Tag: Sacklers

  • Purdue Pharma and Sacklers reach new $7.4bn settlement over opioids crisis | Opioids crisis


    Members of the family who own OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma agreed to pay up to $7.4bn in a new settlement to lawsuits over the toll of the powerful prescription painkiller, the New York Aattorney Ggeneral, Letitia James, announced Thursday.

    The deal, agreed to by Purdue Pharma, the Sackler family members who own the company and lawyers representing state and local governments and thousands of victims of the opioid crisis, represents an increase of more than $1bn over a previous settlement deal that was rejected last year by the US supreme court.

    It’s among the largest settlements reached over the past several years in a series of lawsuits by local, state, Native American tribal governments and others seeking to hold companies responsible for a deadly epidemic. Aside from the Purdue deal, others worth about $50bn have been announced – and most of the money is required to be used to stem the crisis.

    The deal still needs court approval, and some of the details are yet to be ironed out.

    Under the new proposal, members of the Sackler family who own Purdue would contribute up to $7.4bn over 15 years and give up ownership of Purdue, which would become a new entity with its board appointed by states and others who sued the company. A portion of the money is also to go to victims of the opioid crisis or their survivors.

    The family’s contribution will be higher than the $6bn agreed to under the previous version. The supreme court blocked the agreement last year because it protected members of the wealthy family from civil lawsuits over OxyContin – even though the family members themselves were not in bankruptcy. The new agreement protects family members from lawsuits only from entities that agree to the settlement.

    There’s been mediation seeking a new deal since the court’s ruling was delivered. If one is not reached, it could open the floodgates to lawsuits against Sackler family members.

    The new settlement could bring to a close a chapter in a long legal saga over the toll of an opioid crisis that some experts assert began after the blockbuster painkiller OxyContin hit the market in 1996. Since then, opioids have been linked to hundreds of thousands of deaths in the US. The deadliest stretch has been since 2020, when illicit fentanyl has been found as a factor in more than 70,000 deaths annually.

    Members of the Sackler family been cast as villains and have seen their name removed from art galleries and universities around the world because of their role in the privately held company. They have continued to deny claims of any wrongdoing.

    Collectively, family members have been estimated to be worth billions more than they’d contribute in the settlement, but much of the wealth is in offshore accounts and might be impossible to access through lawsuits.

    Purdue sought bankruptcy protection in 2019 as it faced thousands of lawsuits over the opioid crisis. Among the claims are that the company targeted doctors with a message that the addiction risk to the powerful painkillers was low.

    In an October 2024 filing, one branch of the family pledged to defend itself in any cases that are allowed to move ahead, saying that the legal theory at the heart of the lawsuits – that Purdue and Sackler family members created a “public nuisance” – “is utterly devoid of merits”.



    Purdue Pharma and the Sackler family have reached a new $7.4 billion settlement over their role in the opioids crisis. The settlement, which was announced on Thursday, comes after years of legal battles and public outrage over the company’s aggressive marketing of OxyContin and other opioid drugs.

    Under the terms of the settlement, Purdue Pharma will be dissolved and its assets will be used to create a new public benefit company that will be dedicated to addressing the opioid crisis. The Sackler family, who owns Purdue Pharma, will also contribute $4.5 billion to the settlement from their personal fortune.

    This settlement marks a significant step towards holding Purdue Pharma and the Sacklers accountable for their role in fueling the opioids crisis, which has claimed the lives of hundreds of thousands of Americans. However, many advocates and lawmakers argue that the settlement is not enough to fully address the harm caused by the company’s actions.

    The opioids crisis continues to be a major public health issue in the United States, with millions of Americans struggling with addiction and overdose deaths on the rise. It is clear that more needs to be done to prevent future crises and support those who have been affected by the devastating impact of opioid addiction.

    Tags:

    Purdue Pharma, Sacklers, $7.4bn settlement, opioids crisis, pharmaceutical company, opioid epidemic, opioid addiction, drug crisis, legal settlement, drug manufacturers, opioid lawsuit, drug abuse epidemic

    #Purdue #Pharma #Sacklers #reach #7.4bn #settlement #opioids #crisis #Opioids #crisis

  • Sacklers Up Their Offer to Settle Purdue Opioids Cases, With a New Condition


    Seven months after the Supreme Court struck down a deal that would have resolved thousands of opioid cases against Purdue Pharma, the company’s owners, members of the Sackler family, have increased their cash offer to settle the litigation — but with a novel catch.

    Under the framework for a new deal, the Sacklers would not receive immunity from future opioid lawsuits, a condition that they had long insisted upon but that the court ruled was impermissible.

