Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Opioid Complaint
Opioid Complaint
______________________________________
)
THE MAYOR AND ALDERMEN OF )
THE CITY OF SAVANNAH, )
A GEORGIA MUNICIPAL )
CORPORATION, )
)
Plaintiff, )
)
v. ) CIVIL ACTION NO. _________________
)
AMERISOURCEBERGEN DRUG )
CORPORATION, )
CARDINAL HEALTH, INC., )
McKESSON CORPORATION, )
PURDUE PHARMA L.P.; PURDUE )
PHARMA, INC.; THE PURDUE FREDERICK )
COMPANY, INC.; TEVA )
PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRIES, LTD.; ) COMPLAINT
TEVA PHARMACEUTICALS USA, INC.; )
CEPHALON, INC.; JOHNSON & JOHNSON; ) Complaint for Public Nuisance; Violations
JANSSEN PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.; ) of Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt
ORTHO-MCNEIL-JANSSEN ) Organizations Act (RICO) 18 U.S.C. § 1961
PHARMACEUTICALS, INC. n/k/a JANSSEN ) et seq.; O.C.G.A. § 16-14-1 et seq.;
PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.; JANSSEN ) Negligence; Negligence Per Se; Violation of
PHARMACEUTICA INC. n/k/a JANSSEN ) Georgia Deceptive Trade Practices Act,
PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.; ) OCGA § 10-1-370 et seq.; False Statement
ENDO HEALTH SOLUTIONS INC.; ) in Advertising, OCGA § 10-1-421 et. seq;
ENDO PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.; ) and Violation of Legal Duty Owed to
ALLERGAN PLC f/k/a ACTAVIS PLS; ) Plaintiff, OCGA § 51-1-6.
WATSON PHARMACEUTICALS, INC. n/k/a )
ACTAVIS, INC.; )
WATSON LABORATORIES, INC.; )
ACTAVIS LLC; ) JURY TRIAL DEMANDED
ACTAVIS PHARMA, INC. f/k/a WATSON )
PHARMA, INC.; and MALLINCKRODT LLC,)
)
Defendants. )
______________________________________ )
Case 4:18-cv-00087-WTM-GRS Document 1 Filed 04/17/18 Page 2 of 139
I. PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
1. Plaintiff, the Mayor and Aldermen of the City of Savannah, a Georgia Municipal
services for its citizens and residents, including law enforcement, emergency medical
assistance, services for families and children, public assistance, public welfare, and other
care and services for the health, safety and welfare of its citizens and residents. The rising
numbers of people addicted to opioids have led to significantly increase d costs, as well as
a dramatic increase of social problems, including, but not limited to, drug abuse and the
generic drugs like oxycodone and hydrocodone. These drugs are derived from or possess
properties similar to opium and heroin, and, as such, they are highly addictive and
dangerous.
3. Opioid analgesics are widely diverted and improperly used, and the widespread
abuse of opioids has resulted in a national epidemic of opioid overdose deaths and addictions.2
4. Plaintiff brings this civil action to recover damages from the Defendants, who
are manufacturers and distributors of opioids, and to eliminate the hazard to public health
and safety caused by the opioid epidemic, to abate the nuisance caused thereby, and to recoup
monies that have been spent, or will be spent, because of Defendants’ false, deceptive and
As used herein, the term “opioid” or “opioids” refers to the entire family of opiate drugs including
1
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II. PARTIES
A. Plaintiff
County, Georgia. As such, it has all of the expressed and inherent powers granted by the
Constitution of the State of Georgia, and the laws of the State of Georgia.
6. In the City of Savannah, opioid abuse, addiction, morbidity and mortality has
created a serious public health and safety crisis, is a public nuisance, and the diversion of
opioids into the illicit market causes or contributes to this public nuisance.
7. The distribution and diversion of opioids into the City of Savannah created the
foreseeable opioid crisis and public nuisance for which Plaintiff seeks relief.
