Sackler family members and states objecting to terms of Purdue's
bankruptcy reorganization are "close to an agreement in principle"
to contribute additional cash beyond the $4.325 billion they had
pledged to settle opioid litigation, according to a mediator's
interim report filed on Monday.
An agreement involving members of the Sackler family and several
state attorneys general could potentially end a legal challenge that
has prevented Purdue from exiting bankruptcy, and clear the way for
a plan aimed at helping to abate the opioid crisis.
The mediation kicked off in January among Sackler family members and
several states after a U.S. district judge overturned the original
settlement, which was the cornerstone of Purdue's bankruptcy
reorganization plan.
The judge found the reorganization plan improperly shielded Sackler
family members, who had not filed for Chapter 11 themselves, from
opioid litigation.
The mediator, former U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Shelley Chapman, said any
additional contribution from the Sacklers would be solely for opioid
abatement. She asked that talks be extended to Feb. 7, a request
that could be considered at a bankruptcy-court hearing on Tuesday.
The report described marathon negotiating sessions held on Jan.
25-26 in New York that ran more than 12 hours each day and involved
two unidentified state attorneys general who participated in person
and another who joined by Zoom.
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The settlement agreement had been opposed by at
least eight state attorneys general, including
Bob Ferguson in Washington state and William
Tong in Connecticut.
Purdue, the maker of the highly addictive
OxyContin opioid painkiller, filed for
bankruptcy in 2019 in the face of thousands of
lawsuits accusing it and the Sacklers of fueling
the U.S. opioid epidemic through deceptive
marketing. The opioid abuse crisis has led to
nearly 500,000 overdose deaths over two decades,
according to U.S. data.
Sackler family members have denied wrongdoing.
Purdue pleaded guilty in November 2020 to three
felonies arising from its handling of OxyContin.
Several members of the Sackler family testified
during Purdue's bankruptcy trial that their
contribution to the settlement was conditioned
on receiving "global peace" from opioid
litigation.
(Reporting by Mike Spector in New York; writing
by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware; Editing by
Bill Berkrot)
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