    Instead, they would pay up to $6.5 billion — $500 million more than the previous agreement — but with a new condition: Claimants, including states, municipalities and individuals, would have to set aside as much as $800 million in an account akin to a legal-defense fund for the billionaires to fight such cases, according to people familiar with the negotiations.

    Some details of the framework — but not the legal-defense fund — were announced on Thursday by the New York attorney general, Letitia James. She said the overall settlement totaled $7.4 billion, which would include $897 million from Purdue.

    New York could receive as much as $250 million, she said.

    “The Sackler family relentlessly pursued profit at the expense of vulnerable patients and played a critical role in starting and fueling the opioid epidemic,” Ms. James said.

    When the deal is finalized, she added, the Sacklers will “no longer have control of Purdue and will never be allowed to sell opioids in the United States again.”

    Echoing other settlements in nationwide opioid litigation, these payments are intended to fund efforts to prevent and treat addiction in hard-hit communities across the country.

    How many claimants will agree to the new terms is unclear. Ms. James noted that 14 other states involved in talks were on board, including Florida, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Tennessee, California and West Virginia.

    But now the deal has to be sold to all the claimants — not only the remaining states and thousands of local governments, but to some 140,000 personal injury victims and hundreds of Native American tribes.

    The reserve legal fund for the Sacklers may well be depleted: Already, new lawsuits against the Sacklers have been threatened by a handful of states, counties, cities and individuals.

    A spokesman for Washington State, which has successfully pursued other pharmaceutical companies rather than sign onto national deals, said the state was weighing its options.

    The states, which are responsible for the bulk of those payments, would have to keep a minimum of $200 million in the account, with total contributions up to $800 million. After five years, unused funds would start reverting back to the states.

    Final calculations for how much of the total would be deducted to pay lawyers, consultants and administration fees are still under discussion.

    The Sacklers would pay nearly $3 billion in the first three years, with remaining payments over an additional 12 years.

    If the plan is approved by claimants, an arm of the Justice Department that oversees the bankruptcy system called the U.S. Trustee and a federal bankruptcy judge, Purdue would emerge by the end of this year from the bankruptcy that has shielded it since 2019. It would immediately pay the $897 million of its own cash to the parties who signed on to the deal.

    That process is expected to conclude around the end of the year.

    At that point, 15 years of Sackler payments would also commence. And most of the lawsuits that began more than a decade ago — eventually morphing into an ungainly combined litigation brought by cities, states, tribes, hospitals and individual victims, and argued by countless teams of lawyers — would, presumably, end.

    In the plan rejected by the Supreme Court, the Sacklers, long portrayed across films, television and news articles as the public face of predatory opioid manufacturers, demanded a guarantee for putting up $6 billion: that all current and future lawsuits against them related to Purdue and opioids would be barred.

    Purdue itself gets that protection as a standard benefit conferred when a company comes out of bankruptcy. But because the Sacklers did not personally file for bankruptcy, the Supreme Court ruled in June that granting them permanent civil immunity was outside the purview of bankruptcy law.

    The intention of the legal reserve fund, in which, essentially, claimants will be paying to defend the Sacklers against other claimants, is to satisfy the court’s ruling.

    “If states are expected to contribute funds to the Sacklers’ legal defense, the public will want to hear more about the impact of that money going to the Sacklers and their lawyers rather than to opioid abatement,” said Melissa B. Jacoby, a bankruptcy expert at the University of North Carolina School of Law.



    The Sackler family, owners of Purdue Pharma, have recently increased their offer to settle thousands of lawsuits related to the opioid crisis. However, their latest offer comes with a new condition that has sparked controversy.

    In their latest proposal, the Sacklers have offered to pay up to $10 billion to resolve the lawsuits, an increase from their previous offer of $3 billion. However, they are now demanding that the settlement include a legal shield that would protect the family from any future opioid-related lawsuits.

    This new condition has drawn criticism from many who argue that the Sacklers should not be allowed to escape accountability for their role in fueling the opioid epidemic. Critics point to evidence that Purdue Pharma aggressively marketed OxyContin, downplayed its addictive properties, and lobbied to increase sales of the drug, all of which contributed to the crisis.

    Despite the increased offer, many states and local governments have rejected the deal, with some vowing to continue pursuing legal action against the Sacklers. The debate over whether to accept the settlement with its controversial condition is likely to continue, as the opioid crisis continues to devastate communities across the country.

    Tags:

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    2. Purdue opioids lawsuit
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    5. Opioid crisis settlement
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    8. Opioids epidemic update
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    10. Purdue Pharma court case

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