Defendants’ conduct as alleged herein. Categories of past and continuing damages include, but
are not limited to; (1) costs associated with law enforcement and public safety relating to the
opioid epidemic: (2) costs for providing emergency services, medical care, therapeutic care, and
other treatments for patients suffering from opioid-related addiction or disease, including
overdoses and deaths; (3) costs for prescription drug purchases; and (4) such other costs as may
9. Plaintiff also seeks the means to abate the opioid epidemic created by Defendants’
wrongful and/or unlawful conduct. Plaintiff is authorized by law to abate any nuisance and
prosecute any person or entity who creates, continues or contributes to such nuisance, and to
10. Plaintiff has standing to bring this action and recover damages incurred as a result
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B. Manufacturer Defendants
11. At all relevant times, certain Defendants named below packaged, distributed,
supplied, sold, placed into the stream of commerce, labeled, described, marketed, advertised,
promoted, and purported to warn, or purported to inform prescribers and users regarding the
benefits and risks associated with the use of the prescription opioid drugs. These Defendants (the
“Manufacturer Defendants”) manufactured and sold prescription opioids without fulfilling their
12. PURDUE PHARMA L.P. is a limited partnership organized under the laws of
Delaware. PURDUE PHARMA INC. is a New York corporation with its principal place of
(collectively, “Purdue”).
the United States. OxyContin is Purdue’s best-selling opioid. Since 2009, Purdue’s annual
nationwide sales of OxyContin have fluctuated between $2.47 billion and $2.99 billion, up
four-fold from its 2006 sales of $800 million. OxyContin constitutes roughly 30% of the
14. CEPHALON, INC. is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business
is an Israeli corporation with its principal place of business in Petah Tikva, Israel. In 2011, Teva
Ltd. acquired Cephalon, Inc. TEVA PHARMACEUTICALS USA, INC. (“Teva USA”) is a
subsidiary of Teva Ltd. in Pennsylvania. Teva USA acquired Cephalon in October 2011.
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15. Cephalon, Inc. manufactures, promotes, sells, and distributes opioids such as
Actiq and Fentora in the United States. Actiq has been approved by the FDA only for the
“management of breakthrough cancer pain in patients 16 years and older with malignancies who
are already receiving and who are tolerant to around-the-clock opioid therapy for the underlying
persistent cancer pain.”3 Fentora has been approved by the FDA only for the “management of
breakthrough pain in cancer patients 18 years of age and older who are already receiving and
who are tolerant to around-the-clock opioid therapy for their underlying persistent cancer pain.”4
In 2008, Cephalon pled guilty to a criminal violation of the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic
Act for its misleading promotion of Actiq and two other drugs, and agreed to pay $425 million.5
16. Teva Ltd., Teva USA, and Cephalon, Inc. work together closely to market
and sell Cephalon products in the United States. Teva Ltd. conducts all sales and
marketing activities for Cephalon in the United States through Teva USA and has done so
since its October 2011 acquisition of Cephalon. Teva Ltd. and Teva USA hold out Actiq
and Fentora as Teva products to the public. Teva USA sells all former Cephalon branded
products through its “specialty medicines” division. The FDA-approved prescribing information
and medication guide, which is distributed with Cephalon opioids, discloses that the guide was
submitted by Teva USA, and directs physicians to contact Teva USA to report adverse events.
3
Highlights of Prescribing Information, ACTIQ® (fentanyl citrate) oral transmucosal lozenge, CII
(2009), https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2009/020747s030lbl.pdf.
4
Highlights of Prescribing Information, FENTORA® (fentanyl citrate) buccal tablet, CII (2011),
https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2012/021947s015lbl.pdf.
5
Press Release, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Biopharmaceutical Company, Cephalon, to Pay $425 Million &
Enter Plea to Resolve Allegations of Off-Label Marketing (Sept. 29, 2008),
https://www.justice.gov/archive/opa/pr/2008/September/08-civ-860.html.
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17. Cephalon’s promotional websites, including those for Actiq and Fentora,
display Teva Ltd.’s logo.6 Teva Ltd.’s financial reports list Cephalon’s and Teva USA’s sales as
its own, and its year-end report for 2012 – the year immediately following the Cephalon
acquisition – attributed a 22% increase in its specialty medicine sales to “the inclusion of a full
year of Cephalon’s specialty sales,” including inter alia sales of Fentora®.7 Teva Ltd. operates
in the United States through its subsidiaries Cephalon and Teva USA. The United States is the
largest of Teva Ltd.’s global markets, representing 53% of its global revenue in 2015. Upon
information and belief, Teva Ltd. directs the business practices of Cephalon and Teva USA, and
their profits inure to the benefit of Teva Ltd. as controlling shareholder. Teva Pharmaceutical
Industries, Ltd., Teva Pharmaceuticals USA, Inc., and Cephalon, Inc. are referred to
collectively as “Cephalon.”
principal place of business in Titusville, New Jersey, and is a wholly owned subsidiary of
JOHNSON & JOHNSON (J&J), a New Jersey corporation with its principal place of business in
registered to do business in Georgia with its principal place of business in Titusville, New
business in Titusville, New Jersey. J&J is the only company that owns more than 10% of
Janssen Pharmaceuticals’ stock, and corresponds with the FDA regarding Janssen’s products.
