Outgoing Tennessee Attorney General Herbert H. Slatery III announced via a press statement on Wednesday that his office reached an agreement in principle with the opioid maker Endo International PLC and its lenders that “would provide up to $450 million to participating states and local governments, ban promotion of Endo’s opioids, and require Endo to turn over millions of documents related to its role in the opioid crisis for publication in a public online archive.”
“In Tennessee, Endo’s tactics were especially profitable for them and devastating for us,” Slatery said in the statement. “From 2009-2015, Tennessee’s Opana ER sales were the highest in the nation, and the drug was abused at three times the rate of the older formulation.”
Slatery’s office described the agreement in the press release.
“The agreement in principle with Endo, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Tuesday night in the Southern District of New York, resolves allegations that Endo boosted opioid sales using deceptive marketing that downplayed the risk of addiction and overstated the benefits,” the statement said.
“Endo, an Ireland-based drugmaker with its U.S. headquarters in Malvern, Pennsylvania, makes generic and branded opioids including Percocet and Endocet, and also made Opana ER, which was withdrawn from the market in 2017. The states allege that Endo falsely promoted the benefits of Opana ER’s so-called abuse-deterrent formulation, which did nothing to deter oral abuse and led to deadly outbreaks of Hepatitis and HIV due to its widespread abuse via injection,” added the office.
The agreement, which is contingent on final documentation and bankruptcy court approval, “requires payment of $450 million in cash over 10 years to participating states and subdivisions.”
It also “requires Endo to turn over its opioid-related documents for publication online in a public document archive and pay $2.75 million for archival expenses,” and “bans the marketing of Endo’s opioids forever.”
Tennessee led the negotiations, joined by six additional states: Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Vermont, and Virginia. The settlement is also joined by the attorneys general of Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey, North Carolina, North Dakota, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming, and the U.S. Virgin Islands are participating as well.
Slatery leaves office on August 31, did not seek reappointment to the role, and his replacement Jonathan Skrmetti will take office on September 1.
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Aaron Gulbransen is a reporter at The Tennessee Star and The Star News Network. Email tips to [email protected]. Follow Aaron on GETTR, Twitter, Truth Social, and Parler.
My dead son hated “Pharma” and the politicians who got fat on their money. He knew what their lust for wealth and power had done to him. Why not fund long term addiction recovery programs with every penny these people have.
this is good news but seems to me the medical profession should be called in also for prescribing these