The Columbus Dispatch

FAMILIES

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son, Tyler, died of an overdose five years ago, said it’s hard to read news accounts of multimilli­on-dollar settlement­s that allow companies to maintain they did nothing wrong.

“Come say that to my face,” Addison said. “Let me introduce you to my granddaugh­ter who has to grow up without a father.”

Addison, 52, now works to organize community forums and to connect struggling families with informatio­n and resources.

Big Pharma executives helped to create“the deadliest drug epidemic in United States history,and theystill get to go home to their families at night,” Addison said.“they’re not wiped out financiall­y. Some parents can’t even afford to buy a suit for their child’s funeral.”

Painful trade-offs

Before the massive, consolidat­ed lawsuit against drug companies now in front of a federal judge in Cleveland — it includes more than1,500cases— some people did seek damages on their own.

Nora Freeman Engstrom, a Stanford University law professor and expert on tort law, said her research has turned up more than 1,100 individual lawsuits filed between 2001 and 2007 that largely took aim at Purdue Pharma, manufactur­er of the opioid painkiller Oxycontin.

“There was a swell of litigation, but it fell flat,” she said. “These suits were confounded by a number of obstacles.”

Plaintiffs and their lawyers were outgunned and outmanned by Purdue’s legal team, Engstrom said, and very

rarely made it past pre-trial procedural maneuverin­g. They were stymied by defenses that focused on victims’ illegal behavior and the unethical prescribin­g practices by physicians.

Cities, states and counties “can neutralize the defenses,” Engstrom said. “The states never abused drugs, they never crushed Oxycontin, they never sought heroin.”

Without the large-scale aggregatio­n of lawsuits that has taken place, she and others say, it’s unlikely that drug companies would be poised to pay billions for their roles in a drug crisis that saw 400,000 people die of opioid-involved overdoses in the United States from 1999 to 2017.

But there are painful tradeoffs, especially when cases are settled without an airing of the evidence.

“I think the families also have an interest in there being a full public accounting and disclosure of what these companies did,” said Micah Berman, a professor of public health and law at Ohio State University. “The fact that these companies keep settling is probably very frustratin­g.”

When government entities and drug companies square off, public health and individual interests aren’t always at the forefront.

“There are certainly lots of limitation­s to using litigation in trying to address social problems like the opioid crisis,” Berman said. “It’s valid for these families who have been harmed to try to make their voices heard.”

Everyone at the trough

Sonya Smith attended a

recent meeting of advocates for grandparen­ts and other relatives raising children and asked what to her seemed an obvious question.

“I threw out the idea of filing a lawsuit on behalf of these children,” said Smith, who lives in the Canal Winchester area. “They are the poor, innocent victims in all of this.”

Smith is about to turn 57 and ought to be thinking of how close she is to retirement. Instead, she is raising four grandchild­ren, working an overnight job and dipping into her 401(k). She can’tsave money, take vacations or enjoy a full night of sleep.

“I hold out hope that she’s going to get better and get her kids,” Smith said of her daughter, who became addicted to opioids. “But she would have to do a real (turnaround). The parenting skills just aren’t there anymore.”

She loves her grandchild­ren fiercely and would never want them cared for in the foster system. But Smith can’t see how her family isn’t as deserving as the government plaintiffs and their lawyers.

“Everybody’s at the trough,” said Ron Browder, a member of the Ohio Grandparen­t/kinship Coalition board. “There needs to be some type of conversati­on with the settlement master about what actually gets down to the families.”

Ohio Gov. Mike Dewine met with about 100 lawyers and government officials from across the state last week and started talking about how best to spend the millions in settlement money that communitie­s could soon receive. Fighting addiction will be a focus, he said.

Franklin County officials who attended the meetingat the Governor’s Residence want any resulting payout to be handled by local government­s rather than a budget process involving state lawmakers.

The nation’s three biggest drug distributo­rs and a major drugmaker alreadyhav­e settled with Cuyahoga and Summit counties for $260 million, avoiding what would have been the first federal trial. Cuyahoga officials have said they plan to expand residentia­l treatment in the area and develop an opioidtrea­tment program in the county jail.

Rossi, who lost one son and has another who has successful­ly remained in recovery from opioid addiction, said shestarted keeping a mental of all the people she knows of — directly or through friends and relatives — who have suffered from opioid addiction. “It’s about 40,” she said.

Of those, 18 have died, including a nephew. Sixteen were fatal overdoses, two were homicides.

“I belong to a mom’s group, and we’ve encountere­d a lot of judgment,” Rossi said. “People think it’s because of the parents’ mistakes. And I believed that.”

She knows better now. Rossi looked over at the photo of Vince that sits in her dining room, and at the collage she and her husband, Matthew, displayed attheir son’sfuneral. She smiled as she fought back tears. “We were good parents,” Rossi said. “And I’ve got the pictures to prove it.”

rprice@dispatch.com @Ritaprice

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