6
E.g., ACTIQ, http://www.actiq.com/ (displaying logo at bottom-left) (last visited Aug. 21, 2017).
7
Teva Ltd., Annual Report (Form 20) 62 (Feb. 12, 2013),
http://annualreports.com/HostedData/AnnualReportArchive/t/NASDAQ_TEVA_2012.pdf.
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Upon information and belief, J&J controls the sale and development of Janssen
Pharmaceuticals’ drugs and Janssen’s profits inure to J&J’s benefit. Janssen Pharmaceuticals,
Inc., Ortho-McNeil-Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Janssen Pharmaceutica, Inc., and J&J are
referred to as “Janssen.”
19. Janssen manufactures, promotes, sells, and distributes drugs in the United States,
including the opioid Duragesic (fentanyl). Before 2009, Duragesic accounted for at least $1
billion in annual sales. Until January 2015, Janssen developed, marketed, and sold the opioids
Nucynta (tapentadol) and Nucynta ER. Together, Nucynta and Nucynta ER accounted for $172
20. ENDO HEALTH SOLUTIONS INC. is a Delaware corporation with its principal
wholly owned subsidiary of Endo Health Solutions Inc. and is a Delaware corporation
Pennsylvania. Endo Health Solutions Inc. and Endo Pharmaceuticals Inc. are referred to
collectively as “Endo.”
21. Endo develops, markets, and sells prescription drugs, including the opioids
Opana/Opana ER, Percodan, Percocet, and Zydone, in the United States. Opioids made up
roughly $403 million of Endo’s overall revenues of $3 billion in 2012. Opana ER yielded $1.15
billion in revenue from 2010 and 2013, and it accounted for 10% of Endo’s total revenue in 2012.
Endo also manufactures and sells generic opioids such as oxycodone, oxymorphone,
hydromorphone, and hydrocodone products in the United States, by itself and through its
22. ALLERGAN PLC is a public limited company incorporated in Ireland with its
principal place of business in Dublin, Ireland. ACTAVIS PLC acquired ALLERGAN PLC in
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March 2015, and the combined company changed its name to ALLERGAN PLC in January 2013.
2012, and the combined company changed its name to Actavis, Inc. as of January 2013 and then
with its principal place of business in Corona, California, and is a wholly-owned subsidiary
of ALLERGAN PLC (f/k/a Actavis, Inc., f/k/a Watson Pharmaceuticals, Inc.). ACTAVIS
PHARMA, INC. (f/k/a Actavis, Inc.) is registered to do business with the Georgia Secretary of
State as a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in New Jersey and was
formerly known as WATSON PHARMA, INC. ACTAVIS LLC is a Delaware limited liability
company with its principal place of business in Parsippany, New Jersey. Each of these
defendants is owned by ALLERGAN PLC, which uses them to market and sell its drugs in
the United States. Upon information and belief, ALLERGAN PLC exercises control over
these marketing and sales efforts and profits from the sale of Allergan/Actavis products
ultimately inure to its benefit. ALLERGAN PLC, ACTAVIS PLC, ACTAVIS, Inc., Actavis
LLC, Actavis Pharma, Inc., Watson Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Watson Pharma, Inc., and Watson
23. Actavis manufactures, promotes, sells, and distributes opioids, including the
branded drugs Kadian and Norco, a generic version of Kadian, and generic versions of
Duragesic and Opana, in the United States. Actavis acquired the rights to Kadian from King
Pharmaceuticals, Inc. on December 30, 2008, and began marketing Kadian in 2009.
under the laws of the State of Delaware and licensed to do business in Georgia. Mallinckrodt,
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25. Mallinckrodt manufactures, markets, and sells drugs in the United States including
Mallinckrodt agreed to pay $35 million to settle allegations brought by the Department of Justice
that it failed to detect and notify the DEA of suspicious orders of controlled substances.
