Overall, 98% of some 34,000 local governments agreed to be bound by
a class action against companies such as drug distributor McKesson
Corp, drugmaker Johnson & Johnson and pharmacy chain Walgreens Boots
Alliance Inc, according to a Monday court filing.
However, the 541 local governments that opted out included Florida's
Palm Beach County and counties in West Virginia, according to
attorneys, raising the prospect that companies could face expensive
trials even if they settled with the class. The two regions are
among the hardest hit by the crisis, which has contributed to more
than 400,000 deaths since 1997.
Officials from Houston's Harris County, one of the largest U.S.
counties, have said it would opt out, meaning they would pursue
their own lawsuit and not receive funds from a nationwide
settlement.
The court filing did not identify opt-outs.
U.S. Judge Dan Polster in Cleveland, who has been overseeing 2,600
consolidated opioid lawsuits, is pushing hard for a settlement to
help get funds to those most in need in a timely fashion. He
approved the novel "negotiation class" as a way to reassure
companies that any deal to resolve the lawsuits would bind remaining
governments and prevent them from filing a case.
The lawsuits generally allege that drugmakers improperly marketed
opioids while distributors and pharmacy chains failed to stop
suspicious orders. The defendants deny the allegations.
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Typical class actions allow members to opt out after a settlement
has been reached, but the negotiation class fixes the members first.
Any settlement must be approved by 75% of the class.
Lawyers said towns and counties less affected by the crisis had
little reason to opt out, while areas ravaged by opioids, like West
Virginia, had more incentive to pursue and control their own
lawsuit.
The number of opt-outs represented around 20% of those that have
already sued and could be significant if it included large cities,
according to Elizabeth Burch, a professor at the University of
Georgia School of Law.
"If I'm trying to negotiate with a town of 80, that's very different
from Houston," she said.
The negotiation class was opposed by some state attorneys general
and drug distributors, and faces a legal challenge at the 6th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati.
(Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware; additional reporting
by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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