July 26, 2021
Manchin Urges Court To Reject $34.7 Million In Bonuses For Purdue Pharma's Top Executives, Employees
Under the
proposed plan, bonuses to Purdue executives and employees would often be larger
than payouts to victims and families
Washington, DC –
Today, U.S. Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) led six Senators in urging Judge Robert
D. Drain to reject Pharma’s recent motion requesting $34.7 million in employee
bonuses, including $5.4 million for its top executives, as part of Purdue’s bankruptcy
reorganization plan. West Virginia continues to have the highest drug overdose death
rate in the nation.
In the letter,
the Senators pointed out that under the proposed plan, approximately 500
bonus-eligible Purdue employees could receive a bonus of up to $67,000, while
victims of the opioid epidemic and their loved ones would be eligible to
receive far less in individual claims.
The Senators
said in part, “We write today in opposition to Purdue Pharma’s recent motion
requesting $34.7 million in employee bonuses, including $5.4 million for its
top executives, as part of Purdue’s Chapter 11 reorganization plan. If
approved, this offensive incentive plan could amount to an average bonus of
$67,000 per person for the approximately 500 bonus-eligible Purdue employees.
Meanwhile, Purdue’s proposed bankruptcy reorganization plan will cap payouts to
individual claimants at $48,000, but only in cases where an individual was
prescribed OxyContin and died as a direct result. Most victims and their
families will receive far less.”
According to the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), there were nearly 500,000
overdose deaths between 1999 and 2019, and 93,331 deaths in 2020 alone, with a
majority of those involving an opioid or synthetic opioid, of which Purdue
greatly contributed to. In 2020, 1,377
West Virginians died from drug related overdoses, a 49.3% increase from
2019. Even with the company pleading guilty to multiple federal crimes and
facing thousands of lawsuits, the company has continued to handsomely reward
its top executives.
“It would be
contrary to public policy and public health – and a miscarriage of justice – to
provide those running an alleged “criminal enterprise” with upwards of $35
million in bonuses, including $5.4 million for top executives and $67,000 per
employee, while individual victims can receive no more than $48,000. We
therefore request reallocation of these funds towards settlements with victims,
their families, and states and localities,” the Senators concluded.
Senator Manchin
was joined by U.S. Senators Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Tammy Baldwin (D-WI),
Tina Smith (D-MN), Maggie Hassan (D-NH), and Elizabeth Warren (D-MA).
In September
2020, Senator Manchin led five Senators in urging Judge Robert D. Drain to
reject Purdue Pharma’s proposal to pay President and CEO Craig Landau a bonus
of up to $3.5 million. In December
2019, Senator Manchin led eleven Senators in sending a letter to Purdue
Pharma asking them to cancel the reported bonuses they planned to give Mr.
Landau. Attorneys General from 24 states have argued that Landau should not
collect a bonus.
A timeline of
Senator Manchin’s efforts to address the opioid crisis can be found
here.
Read the full
letter below or click here.
Dear
Judge Drain,
We
write today in opposition to Purdue Pharma’s recent motion requesting $34.7
million in employee bonuses, including $5.4 million for its top executives, as
part of Purdue’s Chapter 11 reorganization plan. If approved, this offensive
incentive plan could amount to an average bonus of $67,000 per person for the
approximately 500 bonus-eligible Purdue employees. Meanwhile, Purdue’s proposed
bankruptcy reorganization plan will cap payouts to individual claimants at
$48,000, but only in cases where an individual was prescribed OxyContin and
died as a direct result. Most victims and their families will receive far less.
At a time when individual victims and their families seek compensation for the
devastating impact Purdue’s criminal actions have had on their lives, and as
governments at the federal, state, and local level seek out and put forth as
many resources as possible to fight back against an addiction crisis fueled by
Purdue, allowing nearly $35 million in funds to go towards executive and employee
bonuses is contrary to public health and public policy, and runs counter to the
company’s transition to a public benefit company (PBC). As such, we request the
funds currently proposed for executive and employee incentive and retention
plans instead be made available to victims, their families, and communities.
The
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that between 1999
and 2019, “[n]early 500,000 people died from overdoses involving any opioid,
including prescription and illicit opioids.” CDC attributes the “first wave” of
the opioid epidemic to “increased prescribing of opioids in the 1990s, with
overdose deaths involving prescription opioids (natural and semi-synthetic
opioids and methadone) increasing since at least 1999.” Worse, the opioid
epidemic is far from over. According to preliminary statistics recently
released by CDC and reported by the New York Times, there were 93,000 drug
overdose deaths in the nation throughout 2020 – a 30 percent increase from the
previous year, the largest single-year increase ever recorded, the most deaths
from opioids ever, and the most overdose deaths in a single year. The “first
wave” in the American opioid epidemic that Purdue contributed to has ushered in
a tidal wave of substance use disorder, overdoses, and death that our nation
still struggles to prevent.
Similarly,
the economic toll of addiction has been overwhelming. A recent report estimated
that in 2017 alone, the “economic cost of opioid use disorder ($471 billion)
and fatal opioid overdose ($550 billion)…totaled $1,021 billion,” or over $1
trillion. These costs, while national, are largely borne by individual states
and communities. Congress has intervened, appropriating tens of billions of
dollars over the past several years to provide states with some of the funds
needed to address the opioid epidemic, but more resources are clearly and
desperately needed as overdose rates surge. And while Purdue’s bankruptcy
proceedings have given the company the opportunity to determine set compensation
for their wrongdoing on an individual level, $48,000 per person lost to the
opioid crisis will never be enough for their loved ones.
The
opioid epidemic’s staggering human and economic toll on our country, greatly
exacerbated by the crimes committed by Purdue, led individuals, states, and
localities to take action and seek compensation for the lives lost or forever
altered by Purdue’s actions, and to help fund the seemingly insurmountable
public health effort to prevent and treat substance use disorder in our
communities. Despite this effort to ensure as much money as possible goes to
Purdue’s victims, their families, and communities affected by the opioid
epidemic, and despite Purdue filing for bankruptcy, the company has continued
to handsomely reward its top executives. For instance, Craig Landau, the
company’s CEO, has already received “more than $8.9 million” in payouts since
the company filed for bankruptcy. In total, top executives at the company have
received over $32 million since the company filed for bankruptcy.
The
latest request for over $34.7 million in additional bonuses, including $2.1
million for Landau and $5.4 million in total for Purdue’s top five executives
is offensive to victims and their families. While employee retention can be an
important aspect of bankruptcy reorganization plans, Purdue has pled guilty to
multiple federal crimes and is facing thousands of lawsuits, including those
from states, localities, and individual claimants, for tens of billions of
dollars. Furthermore, the bonus request is completely untenable with the
company’s plan to transition to a public benefit company (PBC) that functions
“entirely in the public interest” and demonstrates a complete lack of
understanding about the company’s future.
It
would be contrary to public policy and public health – and a miscarriage of
justice – to provide those running an alleged “criminal enterprise” with
upwards of $35 million in bonuses, including $5.4 million for top executives
and $67,000 per employee, while individual victims can receive no more than
$48,000. We therefore request reallocation of these funds towards settlements
with victims, their families, and states and localities.
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