C. Distributor Defendants
26. At all relevant times, certain Defendants named below distributed, supplied, sold,
and placed into the stream of commerce the prescription opioids, without fulfilling the
fundamental duty of wholesale drug distributors to detect and warn of diversion of dangerous
drugs for non-medical purposes. These Defendants (the “Distributor Defendants”) failed to comply
with federal and/or state law. Plaintiff alleges the unlawful conduct by the Distributor
Defendants is responsible for the volume of prescription opioids entering into and plaguing the
City of Savannah.
licensed pharmacy wholesaler in Georgia. McKesson is registered with the Georgia Secretary
of State as a Delaware corporation. McKesson has its principal place of business located in San
Francisco, California.
including Cardinal Health 100, Inc. with the Georgia Secretary of State as an Indiana
corporation, with its principal office located in Dublin, Ohio. Cardinal Health, Inc. is an
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corporation which may be served through its registered agent for service of process.
30. The data which reveals and/or confirms the identity of each wrongful opioid
distributor is hidden from public view in the DEA’s confidential ARCOS database. See
Madel v. USDOJ, 784 F.3d 448 (8th Cir. 2015). Neither the DEA8 nor the wholesale
distributors9 will voluntarily disclose the data necessary to identify with specificity the
transactions which will form the evidentiary basis for the many claims asserted herein.
31. Consequently, Plaintiff has named the three (3) wholesale distributors (i.e.,
AmerisourceBergen Drug Corporation, Cardinal Health, Inc., and McKesson Corporation) which
dominate 85% of the market share for the distribution of prescription opioids, whose principal
business is the nationwide wholesale distribution of prescription drugs. See Fed. Trade Comm'n
v. Cardinal Health, Inc., 12 F. Supp. 2d 34, 37 (D.D.C. 1998) (describing Cardinal Health, Inc.,
been investigated and/or fined by the DEA for the failure to report suspicious orders. Plaintiff
has reason to believe each has engaged in unlawful conduct which resulted in the diversion
of prescription opioids into Plaintiff’s community and that discovery will likely reveal
others who likewise engaged in unlawful conduct. Plaintiff names each of these corporations
herein as defendants and places the industry on notice that the Plaintiff is acting to abate the
8
Declaration of Katherine L. Myrick, Chief, Freedom of Information (FOI)/Privacy Act Unit (“SARF”),
FOI, Records Management Section (“SAR”), Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), United States
Department of Justice (DOJ), Madel v. USDOJ, Case 0:13-cv-02832-PAM-FLN, (Document 23) (filed
02/06/14) (noting that ARCOS data is “kept confidential by the DEA”).
9
See Declaration of Tina Lantz, Cardinal Health VP of Sales Operation, Madel v. USDOJ, Case 0:13-
cv-02832- PAM-FLN, (Document 93) (filed 11/02/16) (“Cardinal Health does not customarily release
any of the information identified by the DEA notice letter to the public, nor is the information publicly
available. Cardinal Health relies on DEA to protect its confidential business information reported to the
Agency.”).
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public nuisance plaguing the community. Plaintiff will request expedited discovery pursuant to
Rule 26(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure to secure the data necessary to reveal
and/or confirm the identities of the wholesale distributors, including data from the ARCOS
database.
32. This Court has jurisdiction based upon complete diversity of Plaintiff and
Defendants pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Defendants are subject to the Court’s jurisdiction
servants and employees, regularly transacted business in Georgia, manufactured, supplied, and
distributed opioids in Georgia, and through their illegal acts and omissions, tortuously caused
injuries in Georgia. Defendants derived substantial revenue as the result of the opioids that were
distributed in Georgia and later consumed by persons then residing in Georgia. Damages sought
33. Defendants are also subject to the Court’s jurisdiction because Defendants conduct
business in Georgia, purposefully direct or directed their actions toward Georgia, consented to be
sued in Georgia by registering an agent for service of process, consensually submitted to the
jurisdiction of Georgia when obtaining a manufacturer or distributor license, and have the
requisite minimum contacts with Georgia necessary to permit the Court to exercise jurisdiction
over Defendants.
34. This Court also has personal jurisdiction over all of the Defendants under 18
U.S.C. § 1965(b). This Court may exercise nation-wide jurisdiction over the named
Defendants where the “ends of justice” require national service and Plaintiff demonstrates
national contacts. Here, the interests of justice require that Plaintiff be allowed to bring all
members of the nationwide RICO enterprise before the Court in a single trial. See, e.g., Iron
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Case 4:18-cv-00087-WTM-GRS Document 1 Filed 04/17/18 Page 12 of 139
Workers Local Union No. 17 Insurance Fund v. Philip Morris Inc., 23 F. Supp. 2d 796 (1998)
(citing LaSalle National Bank v. Arroyo Office Plaza, Ltd., 1988 WL 23824, *3 (N.D. Ill. Mar 10,
1988); Butcher’s Union Local No. 498 v. SDC Invest., Inc., 788 F.2d 535, 539 (9th Cir. 1986).
