This undated handout file photo obtained courtesy of the US Drug Enforcement Administration shows 20 mg pills of the opioid painkiller OxyContin (AFP Photo/Handout) |
Chicago (AFP) - The first civil trial that could end up holding a drug company responsible for the US opioid epidemic began Tuesday in Oklahoma, in a landmark case that might impact thousands of others like it.
The bench
trial pits the state of Oklahoma against Johnson & Johnson. Two other drug
companies named in the lawsuit settled ahead of the trial.
Oklahoma
has accused the three drug makers of deceptively marketing addictive opioid
painkillers, hyping their effectiveness and downplaying the risks of addiction.
The lawsuit
is the first of many of its kind to go to trial, and seen as an important test
of whether drug companies can be held accountable in court for an addiction
epidemic that has killed tens of thousands of Americans.
Oklahoma
Attorney General Mike Hunter in opening statements accused Johnson &
Johnson of being motivated by greed in embarking on "a cynical, deceitful
multimillion-dollar brainwashing campaign" to sell opioids as a
"magic drug."
"It's
time to hold them responsible for their actions," Hunter told the
presiding judge, who will decide the case in lieu of a jury.
Johnson
& Johnson has denied the charges levied by the state and its attorneys were
scheduled to make opening statements later in the afternoon.
There are
some 2,000 lawsuits brought by states, cities and Native American territories
across the country, all seeking compensation from makers of the highly
addictive prescription painkillers.
The
lawsuits are being compared to the 1998 cases against Big Tobacco, which ended
in a 46-state overarching settlement estimated at $250 billion in annual
payments over the first 25 years of it being in force.
In the
Oklahoma lawsuit, Israeli pharmaceutical giant Teva on Sunday settled the case
for $85 million.
Purdue
Pharma, maker of the opioid painkiller OxyContin -- a key driver of the crisis
-- reached a $270 million settlement with the state in March.
Overdoses
from prescription painkillers and heroin exploded over the last 20 years,
according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse.
Almost
400,000 people have died from an overdose involving prescription or illicit
opioids, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Pop icon
Prince and rocker Tom Petty were among the high-profile victims of the
epidemic.
The first civil trial that could end up holding a drug company responsible for the US opioid epidemic heard opening arguments in Oklahoma https://t.co/T4x8AAuq9E— AFP news agency (@AFP) 28 mei 2019
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