Las Vegas Review-Journal

Is $6 billion enough restitutio­n for causing the opioid crisis?

- Robin Abcarian Robin Abcarian is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times.

On Monday, the Supreme Court heard arguments in the complex bankruptcy case of Purdue Pharma, whose owners, the Sackler family, have become synonymous with the carnage wreaked on American families by the profligate and dishonest marketing and distributi­on of Oxycontin and other opioids.

In exchange for giving up ownership of Purdue and paying up to $6 billion over the next 18 years that would be used to address the crisis they helped cause, the Sacklers, understand­ably but shamelessl­y, want to be shielded against any other civil lawsuits from victims who are not parties to the current litigation. Most of the victims who are part of the settlement — state government­s, Native American tribes and individual­s — agreed to the terms.

But should it be legal to grant the

Sacklers protection from future lawsuits?

The U.S. Trustee Program, an arm of the Justice Department that oversees the administra­tion of bankruptcy cases, argues that it is not.

Why should the Sacklers be entitled to the protection­s that bankruptcy offers when they have not personally declared bankruptcy? And why should potential victims who are not part of the megasettle­ment be prohibited from filing lawsuits in the future?

One argument in the Sacklers’ favor: Failing to immunize the family will tank the settlement, dismantlin­g years of complex negotiatio­ns and depriving victims and their families of agreed upon and timely compensati­on. (Which, by the way, is not particular­ly handsome, ranging from about $3,500 to $48,000, the highest sums to be paid out over 10 years.)

The U.S. trustee argues that individual victims going forward might be able to negotiate a better deal.

“Forget a better deal. There is no other deal,” said Washington lawyer Pratik Shah, who represents a number of plaintiffs in the case, including states, tribes, hospitals and individual­s.

Whatever the court decides, this case should bury once and for all the lie that drug misuse and addiction stem only from bad personal choices.

The American people were victimized by a family of heedless billionair­es who lied and cheated to get their product, up to twice as powerful as morphine, into our bloodstrea­ms for profit.

It’s important to remember how the opioid crisis began. Then you can decide whether the branch of the Sackler family responsibl­e for most of it deserves to be protected from further potential punishment.

In 1995, the Food and Drug Administra­tion approved Oxycontin, a timereleas­e version of the painkiller oxycodone. Incredibly, the agency allowed Purdue to claim that because it was a long-acting drug, it was safer and less likely to be abused than rival painkiller­s such as Percocet and Vicodin. Was this claim based on findings from clinical trials? Nope. It was based on the nonsensica­l theory that drug abusers would prefer the quicker-hit high of fast-acting narcotics.

“If you look at the prescribin­g trends for all the different opioids, it’s in 1996 that prescribin­g really takes off,” Andrew Kolodny, co-director of the Opioid Policy Research Collaborat­ive at Brandeis University, told the New Yorker in 2017. “It’s not a coincidenc­e. That was the year Purdue launched a multifacet­ed campaign that misinforme­d the medical community about the risks.”

In a 2007 plea deal with the government, Purdue admitted that it trained its sales representa­tives to tell doctors that Oxy was less addictive and less prone to abuse than its competitor­s, which we now know to be lies.

Internal documents that came to light in the Justice Department’s investigat­ion showed that the company knew as early as 1999 that Oxycontin users were exchanging tips on how to crush and snort the pills for a faster high, and that some doctors were being charged with selling prescripti­ons.

In November, during an interview with a local New Hampshire TV station where he lives, Curtis Wright, the FDA examiner who approved Purdue’s package insert asserting the drug’s safety said, “It is a difficult, terrible situation, and I am so sorry for the people who are hurt and for the patients who can’t get good pain relief now.”

So why, exactly, can’t those people get good pain relief anymore?

After Purdue and other drug manufactur­ers flooded the country with opioids in the 2000s, sparking a dramatic rise in overdose deaths (and oh, by the way, turning the Sacklers into multibilli­onaires), alarmed states passed laws limiting the prescribin­g and dispensing of the pain pills.

And with doctors dramatical­ly reducing the opioid prescripti­ons they wrote, addicted users turned to street drugs such as heroin and, when heroin became scarce, to the much more dangerous fentanyl, which is manufactur­ed illegally in Mexico with precursor materials from China and India, then smuggled into the U.S., generally through official ports of entry.

It’s fair to say that in recent years, the American street drug supply has essentiall­y been poisoned by Oxycontin’s illicit grandchild, fentanyl. In 1999, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says, 3,442 Americans died of opioid-involved overdose deaths. In 2021, the number had soared to 80,411. More than 70,000 involved synthetic opioids, mostly fentanyl.

If the Supreme Court approves the bankruptcy plan, the Sacklers will be out the $6 billion they’ve agreed to, but by any standards, they will remain fabulously rich. Their infamous name will be erased from dozens of cultural and medical institutio­ns in the U.S. and the U.K., a good thing.

But not one of them will serve a single day in prison or otherwise be much discomfite­d for the death and social destructio­n they have wreaked on this country.

 ?? JESSICA HILL / ASSOCIATED PRESS (2018) ?? Family and friends who have lost loved ones to Oxycontin and opioid overdoses leave pill bottles in protest Aug. 17, 2018, outside the headquarte­rs of Purdue Pharma in Stamford, Conn.
JESSICA HILL / ASSOCIATED PRESS (2018) Family and friends who have lost loved ones to Oxycontin and opioid overdoses leave pill bottles in protest Aug. 17, 2018, outside the headquarte­rs of Purdue Pharma in Stamford, Conn.

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