35. Venue is proper in the Southern District of Georgia, Savannah Division, under
Local Rule 2 and pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1391 and 18 U.S.C. § 1965, as a substantial part of the
events or omissions giving rise to the claim occurred in this District and each Defendant transacted
affairs and conducted activity that gave rise to the claim of relief in this District. 28 U.S.C. §§
1391(b); § 1965(a).
36. Plaintiff does not bring any product liability claims or causes of action and does
not seek compensatory damages for death, physical injury to person, or emotional distress.
Plaintiff does not bring common law claims for property damage.
37. The past two decades have been characterized by increasing abuse and
38. Prescription opioids have become widely prescribed. By 2010, enough prescription
opioids were sold to medicate every adult in the United States with a dose of 5 milligrams
39. By 2011, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Resources, Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, declared prescription painkiller overdoses at epidemic levels.
10
See Richard C. Dart et al, Trends in Opioid Analgesic Abuse and Mortality in the United States, 372
N. Eng. J. Med. 241 (2015).
11
Katherine M. Keyes at al., Understanding the Rural-Urban Differences in Nonmedical Prescription
Opioid Use and Abuse in the United States, 104 Am. J. Pub. Health e52 (2014).
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a. The death toll from overdoses of prescription painkillers has more than
tripled in the past decade.
b. More than 40 people die every day from overdoses involving narcotic pain
relievers like hydrocodone (Vicodin), methadone, oxycodone (OxyContin),
and oxymorphone (Opana).
40. The number of annual opioid prescriptions written in the United States is now
41. Many Americans are now addicted to prescription opioids, and the number of
deaths due to prescription opioid overdose is unacceptable. In 2016, drug overdoses killed
roughly 64,000 people in the United States, an increase of more than 22 percent over the
42. Moreover, the CDC has identified addiction to prescription pain medication as the
strongest risk factor for heroin addiction. People who are addicted to prescription opioid
current heroin users report having used prescription opioids non-medically before they
12
See Press Release, Ctrs. for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. Dep’t of Health and Human Servs.,
Prescription Painkiller Overdoses at Epidemic Levels (Nov. 1, 2011),
https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2011/p1101_flu_pain_killer_overdose.html.
13
See Califf et al., supra note 3
14
See Ctrs. for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. Dep’t of Health and Human Servs., Provisional
Counts of Drug Overdose Deaths, (August 8, 2016),
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/health_policy/monthly-drug-overdose-death-estimates.pdf.
15
See Ctrs. for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. Dep’t of Health and Human Servs., Today’s
Heroin Epidemic, https://www.cdc.gov/vitalsigns/heroin/index.html (last updated July 7, 2015).
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initiated heroin use. Available data indicates that the nonmedical use of prescription opioids is a
44. The CDC reports that drug overdose deaths involving heroin continued to climb
sharply, with heroin overdoses more than tripling in 4 years. This increase mirrors large
increases in heroin use across the country and has been shown to be closely tied to opioid
pain reliever misuse and dependence. Past misuse of prescription opioids is the strongest risk
factor for heroin initiation and use, specifically among persons who report past-year
dependence or abuse. The increased availability of heroin, combined with its relatively low price
(compared with diverted prescription opioids) and high purity appear to be major drivers of
46. Across the nation, local governments are struggling with a pernicious, ever-
expanding epidemic of opioid addiction and abuse. Every day, more than 90 Americans lose
47. The National Institute on Drug Abuse identifies misuse and addiction to
opioids as “a serious national crisis that affects public health as well as social and economic
16
See Wilson M. Compton, Relationship Between Nonmedical Prescription-Opioid Use and Heroin,
374 N. Eng. J. Med. 154 (2016).
17
See Rose A. Rudd et al., Increases in Drug and Opioid Overdose Deaths—United States, 2000–2014,
64 Morbidity & Mortality Wkly. Rep. 1378 (2016).
18
See Amicus Curiae Brief of Healthcare Distribution Management Association in Support of Appellant
Cardinal Health, Inc., Cardinal Health, Inc. v. United States Dept. Justice, No. 12-5061 (D.C. Cir. May 9,
2012), 2012 WL 1637016, at *10 [hereinafter Brief of HDMA].
