San Francisco Chronicle

Owners of OxyContin company deny wrongdoing

- By Geoff Mulvihill Geoff Mulvihill is an Associated Press writer.

Two owners of the company that makes OxyContin acknowledg­ed to Congress on Thursday that the powerful prescripti­on painkiller played a role in the opioid epidemic but they stopped short of apologizin­g or admitting wrongdoing.

“I want to express my family’s deep sadness about the opioid crisis,” David Sackler, whose family owns Purdue Pharma, said at a rare appearance in a public forum. “OxyContin is a medicine that Purdue intended to help people, and it has helped, and continues to help, millions of Americans.”

The company’s marketing efforts have been blamed for contributi­ng to an addiction and overdose crisis that has been linked to 470,000 deaths in the U. S. over the past two decades.

Kathe Sackler, David Sackler’s cousin, told the House Oversight and Reform Committee that she knows “the loss of any family member or loved one is terribly painful and nothing is more tragic than the loss of a child.”

“As a mother,” she said, “my heart breaks for the parents who have lost their children.”

Asked about her role, she said she had done soulsearch­ing.

“I have tried to figure out if there’s anything I could have done differentl­y knowing what I knew then, not what I know now,” she said. “There is nothing I can find that I would have done differentl­y.”

Rep. Kelly Armstrong, RN. D., noted that OxyContin sales revenue increased even after the company pleaded guilty to crimes for improper marketing of the drug.

“You want to ask what you could have done differentl­y?” he asked. “Look at your own damn balance sheet.”

The two Sacklers, descendant­s of two of the three brothers who bought Purdue nearly 70 years ago, appeared before the committee in a video hearing held amid coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

They took the step after the committee’s chairwoman, Democratic Rep. Carolyn Maloney of New York, threatened to issue subpoenas.

The hearing came three weeks after Purdue pleaded guilty to three criminal charges as part of a settlement with the Department of Justice.

The company agreed to pay more than $ 8 billion in forfeiture­s and penalties, while members of the Sackler family would have to pay $ 225 million to the government. The deal leaves open the possibilit­y that family members could be criminally prosecuted.

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