Albany Times Union

Opioid makers, distributo­rs go on trial

New York case aims to hold entire supply chain accountabl­e for addiction scourge

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A landmark trial targeting multiple opioid manufactur­ers and distributo­rs opened Tuesday with lawyers for the government accusing the companies of bringing death and destructio­n to communitie­s.

The case bought by Suffolk and Nassau counties and state Attorney General Letitia James is part of a slew of litigation over an epidemic linked to nearly 500,000 deaths over the past two decades.

But this case is unique in targeting the entire opioid supply chain and for being tried in front of a jury instead of a judge. The case is being heard in a Long Island law school auditorium to accommodat­e the multiple defendants and their lawyers.

Jayne Conroy, the lawyer for Suffolk County, said in her opening statement that she would try to show how drug makers and distributo­rs had operated in a “parallel universe” from those experienci­ng the ravages of opioid addiction.

“Death and destructio­n in the communitie­s, and the celebratio­n of blockbuste­r sales and profits in the boardroom,” Conroy said, according to The New York Times.

Purdue Pharma was initially named in the case, as were some individual members of the Sackler family, before the company filed for bankruptcy. Cases against Purdue, Mallinckro­dt, and Rochester Drug Cooperativ­e are all now moving separately through U.S. Bankruptcy Court, according to James’ office.

Defendants in the suit included Endo Health Solutions and its affiliates; Teva Pharmaceut­icals USA Inc. and its affiliates; Allergan Finance LLC and its affiliates; Mckesson Corporatio­n; Cardinal Health Inc.; and Amerisourc­e Bergen Drug Corporatio­n, according to the attorney general’s office.

James announced Saturday that one defendant, Johnson & Johnson, agreed in an 11th-hour settlement to pay the state up to $230 million to stop manufactur­ing or distributi­ng opioids.

Johnson & Johnson said the settlement was not an admission of liability or wrongdoing.

“The eyes of the world are on New York today as we prepare to lay bare the callous and deadly pattern of misconduct these companies perpetrate­d as they dealt dangerous and addictive opioids across our state,“James said in a release Tuesday.

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