Social OxyContin maker’s settlement plan divides victims of opioid crisis. Now it’s up to the Supreme Court

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BY GEOFF MULVIHILL AND MARK SHERMAN
Updated 4:27 PM BRT, November 23, 2023


WASHINGTON (AP) — The agreement by the maker of OxyContin to settle thousands of lawsuits over the harm done by opioids could help combat the overdose epidemic that the painkiller helped spark. But that does not mean all the victims are satisfied.

In exchange for giving up ownership of drug manufacturer Purdue Pharma and for contributing up to $6 billion to fight the crisis, members of the wealthy Sackler family would be exempt from any civil lawsuits. At the same time, they could potentially keep billions of dollars from their profits on OxyContin sales.
The Supreme Court is set to hear arguments Dec. 4 over whether the agreement, part of the resolution of Purdue Pharma’s bankruptcy, violates federal law.
The issue for the justices is whether the legal shield that bankruptcy provides can be extended to people such as the Sacklers, who have not declared bankruptcy themselves. The legal question has resulted in conflicting lower court decisions. It also has implications for other major product liability lawsuits settled through the bankruptcy system.

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But the agreement, even with billions of dollars set aside for opioid abatement and treatment programs, also poses a moral conundrum that has divided people who lost loved ones or lost years of their own lives to opioids.


Ellen Isaacs’ 33-year-old son, Ryan Wroblewski, died in Florida in 2018, about 17 years after he was first prescribed OxyContin for a back injury. When she first heard about a potential settlement that would include some money for people like her, she signed up. But she has changed her mind.

Money might not bring closure, she said. And by allowing the deal, it could lead to more problems.

“Anybody in the future would be able to do the exact same thing that the Sacklers are now able to do,” she said in an interview.

Her lawyer, Mike Quinn, put it this way in a court filing: “The Sackler releases are special protection for billionaires.”

Lynn Wencus, of Wrentham, Massachusetts, also lost a 33-year-old son, Jeff, to overdose in 2017.

She initially opposed the deal with Purdue Pharma but has come around. Even though she does not expect a payout, she wants the settlement to be finalized in hopes it would help her stop thinking about Purdue Pharma and Sackler family members, whom she blames for the opioid crisis.

“I feel like I can’t really move on while this is all hanging out in the court,” Wencus said.

Purdue Pharma’s aggressive marketing of OxyContin, a powerful prescription painkiller that hit the market in 1996, is often cited as a catalyst of a nationwide opioid epidemic, persuading doctors to prescribe painkillers with less regard for addiction dangers.
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The company pleaded guilty to misbranding the drug in 2007 and paid more than $600 million in fines and penalties.

The drug and the Stamford, Connecticut-based company became synonymous with the crisis, even though the majority of pills being prescribed and used were generic drugs. Opioid-related overdose deaths have continued to climb, hitting 80,000 in recent years. That’s partly because people with substance abuse disorder found pills harder to get and turned to heroin and, more recently, fentanyl, an even more potent synthetic opioid.

Drug companies, wholesalers and pharmacies have agreed to pay a total of more than $50 billion to settle lawsuits filed by state, local and Native American tribal governments and others that claimed the companies’ marketing, sales and monitoring practices spurred the epidemic. The Purdue Pharma settlement would be among the largest. It’s also one of only two so far with provisions for victims of the crisis to be compensated directly, with payouts from a $750 million pool expected to range from about $3,500 to $48,000.

Lawyers for more than 60,000 victims who support the settlement called it “a watershed moment in the opioid crisis,” while recognizing that “no amount of money could fully compensate” victims for the damage caused by the misleading marketing of OxyContin.

In the fallout, parts of the Sackler family story has been told in multiple books and documentaries and in fictionalized versions in the streaming series “Dopesick” and “Painkiller.”

Museums and universities around the world have removed the family’s name from galleries and buildings.

Family members have remained mostly out of the public eye, and they have stepped off the board of their company and have not received payouts from it since before the company entered bankruptcy. But in the decade before that, they were paid more than $10 billion, about half of which family members said went to pay taxes.

Some testified in a 2021 bankruptcy hearing, telling a judge that the family would not contribute to the proposed legal settlement without being shielded from lawsuits.

Two family members appeared by video and one listened by audio to a 2022 court hearing in which more than two dozen people impacted by opioids told their stories publicly. One told them: “You poisoned our lives and had the audacity to blame us for dying.”

