February 16, 2022
Manchin Urges DOJ To Investigate Sackler Family For Role In Fueling Opioid Epidemic
Washington, DC – Today, U.S. Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) led seven
Senators in calling on the Department of Justice (DOJ) to investigate whether
members of the Sackler family personally engaged in criminal conduct in
connection with Purdue Pharma’s admitted criminal wrongdoing in fueling the
devastating opioid epidemic. The Senators also urged DOJ to investigate whether
any of the Sacklers’ subsequent conduct warrants criminal investigation.
In 2020, DOJ resolved its civil and criminal investigations into Purdue
Pharma for its role in the opioid epidemic. The company also pleaded guilty to
three felonies for its sale and marketing of OxyContin, and DOJ reached a civil
settlement with the Sackler family for their role in fueling this crisis. As
part of this settlement, DOJ reserved the right to bring charges against
individuals, including members of the Sackler family.
“This settlement and plea are little solace for the millions who lost
their lives and livelihoods at the hands of Purdue and the individuals at its
helm—the Sackler family,” the Senators said in part. “While the
Department also reached a civil settlement with certain individual members of
the Sackler family for their roles in causing this crisis, real justice in this
case means holding individual lawbreakers criminally accountable.”
As owners and operators of Purdue Pharma, the Sackler family exacerbated
the opioid epidemic’s staggering human and economic toll on hundreds of
thousands of Americans. When faced with declining sales in the 2000s, the
Sacklers employed aggressive marketing tactics to “turbocharge” OxyContin
sales, eventually resulting in Purdue pleading guilty to federal criminal
charges in 2007 for misleading doctors and regulators. Nevertheless, Purdue
continued these aggressive tactics in the years that followed, leading to the
company’s 2020 guilty plea. During this same time, the Attorney General of the
State of New York has alleged members of the Sackler family tried to shield
their fortunes from investigation by transferring billions of dollars from
Purdue to themselves.
Citing these alleged fraudulent transfers, a history of corporate
criminal wrongdoing, and attempts to avoid responsibility for an epidemic that
has taken lives and ravaged communities across the nation, the senators called
on DOJ to consider possible criminal charges for members of the Sackler family.
“As you well
know, the opioid epidemic continues to take a staggering human and economic
toll. There can be no doubt that this epidemic was exacerbated by Purdue and
the decades of criminal conduct it engaged in while owned and operated by the
Sackler family. For decades, the Sacklers have put themselves and their profits
before people, and, under their leadership, Purdue committed crimes that helped
fuel the opioid epidemic. If members of the Sackler family have any criminal
exposure as the individuals who directed and oversaw Purdue before, during, and
after Purdue engaged in the criminal conspiracies to which it pleaded guilty,
the Department must also take steps to hold the Sacklers accountable before
applicable statutes of limitations have run,” the Senators
continued.
Senator Manchin was joined by Senators Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Edward
J. Markey (D-MA), Ron Wyden (D-OR), Maggie Hassan (D-NH), Elizabeth Warren
(D-MA) and Tammy Baldwin (D-WI).
The full
text of the letter is available
here and below:
Dear Attorney
General Garland:
In October 2020,
the Department of Justice (DOJ) announced that it had resolved its civil and
criminal investigations into Purdue Pharma for fueling the devastating opioid
epidemic that has, for decades, taken lives and ravaged communities across the
nation. The next month, Purdue pleaded guilty to three felonies related to its
sale and marketing of OxyContin. This settlement and plea are little solace for
the millions who lost their lives and livelihoods at the hands of Purdue and
the individuals at its helm—the Sackler family.
While the
Department also reached a civil settlement with certain individual members of
the Sackler family for their roles in causing this crisis, real justice in this
case means holding individual lawbreakers criminally accountable. DOJ left that
door open with respect to the Sacklers, as the Department specifically reserved
the right to bring charges against individuals when it settled with Purdue. To
that end, we write to encourage the Department to review the information in its
possession and investigate whether members of the Sackler family engaged in
criminal conduct in connection with Purdue’s admitted criminal wrongdoing,
before any relevant statutes of limitations expire. We also write to urge DOJ
to investigate whether any of their subsequent conduct warrants criminal
investigation as well.
As you well
know, the opioid epidemic continues to take a staggering human and economic
toll. There can be no doubt that this epidemic was exacerbated by Purdue and
the decades of criminal conduct it engaged in while owned and operated by the
Sackler family. According to the Department’s settlement agreement with the
Sacklers, between 1996 and 2018, “members of the Sackler family directed and
oversaw Purdue’s development, manufacture, marketing, promotion, sales, and
distribution of opioids, including OxyContin and interactions with the Drug Enforcement
Administration and the Food and Drug Administration, the Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services, and the Department of Health and Human Services.”
It was, after
all, the Sacklers who—faced with declining sales in the mid-2000s—employed
various business tactics for Purdue to “turbocharge” its OxyContin sales all
while OxyContin was driving abuse and addiction and hundreds of thousands of
Americans had overdosed on the drug. Even after Purdue pleaded guilty to
federal criminal charges in 2007 for having misled doctors and regulators about
the risks of OxyContin, these aggressive tactics continued. In the Department’s
recent civil settlement, DOJ alleged that certain members of the Sackler family
“knew or should have known” that the “aggressive marketing program” Purdue
later developed had “thousands of prescribers . . . prescribing opioids that
were not always for a medically accepted indication[,] were sometimes unsafe,
ineffective, and medically unnecessary[,] and that were sometimes diverted for
uses that lacked a legitimate medical purpose.”
While Purdue,
under Sackler leadership, sold and marketed opioids in such a manner that it
later agreed to plead guilty, the Sacklers themselves sought to protect their
assets and shield their fortunes from investigations at the state and federal
levels that could—and would—lead to settlements and judgments. To do so, the
Attorney General for the State of New York alleged the Sackler family “used a
web of corporate entities to transfer funds from [Purdue] to themselves.” These
transfers were alleged to be fraudulent “because the [Sacklers] knew Purdue was
insolvent,” but nonetheless continued to transfer “over $10 billion” from
Purdue to themselves. In one instance, according to the New York
Attorney General, Mortimer D.A. Sackler—then serving on Purdue’s Board of
Directors—alone “transferred millions of dollars from trust companies . . . to
himself” less than two years after Purdue first pleaded guilty. This purported
conduct warrants investigation, too, under federal fraudulent transfer laws,
including 18 U.S.C. § 152(7).
That the
Department has taken steps to hold Purdue criminally accountable for its
actions, but not the Sacklers, suggests dissimilar treatment for similar—or
even the same—unlawful conduct. For decades, the Sacklers have put themselves
and their profits before people, and, under their leadership, Purdue committed
crimes that helped fuel the opioid epidemic. If members of the Sackler family
have any criminal exposure as the individuals who directed and oversaw Purdue
before, during, and after Purdue engaged in the criminal conspiracies to which
it pleaded guilty, the Department must also take steps to hold the Sacklers
accountable before applicable statutes of limitations have run.
Thank you for
your time and consideration.
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