The Denver Post

State expands lawsuit, adding Sackler family

More than 4,500 Coloradans have died during recent epidemic

- By Sam Tabachnik

Colorado has expanded its lawsuit against Purdue Pharma, the maker of the addictive painkiller Oxycontin, to include its owners and former executives who built their fortunes on the drug’s proliferat­ion, Attorney General Phil Weiser announced Monday.

The amended complaint, filed in Denver District Court, adds several members of the Sackler family, who own Purdue Pharma, the company that created and manufactur­ed Oxycontin. The company and the family have been targeted by nearly every state in the country in lawsuits pinning blame on them for the opioid crisis.

In September, Colorado sued Purdue Pharma and other opioid pill makers, claiming they downplayed Oxycontin’s dangers and rewarded executives and doctors for prescribin­g the pills. Denver and 16 other communitie­s in the state also sued the pharmaceut­ical company in separate lawsuits.

“This is a crisis,” Weiser said. “And it’s a crisis with many causes. One of which is irresponsi­ble companies and executives who put profit over people, who took actions that were wrong, that were deceptive.”

More than 4,500 Coloradans have died during the opioid epidemic, including 543 in 2018, according to state data.

The Sackler family has consistent­ly denied that Purdue Pharma caused the opioid crisis.

The complaint remains sealed, but Weiser detailed some of the allegation­s at Monday’s news conference.

Purdue and the Sacklers maintained a list of medical profession­als in Colorado who prescribed the most opioids and made them the most money, Weiser said.

The amended lawsuit alleges the company and its leaders used front groups and opinion leaders to sponsor and distribute

After suffering through the wettest 12 months since at least 1895, U.S. farmers have plans to adapt next year to what some forecaster­s say may be an increasing­ly soggy new normal for the nation’s midsection.

The plans include bigger and faster tractors to speed up planting, quick-growing seeds and more extensive use of cover crops and drainage tiles to keep flooding fields intact.

But there are problems here too, growers say: The tractors are costly, the short-season seeds have lower yields and cover crops and tiling take time and effort.

While farmers have long been locked in a give-andtake tussle with Mother Nature, trends tracked by scientists and forecaster­s over decades suggest the merciless rains and wild storms that drasticall­y delayed planting times this year could be a weather standard moving forward.

“On a decadal time scale, yeah, you’re going to see record after record falling,” said Donald Wuebbles, a professor of atmospheri­c science at the University of Illinois in Urbana. “What used to be a one in 100 or one in 500-year event is going to become much, much more common.’‘

The regional rains are part of an “increasing trend over four decades,” showing more and more moisture for the region, Wuebbelssa­id.

From June 2018 to May of this year, the contiguous U.S. suffered through its wettest 12-month period going back to 1895, when the federal government first began keeping formal records.

For months, a relentless pulse of storms left fields unplanted, highway and rail traffic snarled, and barges struggling with fierce river currents, when they could move at all.

Jennifer Francis, a senior scientist at Woods Hole Research Center in Massachuse­tts, blames the Midwest deluge on reduced ice cover on the Bering Sea and warmed up waters off the southeast coast. The two high-pressure systems increased the amount of water vapor in the atmosphere, she said, and locked the rainstorms in place.

“It’s hard to imagine that climate change did not rest a heavy thumb on the scale,” Francis said by telephone.

Farmers, meanwhile, are doing what they always do: Adapting. “Next year you’re going to see guys, when they start, they’re going to start and run very hard” to get fields planted as quickly as they can, said Jeff Kirwan, who grows corn and soybeans in Mercer County, Ill.

Farmers are looking for more ways to convey damaging water away from plants, “terraces and things like that,” according to Steve Stierwalt, a farmer in Champaign County, Ill., and president of the Associatio­n of Illinois Soil and Water Conservati­on Districts.

At his place, we’ll “probably get either another planter or a bigger planter, or something that can cut our planting time in half” moving forward,” Stierwalt said.

He’s not alone, according to Matt Arnold, an agricultur­e analyst at Edward D Jones & Co. “With a really short window to actually get crops into the ground, farmers have been investing into the latest and greatest in terms of high horsepower tractors and planters capable of traveling at faster speed.”

Evan Hultine, a corn grower in Bureau County, Ill., is moving in a different direction.

He’s already switched about half his crop to shorter-maturing seeds for those that produce full long-season corn.

That’s helped in getting a crop past the weather, he said, but it means “giving up a lot of yield potential.”

The short-maturity seeds are in demand across the region, “and hard to get hold of,” said Daniel Kowalski, the lead analyst at Cobank Acb, in a telephone interview.

Hultine too sees more farmers turning to new planting equipment that can help shorten the time needed to put seed into the ground. “However, you still have to be able to afford to pay for that equipment,” he added. “And really, not every field allows you to utilize that technology.”

 ?? Nati Harnik, Associated Press file ?? Jeff Jorgenson looks over a partially flooded field he farms near Shenandoah, Iowa, in May. Midwest farmers such as Jorgenson who have fields along the Missouri and Mississipp­i rivers are looking at ways to mitigate flooding in the future, as forecasts favor more soggy springs like this year’s.
Nati Harnik, Associated Press file Jeff Jorgenson looks over a partially flooded field he farms near Shenandoah, Iowa, in May. Midwest farmers such as Jorgenson who have fields along the Missouri and Mississipp­i rivers are looking at ways to mitigate flooding in the future, as forecasts favor more soggy springs like this year’s.

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