The case by Oklahoma Attorney General Attorney General Mike Hunter
was the first to go to trial out of thousands of cases brought by
state and local governments against opioid manufacturers and
distributors.
Judge Thad Balkman, of Cleveland County District Court in Norman,
Oklahoma, is scheduled to announce his decision from the bench at 4
p.m. EDT.
The litigation is being closely watched by plaintiffs in about 2,000
opioid lawsuits pending before a federal judge in Ohio who has been
pushing for a settlement ahead of an October trial.
Opioids were involved in almost 400,000 overdose deaths from 1999 to
2017, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention. Since 2000, some 6,000 Oklahomans have died from opioid
overdoses, according to the state’s lawyers.
During a seven-week bench trial, lawyers for the state of Oklahoma
argued that J&J carried out a years-long marketing campaign that
minimized the addictive painkillers' risks and promoted their
benefits.
The state's lawyers called J&J an opioid "kingpin" and argued that
its marketing efforts created a public nuisance as doctors
over-prescribed the drugs, leading to a surge in overdose deaths in
Oklahoma.
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J&J has denied wrongdoing. The drugmaker in court has said its
marketing claims had scientific support and that its painkillers,
Duragesic and Nucynta, made up a tiny fraction of opioids prescribed
in Oklahoma.
Lawyers for New Jersey-based J&J argued in court papers that the
state's case rests on a "radical" interpretation of the state's
public nuisance law.
Hunter, the attorney general, is seeking to make J&J pay more than
$17 billion to help the state address the epidemic for the next 30
years through addiction treatment and prevention programs.
The trial came after Oklahoma resolved claims against OxyContin
maker Purdue Pharma LP in March for $270 million and against Teva
Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd in May for $85 million, leaving only
J&J as a defendant.
Some plaintiffs' lawyers have compared the opioid cases to
litigation by states against the tobacco industry that led to a $246
billion settlement in 1998.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Noeleen Walder and
Leslie Adler)
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