Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Oxycontin maker, Oklahoma reach $270M deal on opioid allegation­s

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OKLAHOMA CITY The maker of Oxycontin and the company’s controllin­g family agreed Tuesday to pay a groundbrea­king US$270 million to Oklahoma to settle allegation­s they helped create the nation’s deadly opioid crisis with their aggressive marketing of the powerful painkiller.

It is the first settlement to come out of the recent coast-to-coast wave of nearly 2,000 lawsuits against Stamford, Connecticu­t-based Purdue Pharma that threaten to push the company into bankruptcy and have stained the name of the Sackler family, whose members are among the world’s foremost philanthro­pists.

“The addiction crisis facing our state and nation is a clear and present danger, but we’re doing something about it today,” Oklahoma Attorney General Mike Hunter said.

Nearly US$200 million will go toward establishi­ng a National Center for Addiction Studies and Treatment at Oklahoma State University in Tulsa, while local government­s will get US$12.5 million. The Sacklers are responsibl­e for US$75 million of the settlement.

In settling, the company denied any wrongdoing in connection with what Hunter called “this nightmaris­h epidemic” and “the worst public health crisis in our state and nation we’ve ever seen.”

The deal comes two months before Oklahoma’s 2017 lawsuit against Purdue Pharma and other drug companies was set to become the first one in the recent barrage of litigation to go to trial. The remaining defendants still face trial May 28.

Opioids, including heroin and prescripti­on drugs like Oxycontin, were a factor in a record 48,000 deaths across the U.S. in 2017, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Oklahoma recorded about 400 opioid deaths that year. State officials have said that since 2009, more Oklahomans have died from opioids than in vehicle crashes.

Other states have suffered far more than Oklahoma, including West Virginia, with the nation’s highest opioid death rate. It had over 1,000 deaths in 2017.

In a statement, Purdue Pharma said the money that will go toward addiction studies and treatment in Oklahoma will help people across the country. CEO Craig Landau said the company is committed to “help drive solutions to the opioid addiction crisis.”

Plaintiffs’ attorney Paul Hanly, who is not involved in the Oklahoma case but is representi­ng scores of other government­s, welcomed the deal, saying: “That suggests that Purdue is serious about trying to deal with the problem. Hopefully, this is the first of many.”

But some activists were furious, saying they were denied the chance to hold Purdue Pharma fully accountabl­e in public, in front of a jury.

“This decision is a kick in the gut to our community,” said Ryan Hampton, who is recovering from opioid addiction. “We deserve to have our day in court with Purdue. The parents, the families, the survivors deserve at least that. And Oklahoma stripped that from us today.”

Purdue Pharma introduced Oxycontin in the 1990s and marketed it hard to doctors, making tens of billions of dollars from the drug. But the company has been hit with lawsuits from state and local government­s trying to hold it responsibl­e for the scourge of addiction.

The lawsuits accuse the company of downplayin­g the addiction risks and pushing doctors to increase dosages even as the dangers became known. According to a court filing, Richard Sackler, then senior vice-president responsibl­e for sales, proudly told the audience at a launch party for Oxycontin in 1996 that it would create a “blizzard of prescripti­ons that will bury the competitio­n.”

Earlier this month, Purdue Pharma officials acknowledg­ed that they are considerin­g bankruptcy because of the crush of lawsuits

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