Purdue urges skeptical appeals court to revive Sackler opioid lawsuit
shield
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[April 30, 2022] By
Dietrich Knauth
(Reuters) -Judges on a U.S. appeals court
appeared hesitant on Friday to revive a legal shield that would protect
the Sackler family that owns Purdue Pharma from lawsuits related to the
prescription opioid OxyContin, a key to ending the company's bankruptcy.
During oral arguments, a three-judge panel on the U.S. 2nd Circuit Court
of Appeals probed the limits of a bankruptcy judge to protect
non-bankrupt parties like the wealthy Sacklers, in the absence of clear
legal authority.
One judge described the court's own past rulings as "a flimsy ship" to
build on, while another gave little weight to Purdue's argument that the
Sackler protections were necessary to secure funding for opioid
settlements.
"Please don't shoot yourself in the foot by saying it is the
contributions of the Sacklers that make this plan lawful," said Judge
Jon Newman.
Purdue needs the court to revive the legal shield in order to carry out
its bankruptcy exit plan.
The plan will provide $6 billion - contributed by the Sacklers in return
for the legal shield - to settle thousands of lawsuits against the
company for allegedly fueling a nationwide opioid epidemic. Without the
Sacklers' participation in the settlements, Purdue would be unable to
get money to opioid victims or state public health programs, Purdue
attorney Marshall Huebner said.
The Office of the U.S. Trustee, an arm of the Department of Justice that
acts as a watchdog in bankruptcy cases, argued against reviving the
legal shield.
The Sacklers should not be allowed to benefit from bankruptcy
protections without filing for bankruptcy themselves, attorney Michael
Shih said.
Thousands of lawsuits have blamed OxyContin and Purdue's marking of the
addictive pain medicine for starting and fueling a U.S. opioid epidemic
that has caused some 500,000 overdose deaths over the past two decades,
according to U.S. data. The litigation drove Purdue to bankruptcy in
2019.
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Bottles of prescription painkiller OxyContin pills, made by Purdue
Pharma LP sit on a counter at a local pharmacy in Provo, Utah, U.S.,
April 25, 2017. REUTERS/George Frey/File Photo
The Sackler family has expressed regret over OxyContin's role in the health
crisis, but have maintained that their actions were legal and appropriate.
Purdue reached a bankruptcy settlement of opioid claims, but that deal was
upended in December, when a federal judge ruled that the Connecticut-based
company could not also wipe away lawsuits filed against its non-bankrupt owners.
Following that ruling, Purdue and its owners revised the opioid settlement terms
with an additional $1 billion from the Sacklers. That brought the total Sackler
contribution to $6 billion, ending all objections except from the U.S. Trustee,
which opposes such legal shields.
The legal protections, called non-debtor releases, have been a source of
controversy that has divided U.S. bankruptcy courts.
Under questioning from the judges, Purdue and the U.S. Trustee both struggled to
identify a specific section of bankruptcy law that supported their positions.
Purdue argued that nondebtor releases were not explicitly prohibited, and
pointed to past cases in which they were approved. The Trustee argued they were
not explicitly allowed, and that bankruptcy courts cannot exceed their authority
to settle the debts of bankrupt companies and individuals.
The company pled guilty to opioid-related criminal charges in 2007 and 2020.
(Reporting by Dietrich KnauthEditing by Bill Berkrot)
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