Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

How should opioid suit settlement­s be divided?

- By Geoff Mulvihill

The roughly 2,000 state and local government­s suing the drug industry over the deadly opioid crisis have yet to see any verdicts or reach any big national settlement­s but are already tussling with each other over how to divide any money they collect.

The reason: Some of them want to avoid what happened 20 years ago, when states agreed to a giant settlement with the tobacco industry and used most of the cash on projects that had little to do with smoking’s toll.

“If we don’t use dollars recovered from these opioid lawsuits to end the opioid epidemic, shame on us,” Kentucky Attorney General Andy Beshear said.

Overdoses from opioids, which include prescripti­on painkiller­s and illegal drugs like heroin, have surpassed automobile crashes in recent years as the biggest cause of accidental deaths in the U.S., accounting for the loss of more than 400,000 lives since 2000.

An Associated Press analysis found that by 2011 and 2012, the industry was shipping enough prescripti­on opioids to give every man, woman and child in the U.S. nearly a 20-day supply each year.

In their lawsuits, the government­s contend the brand-name manufactur­ers fraudulent­ly downplayed the addiction risks of the powerful painkiller­s while encouragin­g doctors to prescribe their patients more drugs and at higher doses. They also argue that drugmakers and distributo­rs failed to stop suspicious­ly large shipments. The defendants dispute the allegation­s.

In the late 1990s, attorneys general for all 50 states reached colossal settlement­s under which tobacco companies would pay them forever.

A tally by the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids found states have received more than $161 billion so far.

But some of the money has gone toward such things as roads, bridges or teacher pensions. Some of the money went into states’ general fund accounts, available for all sorts of uses.

“Most states have used their settlement recoveries, which are massive, for everything but the problem that gave rise to the litigation,” said Doug Blake, a former Minnesota assistant attorney general who worked on the state’s tobacco settlement.

In the opioid litigation, plaintiffs want to make sure the money goes toward treating addiction and preventing drug abuse. Some also want to be reimbursed for extra taxpayer costs associated with the epidemic, such as rising expenses for jails and mental health services, more ambulance runs and police calls, and more children of addicts placed in the care of the child-welfare system.

Close to 2,000 local government­s have made claims against the drug industry. While the states’ lawsuits are in state court, most of the city and county claims are in federal court, where they have been consolidat­ed under one Cleveland-based judge who is pushing for a settlement.

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