Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

OxyContin maker tentativel­y settles lawsuit

Purdue Pharma deal might be worth up to $12B, sources say

- By Aaron Davis, Lenny Bernstein, Joel Achenbach and Scott Higham

Purdue Pharma, manufactur­er of blockbuste­r painkiller OxyContin, has reached a tentative settlement with 22 state attorneys general and more than 2,000 cities and counties that sued the company over its role in the opioid crisis of the past two decades, people close to the deal said Wednesday.

The executive committee of lawyers representi­ng the cities, counties and other groups in a consolidat­ed federal lawsuit against Purdue and other drug companies is recommendi­ng the deal be accepted. But some attorneys general, who sued Purdue and its controllin­g family,

the Sacklers, in state courts are opposed to a deal.

Under terms of a plan that has been under discussion for months, the Sacklers would relinquish control of their company, Stamford, Connecticu­t-based Purdue Pharma. Purdue would declare bankruptcy and be resurrecte­d as a trust whose main purpose would

be to combat the opioid epidemic.

The deal was said to be worth $10 billion to $12 billion, including a $3 billion payment from the Sacklers’ personal funds. It also would include at least $1.5 billion from the sale of the family’s internatio­nal drug conglomera­te, Mundipharm­a, according to people close to the talks.

The federal plaintiffs and many attorneys general apparently felt the proposal was good enough. Those lawyers “agreed to recommend the MDL claimants move forward in support of the current proposal subject to satisfacto­ry documentat­ion of the essential terms and final documents,” they said in a statement. “We feel good progress has and will continue to be made.”

But some states objected the Sacklers were not contributi­ng enough cash from their personal fortunes, built almost entirely on the sale of OxyContin and taken out of the company in recent years.

Connecticu­t Attorney General William Tong said he remained opposed to any deal.

“I cannot speak to other states ... but Connecticu­t has not agreed to any settlement,” he said. “The scope and scale of the pain, death and destructio­n that Purdue and the Sacklers have caused far exceeds anything that has been offered thus far.”

It was not clear Wednesday whether the Sacklers had agreed to increase their personal contributi­on to the settlement or whether other terms had changed.

“There’s an incredible incentive to make a deal before bankruptcy, because that would make the process much less expensive for the states and cities,” said Adam Zimmerman, a professor of law at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles. If Purdue sought bankruptcy protection without a settlement, “we might see any kind of arrangemen­t tied up in bankruptcy court for a very long time.”

The enormous consolidat­ed federal trial is scheduled to begin in mid-October with two test cases, Cuyahoga and Summit counties, as the first plaintiffs to make their case against an array of drug companies in court. Meanwhile, more than 40 lawsuits against drug companies are wending their way through state courts. A growing number of states also have sued the Sackler family personally.

Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost, who also opposes the deal, has asked a federal appeals court to delay or halt the federal trial. Another 13 states and the District of Columbia have filed briefs in support of that effort, according to Yost’s office.

“I think the main motivation (for Yost) has to do with who holds the balance of power with respect to negotiatin­g a global settlement,” Zimmerman said. “This is kind of a Hail Mary.”

The prescripti­on drug epidemic has taken more than 200,000 lives via overdoses since 1999, according to federal statistics. Another 200,000 deaths are blamed on overdoses from heroin and illegal fentanyl smuggled into the country from China and Mexico.

 ?? JESSICA HILL/AP 2018 ?? The Sacklers, the controllin­g family of Stamford, Conn.based Purdue Pharma, would give up control of the firm.
JESSICA HILL/AP 2018 The Sacklers, the controllin­g family of Stamford, Conn.based Purdue Pharma, would give up control of the firm.

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