New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal
TRENTON Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal announced Thursday that the state has filed a lawsuit against eight members of Purdue Pharma's founding Sackler family, alleging that their greed-driven opioid marketing and sales strategy fomented the opioid crisis that continues to claim lives in New Jersey and across the nation.
The suit was filed in Essex County Superior Court. The complaint accuses the Sackler defendants of seeking to become unimaginably rich by deceptively promoting their company's opioid pain medications as rarely addictive, seeking to flood the market with Purdue's opioid pain products by encouraging risky prescribing practices, and by targeting vulnerable new patient populations, including the elderly.
Specifically, the complaint alleges that Sackler family members took part in a widespread campaign to deceive doctors and other caregivers with prescribing authority about the risks and benefits of Purdue's marquee opioid pain relief drug, OxyContin, as well as other dangerously addictive opioid pain medications made and sold by Purdue and prescription opioids generally.
The Sackler family built a multi-billion-dollar drug empire based on addiction, Grewal said. Despite knowing the harms that would result, the Sacklers drove Purdue to pursue deceitful sales campaigns for OxyContin and other highly addictive opioid painkillers, campaigns that were dutifully carried out by a small army of the company's employees. Our communities are still reeling from the epidemic of addiction and overdose deaths caused by their misconduct.
Sackler defendants include former Purdue CEO and President Dr. Richard S. Sackler, who also served as Purdue's head of research and development for nearly a decade; Jonathan D. Sackler; Dr. Kathe Sackler; Ilene Sackler Lefcourt; Mortimer D.A. Sackler; Beverly Sackler; Theresa Sackler; and David A. Sackler.
Each of the defendants sat on the Purdue Pharma Board of Directors for many years including some who served for the better part of three decades before leaving the board in 2017 or 2018.
The state's complaint lays out a callous plan by the Sacklers to use deception and misinformation to turn the medical community and the public --away from the prevailing view that opioids were so potent and potentially addictive that they should be prescribed sparingly.
The misinformation campaign worked, the complaint asserts, and the Sacklers managed through intensive marketing and high-pressure sales tactics to replace the old wisdom with a new mindset: that pain was an under-recognized and under-treated health care problem, and that opioids should be the first line of treatment for patients suffering from such chronic conditions as moderate back pain, migraine headaches and arthritis.
During their reign as controlling members of the Purdue Board of Directors, the Sacklers were not satisfied with merely raking in millions and millions of dollars. They wanted billions, Grewal said in a release. They cared more about money than they cared about patients, the public or the truth. So they pushed, on a near daily basis, to have more patients consuming more opioids at higher doses and for longer periods of time. To the detriment of all of us, they succeeded on a grand scale. Now it's time to hold them accountable.
Purdue Pharma makes a variety of opioid pain medications including Butrans and Hysingla ER. However, the company's most popular opioid pain medication by far has been OxyContin. Starting with the market debut of OxyContin in 1996, Purdue generated overall sales estimated at more than $35 billion.
The company's current annual revenues are estimated at approximately $3 billion, mostly from the sale of OxyContin.
The lawsuit includes three counts of violating the New Jersey Consumer Fraud Act and one count of violating the State's False Claims Act, and seeks monetary damages for false claims, maximum statutory penalties under the Consumer Fraud Act and the False Claims Act, disgorgement of any ill-gotten gains, and other relief as contribution for the costly solutions -- including addiction treatment and prescriber education -- required to abate the opioid crisis in New Jersey.
According to the complaint, the state's largest Medicaid managed care organization paid $109 million for opioids much of it based on false claims caused by the defendants' misconduct -- through the Medicaid program between 2008 and 2017.
The state paid another $6 million under its Workers' Compensation Program during the same time span, and approximately $136 million under its State Employee and Retiree Health Plans between 2012 and 2017. The bulk of those expenditures were for Purdue opioids, the complaint alleges.
The complaint contends the Sacklers sought to change the U.S. health care landscape concerning opioids in the late 1990s.
Among other actions, the complaint charges that Purdue under the direction of the Sacklers:
Concerned about sales figures that were not up to expectations, the complaint notes, Richard Sackler wanted to shadow company sales reps at a rate of two per day to ensure they were on message and focusing their opioid sales pitches on physicians who had already established a track record of being among the highest prescribing doctors.
According to internal e-mails cited in the complaint, a Purdue vice-president (not a Sackler) reacted to this idea by writing the company's compliance department and expressing his concern that Richard Sackler in the field promoting opioids was a potential compliance risk.
The email reply from compliance read simply: LOL. In another e-mail related to the same request, a Purdue staffer wrote that, Richard needs to be mum and anonymous.
The following Division of Law attorneys are handling the Sackler lawsuit on behalf of the State: Deputy Attorney General Jesse Sierant (Consumer Fraud Prosecution Section); Deputy Attorney General and Assistant Section Chief Patricia Schiripo (Consumer Fraud Prosecution Section); Deputy Attorney General Brian De Vito (Government & HealthCare Fraud Section), Assistant Attorney General Janine Matton (Affirmative Civil Enforcement) and Assistant Attorney General Kevin Jespersen.
In addition, the Attorney General has retained the law firm of Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll, PLC to assist the Office in this litigation.
Sackler Complaint Redacted FILED