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Oklahoma Drops Some Claims To 'Refocus' Lawsuit Against Opioid-Makers

Oklahoma Attorney General Mike Hunter, pictured on Monday, has pared back the state's lawsuit against opioid drugmakers.
Sue Ogrocki
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AP
Oklahoma Attorney General Mike Hunter, pictured on Monday, has pared back the state's lawsuit against opioid drugmakers.

A week after winning a $270 million settlement against Purdue Pharma, Oklahoma is dropping a laundry list of civil claims against drug companies at the center of the national opioid epidemic. Oklahoma Attorney General Mike Hunter said the move would "refocus" the lawsuit slated to go to trial May 28.

"As we got closer to trial, it became more and more apparent to us that our strongest cause of action against the defendants was public nuisance," Hunter said in an interview with public media's StateImpact Oklahoma. Public nuisance refers to actions that harm members of the public, including injury to public health.

Hunter's suit still accuses companies including Johnson & Johnson, Allergan, and Teva Pharmaceuticals USA of contributing to a costly addiction crisis through aggressive marketing and sale of prescription opioid pain medications.

If the state's public nuisance claim prevails, Big Pharma could have to spend billions of dollars in Oklahoma helping ease the epidemic. "It doesn't diminish the amount of damages we believe we'll be able to justify to the judge," Hunter said, estimating a final payout could run into the "billions of dollars."

Last-minute legal maneuverings in the case are being closely watched because this is one of the first major opioid cases slated to go to trial this year. Legal experts have long predicted that many of the specific claims against drug companies would eventually be dropped or amended.

Alexandra Lahav, a law professor at the University of Connecticut, said, "I think it's possible that [the state] might think that they don't have sufficient evidence against these defendants, as opposed to the Purdue defendant."

"There's particularly bad evidence against Purdue, both depositions of members of the Sackler family and disparaging emails," Lahav said. "I don't know what evidence there is with respect to Johnson & Johnson and Teva. It's possible that they're looking at a lower verdict than they would if Purdue ... is out of the picture."

The filing by Hunter's team on Thursday effectively suspended claims by Oklahoma that drug companies committed fraud, deceit, enjoyed "unjust enrichment" or made false claims for compensation under the state's Medicaid program.

Sabrina Strong, attorney for Johnson & Johnson and its subsidiary Janssen Pharmaceuticals, issued a statement to NPR and other media outlets saying the move by Hunter showed that most of the claims were without merit.

"The evidence presented at trial will show that Janssen's actions in the marketing and promotion of its important, FDA-approved prescription pain medications were appropriate and responsible," Strong said. "We will continue to defend against the remaining baseless and unsubstantiated allegations."

Hunter said scaling back the state's lawsuit would accelerate the trial process so that any payouts from drug companies could be used to help communities recover from the epidemic. He also argued that the claims could be reinstated later.

"The state has suffered a good bit," Hunter said. "This is the most prudent and the most strategically efficient way to proceed."

Oklahoma's filing also urges state court Judge Thad Balkman to hear the case without a jury present. Attorneys for drug companies are expected to respond to that request early next week.

This story comes from North Country Public Radio and StateImpact Oklahoma.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Jackie Fortiér worked for StateImpact Oklahoma from November 2017 to January 2020, reporting on a variety of topics and heading up its health reporting initiative. She has many journalism awards to her name during her years of multi-media reporting in Colorado, and was part of a team recognized by the Society of Professional Journalists with a Sigma Delta Chi award for excellence in breaking news reporting in 2013.
Brian Mann is NPR's first national addiction correspondent. He also covers breaking news in the U.S. and around the world.
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