The Ohio counties of Lake and Trumbull allege that oversight
failures at pharmacies run by Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc, CVS
Health Corp, Walmart Inc and Giant Eagle Inc led to excessive
amounts of opioid pills in their communities.
Lawyers for the counties and companies are set to deliver opening
statements on Monday to a federal jury in Cleveland, where thousands
of similar lawsuits against pharmaceutical companies, drug
distributors and pharmacies are pending.
More than 3,300 cases have been brought largely by state and local
governments seeking to hold the companies responsible for an opioid
abuse epidemic that U.S. government data shows led to nearly 500,000
overdose deaths from 1999 to 2019.
Should a jury find the companies liable, U.S. District Judge Dan
Polster will later determine how much they must pay to abate, or
address, the epidemic in the communities.
Lawyers for the local governments have said the pharmacy chains are
among their next targets for settlement.
Polster, who oversees most of the opioid lawsuits, on Tuesday
renewed his long-running push https://www.reuters.com/article/us-opioids-litigation-judge/judges-unorthodox-approach-has-huge-opioid-settlement-within-reach-idUSKBN1WX1AT
for a global settlement by the companies. "Use this trial as an
opportunity to engage in the kind of meaningful discussions that
have not happened over the last couple of years, all right?" he
said.
At trial, the two counties are expected to argue the pharmacies
created a public nuisance by failing to identify red flags and
ensure prescriptions were valid, causing an oversupply of pills,
overdoses and deaths.
"The national chain pharmacies in our case refused to give their
pharmacists the necessary tools and opportunities to follow the law
and stop the diversion and improper sale of opiates," said Mark
Lanier, the counties' lawyer.
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The companies deny wrongdoing,
saying criminals were more likely to obtain
opioids illegally from other sources, including
pill mills, crooked doctors and drug
traffickers.
"Opioid prescriptions are written by doctors,
not pharmacists," CVS said in a statement. "Our
pharmacies fill legitimate prescriptions written
by licensed doctors." Giant
Eagle said Ohio regulators inspected its pharmacies in the two
counties nearly 100 times during the relevant time period and
concluded it complied with the law. The other defendants did not
respond to requests for comment.
The trial comes after the three largest U.S. distributors that
supply pharmacies - McKesson Corp, Cardinal Health Inc and
AmerisourceBergen Corp - and the drugmaker Johnson & Johnson in July
proposed paying up to $26 billion to settle cases against them.
A bankruptcy judge in August approved a settlement by OxyContin
maker Purdue Pharma LP and its wealthy Sackler family owners that
the company values at more than $10 billion.
The pharmacy chains in the Ohio case have only settled one case
nationally. Ahead of a trial in New York, they and Rite Aid Corp
agreed pay $26 million to settle with two counties.
Rite Aid settled pre-trial in Ohio and agreed to pay Trumbull at
least $1.5 million. Lake County has not disclosed its recovery.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Noeleen Walder and
Bill Berkrot)
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