New York decides to sue prescription drug makers

Attorney General James Files Nation’s Most Comprehensive Suit Against Opioid Distributors and Manufacturers

Alleges that 6 Manufacturers and Sackler Family Engaged in False, Deceptive Marketing Practices About the Dangers of Opioids; Distributors Egregiously Failed their Duties to Avoid Unlawful Diversion

NEW YORK - Today, Attorney General Letitia James filed the nation’s most extensive lawsuit against the manufacturers, Sackler Family, and distributors of opioids for their role in the opioid epidemic that has taken hundreds of thousands of lives and devastated families and communities. The lawsuit alleges that through years of false and deceptive marketing, and by ignoring their duties to prevent the unlawful diversion of controlled substances, these six national prescription opioid manufacturers, the SacklerFamily, and four national prescription drug distributors are largely responsible for creating the opioid epidemic that has ravaged New York, causing widespread addiction, overdose deaths, and suffering. This lawsuit breaks new ground by setting forth an extensive set of facts alleging that prescription drug distributors failed to exercise their duties to detect and report diversion of opioids through poorly designed, poorly resourced, and poorly executed suspicious order monitoring programs. 

The amended complaint expands an earlier lawsuit filed by the Office of the Attorney General against Purdue Pharma, and sets forth the Attorney General’s findings from a multi-year, industry-wide investigation of these opioid market participants. 

The manufacturers named in the amended complaint include Purdue Pharma and its affiliates, members of the Sackler Family (owners of Purdue) and trusts they control, Janssen Pharmaceuticals and its affiliates (including its parent company Johnson & Johnson), Mallinckrodt LLC and its affiliates, Endo Health Solutions and its affiliates, Teva Pharmaceuticals USA, Inc. and its affiliates and Allergan Finance, LLC and its affiliates. The distributors named in the complaint are McKesson Corporation, Cardinal Health Inc., Amerisource Bergen Drug Corporation, and Rochester Drug Cooperative Inc.  

“The opioid epidemic has ravaged families and communities across New York,” said Attorney General Letitia James. “We found that pharmaceutical manufacturers and distributors engaged in years of deceptive marketing about the risks of opioids and failed to exercise their basic duty to report suspicious behavior, leading to the crisis we are living with today. As the Sackler Family and the other defendants grew richer, New Yorkers’ health grew poorer and our state was left to foot the bill. The manufacturers and distributors of opioids are to blame for this crisis and it is past time they take responsibility.” 

Specifically, the complaint alleges that the opioid epidemic is especially destructive to New York because of the fraud, willful misconduct, and gross negligence of the distributors who buy controlled substances in bulk from the manufacturers and sell to individual pharmacies and other licensed dispensers. These systemic failures led to massive shipments of opioids to specific pharmacies in New York that showed numerous “red flags,” such as a high percentage of prescriptions paid for in cash or written by a relatively small number of providers who have been charged with, or convicted of, illegal prescribing. 

The complaint also alleges that manufacturers implemented a common “playbook” to mislead the public about the safety, efficacy, and risks of their prescription opioids. Manufacturers pushed claims that opioids could improve quality of life and cognitive functioning, promoted false statements about the non-addictive nature of these drugs, masked signs of addiction by referring to them as “pseudoaddiction” and encouraged greater opioid use to treat it, and suggested that alternative pain relief methods were riskier than opioids, among other grossly misleading claims. They utilized a vast network of sales representatives (“detailers”) to push these dangerous narratives and to target susceptible doctors, flood publications with their deceptive advertisements, and offer consumers discount cards and other incentives to entice them to request treatment with their products.  

The Attorney General’s lawsuit further asserts that the manufacturers and distributors obtained their licenses to sell opioids and other controlled substances in New York by representing, falsely, that they had complied with state requirements governing the distribution of these products, and that their licenses may be revoked. The complaint also sets forth detailed False Claims Act allegations based on opioid prescriptions that were paid under state health programs due to the defendants’ misconduct, with specific examples of overprescribing by New York providers directly exposed to the manufacturer’s deceptive marketing.  

