Purdue Pharma deal has families conflicted
Some feel settlement does not cover enough
For those who lost loved ones in the opioid crisis, making sure the family behind Oxycontin maker Purdue Pharma paid a price was never just about money. What many wanted was a chance to confront Sackler family members face to face, to make them feel their pain.
While some may get that chance – at least by video – under a tentative settlement reached Thursday that also would force the Sacklers to pay out billions, the families still are coming away feeling empty, conflicted and angry yet again. There’s a bit of hope mixed in, too.
Nothing, though, will bring back any of the lives lost or hold the Sacklers fully accountable, in their eyes.
“I’d like to see the Sacklers bleed all they can, but the bigger picture for me is what they’re doing to clean up the mess,” said Vicki Meyer Bishop of Clarksburg, Maryland, who lost her 45-year-old son, Brian Meyer, in 2017.
The Sacklers, whose wealth has been estimated in court filings at over $10 billion, will get to hang on to a chunk of their vast fortune and be protected from current and future civil lawsuits over opioids.
The deal announced Thursday, which must be approved by a federal bankruptcy judge, requires the Sacklers to pay as much as $6 billion, with $750 million for victims and their survivors. Most of the rest will go to state and local governments to fight the crisis. They also must give up ownership of their company, with the new entity’s profits going toward fighting opioid addiction through treatment and education programs.
Some of the survivors of the crisis and relatives of those who died will receive payments. But most will get just a few thousand dollars – not enough to reimburse the cost of a funeral – and many more who have not already filed claims will be shut out altogether.
The agreement also recommends that the victims be allowed to directly share their heartache with Sackler family members by videoconference at a hearing scheduled for Wednesday.
Meyer Bishop would love to face the Sacklers and show them a picture of her son that’s “so big they couldn’t look away.”
“It’s what I see before I fall asleep every night,” she said. “I don’t even know if that would touch them. I don’t think it would.”
A half-million Americans have died from opioids over the past two decades, a toll that includes victims of prescription painkillers like Oxycontin and Vicodin and illicit drugs such as heroin and fentanyl.
“Every day this goes on, we lose all of these people,” said Lynn Wencus, of Wrentham, Massachusetts, whose son Jeff died of an overdose in 2017. “If states use the money the way it’s supposed to be, then we will be saving lives.”
It bothers her that more money won’t end up in the hands of the families, but she also knows nothing would make up for what she and so many others have lost.
“Even if I got a billion dollars, it’s not going to bring back my son,” she said.