Texas attorney general opens investigation into Walmart's opioid sales
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[June 29, 2022]
By Dietrich Knauth
(Reuters) -Texas Attorney General Ken
Paxton said on Tuesday he was investigating whether Walmart improperly
filled prescriptions and failed to report suspicious orders when selling
opioid drugs.
Paxton said he had opened a civil investigation into Walmart's potential
violations of the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act relating to the
promotion, sale, dispensing and distribution of prescription opioids.
The investigation focuses on Walmart's compliance with a requirement to
submit documentation related to its opioid orders to the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration and all state agencies in Texas, Paxton said.
"I have fought for Texans who have been tragically impacted by the
illegal marketing and sale of opioids, which have caused addiction and
the untimely deaths of thousands of people each year," Paxton said. "I
am committed to holding pharmacies accountable if they played a role in
this devastating epidemic."
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Walmart said it would answer the Texas Attorney General’s questions and
that it was confident in its record on opioid safety.
The company's pharmacists have refused to fill hundreds of thousands of
potentially problematic opioid prescriptions, and it has been chastised
for being too cautious at times - including by the Texas Medical Board,
Walmart spokesman Randy Hargrove said.
"Walmart and our pharmacists are torn between the demands on pharmacists
imposed by opioids plaintiffs on one side and health agencies and
regulators on the other, and patients are caught in the middle,"
Hargrove said.
The federal government separately sued Walmart over its alleged failure
to report suspicious opioid orders in 2020, and many of the examples
used in its complaint involved Texas prescriptions.
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Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton speaks during a news conference
after the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in President Joe
Biden's bid to rescind a Trump-era immigration policy that forced
migrants to stay in Mexico to await U.S. hearings on their asylum
claims, in Washington, U.S., April 26, 2022. REUTERS/Elizabeth
Frantz
That lawsuit was put on hold late
last year while the U.S. Supreme Court considered a separate case
involving the criminal conviction of two doctors found guilty of
misusing their medical licenses to fill thousands of prescriptions
for addictive pain medications.
The Supreme Court decided that case on Monday,
ruling unanimously in favor of the two doctors, who argued that
their trials were unfair because jurors were not instructed to
consider whether they had "good faith" reasons to believe their
numerous opioid prescriptions were medically valid.
The federal government's lawsuit against Walmart is scheduled to
resume on July 11.
Walmart, along with two pharmacy chain operators, was found liable
in November for fueling the opioid epidemic in two Ohio counties.
The judge in that case held a second trial to determine the amount
that Walmart and its co-defendants must pay to abate the opioid
crisis in the two counties, but has not yet made a ruling.
(Reporting by Dietrich KnauthEditing by Chris Reese, Leslie Adler
and Michael Perry)
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