Sacklers reaped up to $13 billion from OxyContin maker, U.S. states say
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[October 05, 2019] By
Mike Spector and Nate Raymond
(Reuters) - OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma
LP steered up to $13 billion in profits to the company's controlling
Sackler family, according to U.S. states opposing efforts to halt
lawsuits alleging the company and its owners helped fuel the U.S. opioid
epidemic.
The wealthy Sacklers received the money from Purdue during an
unspecified time frame, according to court documents and portions of a
deposition filed in the drugmaker's bankruptcy proceedings this week.
Purdue ultimately transferred $12 billion or $13 billion to the family,
a company adviser testified in the deposition. The deposition, taken
last week, was revealed in court filings on Thursday and Friday.
The financial figure is significantly larger than the roughly $4 billion
previous lawsuits have alleged the Sacklers took out of Purdue, and was
cited as part of coordinated legal broadsides this week against the
company's attempts to shield itself and the family from sprawling opioid
litigation.
Many states want the Sacklers to contribute more than an initial $3
billion they have pledged toward resolving the lawsuits as part of a
settlement Purdue has proposed.
Attorneys general from 24 states and the District of Columbia on Friday
objected to Purdue's September request that a U.S. bankruptcy judge halt
more than 2,600 lawsuits seeking billions of dollars in damages, and
they raised financial transfers to the Sacklers in their legal
arguments.
So, too, did lawyers representing 500 cities, counties and Native
American tribes, according to an earlier court filing.
"The distribution numbers do not reflect the fact that many billions of
dollars from that amount were paid in taxes and reinvested in businesses
that will be sold as part of the proposed settlement," said Daniel S.
Connolly, a lawyer for family members facing lawsuits who are related to
the late Raymond Sackler, one of the modern Purdue's co-founders, in a
statement.
A spokesman for relatives of another deceased company co-founder,
Mortimer Sackler, who also face litigation, had no immediate comment.
Purdue had no immediate comment on the payments. The company and family
have denied allegations they contributed to the U.S. opioid crisis.
The lawsuits, largely brought by state and local governments, allege
Purdue and the Sacklers contributed to a public health crisis that has
claimed the lives of nearly 400,000 people since 1999 by aggressively
marketing opioids while downplaying their addiction and overdose risks.
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A bottle of prescription painkiller OxyContin, 40mg pills, made by
Purdue Pharma L.D. sit on a counter at a local pharmacy, in Provo,
Utah, U.S., April 25, 2017. REUTERS/George Frey/File Photo
"The Sacklers are billionaires, they are not bankrupt," Massachusetts Attorney
General Maura Healey, among the officials opposing Purdue's efforts to halt
lawsuits, told Reuters in an interview. "They should not be allowed to use the
filing to shield their assets."
Purdue filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection last month after reaching a
deal it valued at more than $10 billion that would resolve the bulk of the cases
against the company and the Sacklers.
The company contends it needs the litigation against it and the Sacklers paused
for about nine months so it can attempt to settle with hold-out plaintiffs and
preserve money that would otherwise be spent fighting the cases.
Purdue said the costs of continued litigation were "staggering," putting its
legal expenses this year at nearly $250 million.
"Without a stay of the litigation, only lawyers will win," the company said in a
statement.
Typically, a bankruptcy filing triggers an "automatic stay" of all litigation
without a specific order from a judge.
However, Purdue is seeking an injunction to stop the lawsuits because the
Sacklers did not seek bankruptcy protection and there is an exception to the
automatic stay for government actions that seek to enforce laws related to
public health and safety.
Healey said the exception gives the states a strong argument to move forward
with their cases against the OxyContin maker. "We're exercising our police power
and have the right to do so," she said.
The Sacklers have offered to cede control of Purdue to the plaintiffs and
contribute $3 billion, and potentially more through the sale of another
pharmaceutical business they own, toward the proposed settlement. Purdue is also
in discussions to resolve a U.S. Justice Department probe that could carry a
financial penalty.
Healey said the Sacklers should increase their contribution and she criticized
the structure of the deal, which is premised in part on the continued sale of
OxyContin, a drug that critics say helped launch the nation's opioid addiction
crisis.
(Reporting by Mike Spector in New York, Nate Raymond in Boston and Tom Hals in
Wilmington, Delaware; Editing by David Gregorio and Sandra Maler)
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