Drug distributors AmerisourceBergen Corp, Cardinal Health Inc and
McKesson Corp and drugmaker Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd
agreed to the deal that removed the immediate threat of a trial that
was to begin on Monday in Cleveland.
The parties could resume talks as soon as Tuesday aimed at a broader
settlement of thousands of opioid lawsuits brought by states and
local governments, according to Paul Hanly, an attorney for the
towns and counties.
Under Monday's local settlement, the distributors, which handle
around 90% of U.S. prescription drugs, will pay a combined $215
million immediately to Ohio's Cuyahoga and Summit counties that were
plaintiffs in Monday's trial.
Israel-based Teva said it was paying $20 million in cash and will
contribute $25 million worth of Suboxone, an opioid addiction
treatment.
Teva, the world's largest maker of generic drugs, said it will make
its contribution over three years.
The companies have been accused of fueling a nationwide opioid
crisis. Some 400,000 U.S. overdose deaths between 1997 and 2017 were
linked to opioids, according to government data.
"While the companies strongly dispute the allegations made by the
two counties, they believe settling the bellwether trial is an
important stepping stone to achieving a global resolution," the
distributors said in a joint statement.
Hanly said his team rejected a proposed $18 billion settlement last
week from the three distributors because the payments were due to be
made over 18 yeas.
"One billion dollars for the entire year is a ham sandwich," said
Hanly. "It's way too small an amount."
Teva and attorneys general for four states pushed to salvage a deal
they had reached last week, which was rejected by the team
representing local governments.
North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein told reporters on a
conference call that he and his counterparts in Pennsylvania, Texas
and Tennessee had an agreement in principle with the distributors as
well.
He said the deal was comprised of $22 billion in cash and $26
billion in treatment drugs.
Teva said it had agreed with the four attorneys general to
contribute opioid treatment drugs worth $23 billion, as well as $250
million in cash over 10 years.
The other contributions to the broader settlement were to come from
the distributors.
'POSITIVE MOMENTUM'
It was not clear if the settlement framework the four states
announced would receive support from other states or the local
governments, who had previously contended it was inadequate.
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Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro said he believed “there’s
a lot of positive momentum” after Friday’s settlement talks, which
he said also included Johnson & Johnson.
In a statement, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost said other attorneys
general "don't speak for Ohio."
He added, "This isn't a framework, it's a pile of lumber that's been
dropped on the construction site. Ohio will wait and see what the
detailed plan looks like."
Hanly said the attorneys general deal was spread over too many years
to be acceptable. He said he did not expect the attorneys general to
participate when talks resumed this week.
The so-called bellwether, or test trial, that had been set for
Monday could have helped shape a broader settlement of some 2,600
lawsuits pending over the toll opioids have taken on local
communities and the nation.
Shares in the companies had risen last week in anticipation of a
broader deal. On Monday, shares of the big three drug distributors
were down as much as 5% but recovered after Teva's statement and
closed down around 2% to 3%.
"We are not surprised to see distributor shares giving back some of
last week’s gains as uncertainty persists in this extremely complex
litigation," Baird analyst Eric Coldwell wrote in a note.
The settlement, if extrapolated to a nationwide deal resolving all
litigation for the four defendants, suggests a settlement value of
around $48 billion, based on a court-approved allocation formula.
Hanly said he had not done the same calculation, but thought it was
likely worth more.
The lawsuits accuse drugmakers of overstating the benefits of
opioids while downplaying the risks and allege distributors failed
to flag and halt a rising tide of suspicious orders.
The companies have denied wrongdoing. Drugmakers argued their
products carried government-approved labels that warned of the
addictive risks of opioids, while distributors had argued that their
role was to make sure medicines prescribed by licensed doctors were
available for patients.
Monday's settlement adds to deals worth $66.4 million that the two
Ohio counties earlier struck with drug companies Mallinckrodt Plc,
Endo International Plc, J&J and Allergan Plc.
(Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware, Nate Raymond in
Boston, Peter Henderson in San Francisco and Kathy Gray in
Cleveland. Writing by Tom Hals; Editing by Noeleen Walder, Chizu
Nomiyama and Bill Berkrot)
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