The public health crisis that has ensued has taken the lives of thousands of New Yorkers and left many more addicted to opioids, whether prescribed by health care providers or obtained on the streets. The complaint alleges that because of their false and deceptive marketing of opioids and flooding New York with opioid pills, manufacturers and distributors bear responsibility for much of the human toll of this crisis.  

Each day, more than 130 people in the United States, about nine of whom live in New York, die as a result of opioid related overdoses. In 2017 alone, more than 3,200 New Yorkers died from opioid overdose. From 2000 to 2011, the number of prescriptions for opioid drugs produced by the manufacturers in this complaint more than quadrupled nationwide, despite no scientific basis for any significant increase in opioid treatment as medically necessary or appropriate. These prescriptions have proven to be an incredibly dangerous gateway to forms of illicit drugs - research shows that up to 80% of heroin users first became addicted as a result of exposure to prescription pills.  

Through their illegal actions, the amended complaint alleges that manufacturers and distributors have harmed New York financially by causing the state to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on services related to addiction treatment and support programs, antidote treatments and training, and medications and services to treat the additional physical morbidities that accompany opioid use disorder. The state has also had to pay false claims for inappropriate opioid prescriptions through its Medicaid program, its employee and retiree health plans, and its Workers’ Compensation Program. 

The lawsuit seeks to hold the manufacturers and distributors accountable for their dangerous and deceptive conduct by making them change their business practices and by obtaining financial compensation for New York State - specifically to abate the opioid epidemic through funding for prevention programs and addiction and medical treatment for affected New Yorkers. The amended complaint also seeks to recover the billions of dollars in profits from OxyContin sales that it alleges were fraudulently conveyed from Purdue Pharma to the Sackler family members who control the company.  

“Opioid dependency and related overdoses are a public health crisis that must be tackled from every angle,” said Joshua D. Lee MD, MSc, Associate Professor of Population Health and Medicine/General Internal Medicine and Clinical Innovation at the NYU School of Medicine and Director of the NYU Fellowship in Addiction Medicine. “As we seek to find the best interventions for opioid use disorders, those who fueled this crisis, marketing useful but addictive drugs into the market without disclosing the risks, must be held responsible. I thank Attorney General Letitia James for taking this bold action so we can beat this epidemic.”   

“The opioid crisis has had a devastating impact on our state – each day, we treat hundreds of New Yorkers and their families struggling with addiction,” said Gary Butchen, LCSWR, CASAC, SAP; Executive Director, Bridge Back to Life Center, Inc. “In 30 years of providing services, we have seen an exponential increase this decade in patients seeking assistance for opioid addiction compared to alcohol and other drugs. With Attorney General Letitia James’ lawsuit, those who made these lethal, addictive drugs so widely available may finally be held accountable.” 

The litigation team on this matter is headed by David Nachman, Counsel for Opioids and Impact Litigation, and includes John Oleske, Senior Enforcement Counsel; Christopher Leung and Sara Mark, Special Counsel in the Health Care Bureau; Elizabeth Chesler, Carol Hunt, Diane Johnston, Michael Reisman, Jennifer Simcovitch and Paulina Stamatelos, Assistant Attorneys General in the Health Care Bureau; Lawrence Reina, Assistant Attorney General in the Labor Bureau; Conor Duffy, Assistant Attorney General in the Civil Rights Bureau; Health Care Bureau Legal Assistant David Payne; and Corey Nugent in the IT Practice Technology Group. The Health Care Bureau is overseen by Bureau Chief Lisa Landau. 

Significant analysis was provided by the Research and Analytics Department, principally Data Scientist Katie Rosman, with additional assistance from Data Scientist Gautam Sisodia, Data Analyst Anushua Choudhury and other staff and interns under the leadership of Deputy Director Megan Thorsfeldt and Director Jonathan Werberg.  


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