Philadelphia Files Suit Over National Opioid Settlement
Philadelphia Files Suit Over National Opioid Settlement
In the first big challenge to the proposed $26 billion national opioid settlement, the Philadelphia district attorney on Thursday sued Pennsylvanias attorney general over the deal, saying the city stands to get only a pittance to cope with an epidemic that is killing more than 1,000 people a year.

In the first big challenge to the proposed $26 billion national opioid settlement, the Philadelphia district attorney on Thursday sued Pennsylvanias attorney general over the deal, saying the city stands to get only a pittance to cope with an epidemic that is killing more than 1,000 people a year.

With Philadelphia pursuing its own, potentially more lucrative litigation against the opioid industry, District Attorney Larry Krasner denounced the national agreement and asked a state court to declare that Attorney General Josh Shapiro has no authority to bind the city to it.

Krasner also blasted Shapiro, a fellow Democrat, for acquiescing to a settlement that he said fails to hold opioid distributors and manufacturers sufficiently accountable for the damage they have caused in Philadelphia and elsewhere.

We are not going to accept a settlement that is a sellout, Krasner said in a news conference. And from what I see, this is a sellout. The money is too low, the payments are too slow, and the money may never show.

A message was sent to Shapiros office seeking comment. In a statement Wednesday, the state’s top prosecutor and expected 2022 gubernatorial candidate acknowledged the opioid epidemics cost is far more than this deal but said it would provide an infusion of funds for treatment and addiction and put in place significant industry controls that will help prevent this type of crisis from happening again.

The national deal would be part of the ongoing effort to address the nationwide opioid addiction and overdose crisis. Prescription drugs and illegal ones like heroin and illicitly produced fentanyl have been linked to more than 500,000 deaths in the U.S. since 2000. The number of cases reached a record high in 2020.

If approved, the settlement will likely be the largest of many in the opioid litigation playing out nationwide. Its expected to bring more than $23 billion to abatement and mitigation efforts to help get treatment for people who are addicted along with other programs to address the crisis. The money would come in 18 annual payments, with the biggest amounts in the next several years.

Krasner said Philadelphia would get only $5 million to $8 million per year out of the agreement, with loopholes that he said could allow the companies to pay less or nothing at all. He said the city plans to continue pursuing its own lawsuits, predicting enormous legal awards that would dwarf what the city would receive under the national settlement.

We are expecting a number that looks, frankly, enormous, compared to this number, Krasner said.

The proposed national settlement would deliver about $1 billion to Pennsylvania but that assumes full participation by local governments, which have five months to decide.

The companies the drugmaker Johnson & Johnson and major drug distribution companies AmerisourceBergen, Cardinal Health and McKesson can back out of the settlement if they dont think enough state or local governments sign on. The fewer that sign on, the less the companies would pay.

Philadelphias lawsuits cannot and should not be extinguished by the Attorney Generals settlement, Krasner’s lawsuit against the attorney general said. Simply put, the Attorney General cannot and should not allow the Big 3 to name their own price for the Philadelphia lives they took.

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Rubinkam reported from northeastern Pennsylvania. Associated Press reporter Geoff Mulvihill in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, contributed to this story.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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