Purdue Pharma reached the deal with the governments suing it — including with some states that initially rejected the plan.

But the U.S. Bankruptcy Trustee, an arm of the Justice Department responsible for promoting the integrity of the bankruptcy system, has objected to the legal protections for Sackler family members. Attorney General Merrick Garland also has criticized the plan.

The opposition marked an about-face for the Justice Department, which supported the settlement during the presidency of Donald Trump, a Republican. The department and Purdue Pharma forged a plea bargain in a criminal and civil case. The deal included $8.3 billion in penalties and forfeitures, but the company would pay the federal government only $225 million so long as it executed the settlement plan.

A federal trial court judge in 2021 ruled the settlement should not be allowed. This year, a federal appeals panel ruled the other way in a unanimous decision in which one judge still expressed major concerns about the deal. The Supreme Court quickly agreed to take the case, at the urging of the administration of President Joe Biden, a Democrat.

Purdue Pharma’s is not the first bankruptcy to include this sort of third-party release, even when not everyone in the case agrees to it. It was specifically allowed by Congress in 1994 for asbestos cases.

They have been used elsewhere, too, including in settlements of sexual abuse claims against the Boy Scouts of America, where groups like regional Boy Scout councils and churches that sponsor troops helped pay, and against Catholic dioceses, where parishes and schools contributed cash.

Proponents of Purdue Pharma’s settlement plan often assert that federal law does not prohibit third-party releases and that they can be necessary to create a settlement that parties will agree to.

“Third-party releases are a recurring feature of bankruptcy practice,” lawyers for one branch of the Sackler family said in a court filing, “and not because anyone is trying to do the released third parties a favor.”

https://apnews.com/article/purdue-p...upreme-court-403e6d0fd01852b858ac3ce6d2a17e9e
 
I did not know who the Sacklers were until I read the book: "The House of Pain"

Basically, the Sacklers hired highly paid sales people to push the product. They said it was safe when it was not. The main thing they did was bribe the doctors to push their product.

Then they were forced into bankruptcy due to lawsuits. So they took billions from the company into their own personal pockets and bankrupted the company.
 
I'd give an opinion but apparently it's against the rules.

Do not condone violence or genocide on a person or group of people. You are free to attack a person or groups ideas but you are crossing the line when calling for violence. This will be heavily enforced in threads with breaking news involving victims.
 
I did not know who the Sacklers were until I read the book: "The House of Pain"

Basically, the Sacklers hired highly paid sales people to push the product. They said it was safe when it was not. The main thing they did was bribe the doctors to push their product.

Then they were forced into bankruptcy due to lawsuits. So they took billions from the company into their own personal pockets and bankrupted the company.
I would suggest watching the Hulu miniseries Dopesick if you liked that book. Also Painkiller on Netflix.
 
I did not know who the Sacklers were until I read the book: "The House of Pain"

Basically, the Sacklers hired highly paid sales people to push the product. They said it was safe when it was not. The main thing they did was bribe the doctors to push their product.

Then they were forced into bankruptcy due to lawsuits. So they took billions from the company into their own personal pockets and bankrupted the company.

It's fuckin disgusting. If anyone in this country deserves the death penalty for the deaths they've caused, the executives who approved this shit and spent years ignoring and suppressing the clear data that their product was highly addictive and causing thousands of deaths are them.
 
Ehh. If you got hooked pre-2004 I'll give you a pass but anyone after that has some level of accountability.

We all knew what we were taking and that it made us feel great and was addictive.

None of these family members of junkies deserve to get paid. Now when people really get hurt and actually need strong pain meds it's like impossible to get them...

We live in a culture of 0 accountability and this is just another example of it.
 
Ehh. If you got hooked pre-2004 I'll give you a pass but anyone after that has some level of accountability.

We all knew what we were taking and that it made us feel great and was addictive.

None of these family members of junkies deserve to get paid. Now when people really get hurt and actually need strong pain meds it's like impossible to get them...

We live in a culture of 0 accountability and this is just another example of it.

If there's any truth to how hard doctors were pushing this stuff and assuring patients it was safe, I think we can give addicts a pass on this one. Opiates are tricky enough when you're strictly rationed and warned about the dangers.
 
