, only to be reimbursed by the county if there is an acceptable recovery.”

Beyond attorneys’ fees, there is another area of financial risk — the prospect of a court ordering that a defendant’s legal and other associated fees be paid if the county’s suit is unsuccessf­ul.

Commission­ers asked Pham if law firms expressing an interest in representi­ng the county had said how much, if any, of those costs it would be willing to cover.

“No one has given me a definitive response,” Pham said. “It’s something they said is negotiable.”

Most commission­ers said they are ready to move forward with a suit.

“Let’s be a zealous advocate for our community and not sit back on this one,” Commission­er Dave Kerner said.

Added McKinlay: “The pharmaceut­ical industry has some responsibi­lity helping us with a crisis they helped create.”

Alex Larson, a Loxahatche­e resident who has frequently sparred with commission­ers, said she doesn’t want to see the county take actions that could make it more difficult for people in pain to receive the medication they need.

She noted her husband’s recent need for medical treatment and pain medication.

“The doctors are not at fault,” Larson said. “The pharmaceut­ical companies are not at fault. We have free will.”

Florida and other states had high-profile, big-dollar successes in lawsuits against the tobacco industry, but Commission­er Hal Valeche cautioned those interested in filing suit against Big Pharma not to expect the same results.

“I don’t want people’s expectatio­ns of a windfall to get too inflated,” he said.

 ??  ?? Palm Beach County Attorney Denise Nieman
Palm Beach County Attorney Denise Nieman

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