No Winners In The Opioid Case
Legal Notes|September - October 2019
Pain can make you rich and the opioid issue in the US is testimony to that. But other than the wealth it spawned, opioid has generated a huge number of legal cases in the US – and quite a few of them have been filed by the states. Will the Sacklers, one of the richest families in the US and the makers of the pain-relieving drug OxyContin, go scot free?
No Winners In The Opioid Case

It was love, love, love alone that caused King Edward to leave his throne … and it was greed, greed, greed alone that drove opioid manufacturers to oversell and overproduce the drugs, and trump the public’s health at every turn.

Hundreds of thousands of lives have been claimed, and everyday more than 130 people in the United States die after overdosing on opioids. To the victims left in its wake, a legal drama has unfolded. The case has the potential to transform key players in the epidemic, starting with the company most prominently linked to prescription opioids, OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma (a privately held company, based in Stamford, Connecticut) that filed for bankruptcy protection, which is seen as succumbing to pressure from more than 2,600 lawsuits alleging the company helped fuel the deadly US opioid epidemic.

This story is from the September - October 2019 edition of Legal Notes.

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This story is from the September - October 2019 edition of Legal Notes.

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