In a decision late Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Terence Kern ruled
the tribal court lacked jurisdiction because the lawsuit involving
six wholesale drug distributors and pharmacy operators does not
directly concern tribal self-government.
“While noting Defendants’ (Cherokee Nation's) evidence of the harm
opioid abuse has caused to individual tribal members and families,
and costs borne by the tribe, the Court cannot plausibly find that
such harm is ‘catastrophic for tribal self-government'," Kern said.
The Cherokee Nation in April 2017 became the first major Native
American tribe to seek redress in tribal court from wholesale drug
distributors and pharmacy operators.
The tribe said the highly addictive painkillers were saturating its
territory and contributing to violence, delinquency and mortality.
It argued in its lawsuit that the defendants had turned a blind eye
to problems in their supply chains by failing to protect opioids
from theft or refusing to fulfill suspicious orders by pharmacies,
doctors and patients.
The suit came as several states, local governments and tribes have
sued drug makers and distributors over a drug crisis declared a
national public health emergency by U.S. President Donald Trump.
Wholesale drug distributors and pharmacy operators McKesson Corp,
Cardinal Health Inc, AmerisourceBergen, CVS Health, Walgreens Boots
Alliance Inc and Wal-Mart Stores Inc responded with a lawsuit in
federal court in Tulsa in June 2017, saying the tribe lacked
jurisdiction.
The companies said the lawsuit attempted to civilly enforce a
federal statute, the Controlled Substances Act, under the guise of
the tribe's statutory and common law.
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In a statement on Wednesday, Cherokee Nation Attorney General Todd
Hembree said, “We continue to believe in our case, and we are
prepared to fight to hold these companies accountable in state
court."
The sovereign Cherokee Nation is the largest tribal nation in the
United States with 335,000 citizens, according to the tribe's court
filing.
The lawsuit said that from 2003 to 2014, more than 350 opioid-related
deaths occurred within the Cherokee Nation, which comprises 14
counties in northeast Oklahoma.
The case is McKesson Corporation, et al, v. Hembree, et al, U.S.
District Court, Northern District of Oklahoma, No. 17-cv-323.
(Reporting by Lenzy Krehbiel-Burton; additional reporting by Nate
Raymond in Boston, writing by Jon Herskovitz; editing by Colleen
Jenkins and Marguerita Choy)
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