Los Angeles Times

Lawmakers call for opioid probe

The congressio­nal investigat­ion would focus on Purdue Pharma, other makers.

- By Harriet Ryan

Two California representa­tives called Monday for a congressio­nal investigat­ion of opioid manufactur­ers, citing a Los Angeles Times investigat­ion that found that the maker of OxyContin collected extensive evidence of criminal traffickin­g of its drug but in many cases did not alert law enforcemen­t.

Rep. Mark DeSaulnier (D-Concord) and Rep. Ted Lieu (D-Torrance), both members of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, said in a letter to the committee chairs that an immediate investigat­ion was necessary “to fully understand the implicatio­ns and consequenc­es of pharmaceut­ical companies that do not fulfill their legal and ethical requiremen­ts to restrict the sale of opioids in circumstan­ces that raise suspicion regarding inappropri­ate prescribin­g practices.”

The congressme­n added, “There appears to be a pervasive disregard for patient safety and public health by some within the pharmaceut­ical industry.”

The Times’ report last month concerned the workings of the internal security department of Purdue Pharma, a private Connecticu­t company that has reaped more than $31 billion from OxyContin, the nation’s top-selling opioid painkiller. The newspaper found that, for a decade, company lawyers, investigat­ors and other employees have used prescribin­g data,

field reports, sales records and their own surveillan­ce operations to identify doctors and pharmacies they suspected of catering to addicts and drug dealers. In many cases, the company did not share its informatio­n with the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion or police or ensure its distributo­rs cut off the supply of pills.

In one case highlighte­d by The Times, a criminal ring monitored by Purdue used a phony MacArthur Park clinic, elderly physicians and corrupt pharmacies to pump more than 1 million OxyContin tablets into the hands of gang members and other criminals. Purdue did not go to law enforcemen­t until years later, when the ring was out of business and its leaders under indictment.

A spokesman for Purdue declined to comment. The company has said it complied with the law.

Since 1999, nearly 200,000 people in the U.S. have died of overdoses involving prescripti­on painkiller­s. Stopping the crisis has attracted bipartisan support in Congress, including the recent passage of a law that would improve treatment programs and curb overdoses.

DeSaulnier, who is in his first term, has worked to address California’s prescripti­on drug problem for several years. While serving in the state Senate in 2013, he wrote a law that improved the prescripti­on monitoring program to allow authoritie­s to better flag doctor-shopping patients and overprescr­ibing physicians.

He said he was concerned that Purdue seemed to have escaped any repercussi­ons for the way it handled the informatio­n it collected on doctors and pharmacies.

“How do you get people to do the right thing when there are no consequenc­es?” he said in an interview.

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