This is just like ciggys. The government allows them to kill thousands while raking in billions in taxes. Then, when public opinion gets a little to much heat they turn around and say "murderers"!!!! And go about fleecing the companies for everything they're worth through civil litigation.


Yeh the sacklers are scum but there are so many other people responsible that are getting off easy....the Dr's, our government, the individual addicts.
 
This is just like ciggys. The government allows them to kill thousands while raking in billions in taxes. Then, when public opinion gets a little to much heat they turn around and say "murderers"!!!! And go about fleecing the companies for everything they're worth through civil litigation.


Yeh the sacklers are scum but there are so many other people responsible that are getting off easy....the Dr's, our government, the individual addicts.
most people are scum. and the ones that aren't are mostly either too weak or cowardly to do what they really want to do, or are just straight up cucks

we live in a world were victorious kings and chieftans would drink out of skull cups, blind thousands of men, torture, drug dealers on every corner and executive board room alike...etc.

at the end of the day, you have to look out for yourself and never trust a man in a suit that tells you a pill is perfectly safe when used as directed...
 
If there's any truth to how hard doctors were pushing this stuff and assuring patients it was safe, I think we can give addicts a pass on this one. Opiates are tricky enough when you're strictly rationed and warned about the dangers.

- I read years ago on a bodybuilding forum, guy got precribed becaseu the treated a canal. Don't the canal simple get dead? Why using that?
 
most people are scum. and the ones that aren't are mostly either too weak or cowardly to do what they really want to do, or are just straight up cucks

we live in a world were victorious kings and chieftans would drink out of skull cups, blind thousands of men, torture, drug dealers on every corner and executive board room alike...etc.

at the end of the day, you have to look out for yourself and never trust a man in a suit that tells you a pill is perfectly safe when used as directed...


Agreed
 
most people are scum. and the ones that aren't are mostly either too weak or cowardly to do what they really want to do, or are just straight up cucks

we live in a world were victorious kings and chieftans would drink out of skull cups, blind thousands of men, torture, drug dealers on every corner and executive board room alike...etc.

at the end of the day, you have to look out for yourself and never trust a man in a suit that tells you a pill is perfectly safe when used as directed...

Agreed. I'll never forget the first time I realized that I was addicted to pain killers. No one warned me. I was taking them recreationally because my friend offered them to me and getting high and taking them felt like heaven on earth.

The one day out of nowhere I threw up in the morning for no reason at all. The crazy thing is I 100% knew it was because of the pills and I never even knew they were addictive like that. I called my buddy up and he confirmed that they are addictive and you will start throwing up if you stop taking them and get addicted. I start weaning myself off them immediately. It took me 2 weeks to feel happy again after that. I always just felt blah until 2 week later I was driving and a feeling of happiness just acme over me and I realized I haven't felt like this since I stopped.

It wasn't that hard to stop but it didn't feel good either. I've always been able to stop doing drugs like that though when I needed to. Did the same with coke when I realized I was getting addicted to it just stopped hanging out with my friends for like 2 weeks.
 
It's fuckin disgusting. If anyone in this country deserves the death penalty for the deaths they've caused, the executives who approved this shit and spent years ignoring and suppressing the clear data that their product was highly addictive and causing thousands of deaths are them.
I don't know how anyone could think opioids are not addictive. It literally is used to treat pain, no shit it's going to be addictive.
 
I don't know how anyone could think opioids are not addictive. It literally is used to treat pain, no shit it's going to be addictive.

It's a lot easier to think that when your doctor is telling you the medication they're prescribing to you isn't addictive because that's what the drug manufacturer is telling them to tell patients, despite knowing that it wasn't true.
 
Are there actual documented instances of people being told oxycodone wasn't addictive?
 
Are there actual documented instances of people being told oxycodone wasn't addictive?

Of course.



"Purdue also instructed its pharmaceutical representatives all over the country to tell physicians that oxycontin was not addictive primarily because of its slow-release properties. Purdue told its representatives to tell doctors that only persons with an “addictive personality” became addicts."
 
Make America Execute White Collar Criminals Again

Agreed, but I'm currently on yellows for suggesting this for corrupt politicians.

A certain sell out mod here doesn't want that suggestion being made, apparently.

Hopefully you go unbothered, as it's clearly within the rules to make such a statement, because it's akin to supporting the death penalty for treason.
 
This is a good story to show people when they act as if doctors, and the medical establishment at large, are a trustworthy bunch of do gooders.
 
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