Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Filmmaker: Opioid crisis ‘Crime of the Century’

- DAVID BAUDER

NEW YORK — Not unexpected­ly, given the subject matter, HBO’s twopart documentar­y “The Crime of the Century” opens with a body bag.

It contained a man from San Diego — his remains carried away in the predawn hours after overdosing on fentanyl — one of nearly a half million Americans to die from opioid abuse since 2001.

Filmmaker Alex Gibney quickly widens the lens, however, for an explanatio­n of how the drugs that caused the crisis came to be, how companies aggressive­ly promoted and distribute­d them and how the government failed to act swiftly and effectivel­y to save lives.

The story is exhaustive and often sickening, its scope recalling the examinatio­ns Gibney and his team have given in the past to Enron, to Scientolog­y and, most recently, to the Trump administra­tion’s response to covid-19. “The Crime of the Century” started Monday and ends today.

“I felt that the whole idea of the crisis was being treated as if it were a spontaneou­s event that just couldn’t have been helped,” Gibney said. “What was missing was the element of crime, in particular the sort of broad, over-arching conspiracy.”

If you put everything together, “it’s almost like a murder mystery,” he said. “In some way, it is a murder mystery.”

The role of the Sackler family and their company, Purdue Pharma, in developing the prescripti­on painkiller OxyContin is familiar territory. Gibney’s film digs into the aftermath, including the push to get doctors to overprescr­ibe the medication and the company’s use of former government regulators to cripple serious oversight.

A former Purdue Pharma salesman, Mark Ross, tells how he got involved to make some money and help people with chronic pain. But when he grew concerned about abuses, his bosses told him to stay in his lane.

Gibney reports on a little-known memo prosecutor­s in Virginia drew up in 2006 that detailed Purdue Pharma’s actions, its contents essentiall­y hidden when the Justice Department reached a settlement. It was his “a-ha” moment, seeing the connection­s between OxyContin, heroin abuse and the developmen­t of fentanyl.

Asked for comment on “The Crime of the Century,” a Purdue Pharma spokeswoma­n pointed to the company’s recent proposed settlement in federal bankruptcy court, intended to clear thousands of lawsuits stemming from OxyContin.

“We remain focused on achieving a global settlement that would deliver more than $10 billion in value, including 100% of Purdue’s assets and millions of doses of opioid addiction treatment and overdose reversal medicines, to claimants and communitie­s across the country affected by the opioid crisis,” the company said.

Gibney’s Jigsaw Production­s worked in tandem with The Washington Post on the documentar­y, and he credits the newspaper’s journalist­s for helping draw connection­s and bringing stories of government to life.

Ross is a key character in Gibney’s film, as is Joe Rannazzisi, a former federal Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion agent who saw his efforts thwarted and is trying to educate the public on what is going on, and Alec Burlakoff, former sales executive at the rogue company Insys Therapeuti­cs, manufactur­er of fentanyl.

With the storytelli­ng ability of a born salesman, Burlakoff tells a frightenin­g tale of a corporate culture where doctors were bribed and intimidate­d to pump out the dangerous drug. Money was the concern, not consequenc­es.

Celebrator­y videos from company events bring the culture to life.

“He was able to cast all moral qualms to the side and rapaciousl­y and relentless­ly sell a drug that he knew was terrible for people, in ways that were utterly reprehensi­ble,” Gibney said. “But he takes us through the process step by step by step in a way that’s just jaw-dropping. You understand ultimately how the crime works.”

Gibney’s film doesn’t avoid the stories of a victim like Roy Bosley, showing in detail how opioids killed the Utah man’s wife. Filmmakers also confront the doctor who ran the pain clinic where Bosley’s wife was treated.

That story illustrate­s Gibney’s focus on the people and companies responsibl­e for creating addicts.

“If you understand the perps and what their motivation­s are, it helps you understand not only how crimes are committed but how to prevent them in the future,” he said.

There is some good in these drugs, in limited doses for people who have undergone serious operations or are in end-of-life care, he said.

The opioid crisis shows “the danger of what happens when you mix a kind of turbo-charged 21st-century capitalism with health care,” he said. “You realize the incentives are all wrong. You realize the incentives are to make money rather than care for patients.”

If it really is the crime of the century, will anyone pay?

 ?? (HBO via AP) ?? Pills spill from a bottle in a scene from the two-part documentar­y “Crime of the Century,” about the opioid epidemic, which premiered Monday and ends today.
(HBO via AP) Pills spill from a bottle in a scene from the two-part documentar­y “Crime of the Century,” about the opioid epidemic, which premiered Monday and ends today.

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