19
Opioid Crisis, NIH, National Institute on Drug Abuse (available at https://www.drugabuse.gov/drugs-
abuse/opioids/opioid-crisis, last visited April 9, 2018) (“Opioid Crisis, NIH”) (citing at note 1 Rudd RA,
Seth P, David F, Scholl L. Increases in Drug and Opioid-Involved Overdose Deaths — United States,
2010–2015. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2016;65:1445–1452. DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.15585/mmwr.mm655051e1)
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welfare.”20 The economic burden of prescription opioid misuse alone is $78.5 billion a year,
including the costs of healthcare, lost productivity, addiction treatment, and criminal justice
expenditures.21
48. The U.S. opioid epidemic is continuing, and drug overdose deaths nearly tripled
during 1999–2014. Among 47,055 drug overdose deaths that occurred in 2014 in the United
49. The rate of death from opioid overdose has quadrupled during the past 15
years in the United States. Nonfatal opioid overdoses that require medical care in a hospital or
50. Every day brings a new revelation regarding the depth of the opioid plague: just
to name one example, the New York Times reported in September 2017 that the epidemic, which
now claims 60,000 lives a year, is now killing babies and toddlers because ubiquitous, deadly
51. The epidemic of prescription pain medication and heroin deaths is devastating
families and communities across the country.25 Meanwhile, the manufacturers and distributors
20
Opioid Crisis, NIH.
21
Id. (citing at note 2 Florence CS, Zhou C, Luo F, Xu L, The Economic Burden of Prescription Opioid
Overdose, Abuse, and Dependence in the United States, 2013, MED CARE 2016;54(10):901-906,
doi:10.1097/MLR.0000000000000625).
22
See Rose A. Rudd et al., Increases in Drug and Opioid-Involved Overdose Deaths—United States,
2010–2015, 65 Morbidity & Mortality Wkly. Rep. 1445 (2016).
23
See Volkow & McLellan, supra note 1.
24
Julie Turkewitz, ‘The Pills are Everywhere’: How the Opioid Crisis Claims Its Youngest Victims,
N.Y. Times, Sept. 20, 2017 (“‘It’s a cancer,’ said [grandmother of dead one-year old], of the nation’s
opioid problem, ‘with tendrils that are going everywhere.’”).
25
See Presidential Memorandum – Addressing Prescription Drug Abuse and Heroin Use, 2015 Daily
Comp. Pres. Doc. 743 (Oct. 21, 2015), https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/DCPD-201500743/pdf/DCPD-
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of prescription opioids extract billions of dollars of revenue from the addicted American
public while public entities experience tens of millions of dollars of injury caused by the
Defendants, have continued their wrongful, intentional, and unlawful conduct, despite their
knowledge that such conduct is causing and/or continuing to the national, state, and local opioid
epidemic.
53. The State of Georgia has been impacted severely by the national opioid crisis.
54. Georgia has an opioid prescription rate of 90.7 per 100 persons, which ranks
55. As reported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Georgia has been
among the states hardest hit by the opioid epidemic for years. From 2001 to 2015, Georgia’s
201500743.pdf.
26
See Leonard J. Paulozzi, M.D., et al., Vital Signs: Variation Among States in Prescribing of Opioid
Pain Relievers and Benzodiazepines – United States, 2012, Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report,
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (July 4,
2014). The combination of hydrocodone, oxycodone, and benzodiazepines is referred to as the “holy
trinity” and significantly increases the risk of harm to those that abuse prescription pills.
27
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) National Center for Health Statistics.
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56. According to the Georgia Department of Public Health and the Office of Health
Indicators of Planning, in 2015, approximately 549 opioid-related drug overdose deaths occurred.
In 2007, healthcare costs associated with opioid misuse in Georgia were approximately $447
from 2010-2014 were approximately $52,856 per baby, and this cost has only increased.
57. The City of Savannah comprises the largest metropolitan area within Chatham
County. Plaintiff and its community have suffered as a result of the opioid crisis. The rate of
opioid prescriptions per 100 persons in Chatham County is far greater than the national average.
Between 2006 and 2016, Chatham County experienced an annual rate as high as 104.5 opioid
prescriptions per 100 persons within the County, and averaged 96 opioid prescriptions per 100
59. Before the 1990s, generally accepted standards of medical practice dictated that
opioids should only be used short-term for acute pain, pain relating to recovery from surgery,
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or for cancer or palliative (end-of-life) care. Because of the lack of evidence that opioids
improved patients’ ability to overcome pain and function, coupled with evidence of greater pain
complaints as patients developed tolerance to opioids over time and the serious risk of
addiction and other side effects, the use of opioids for chronic pain was discouraged or
prohibited. As a result, doctors generally did not prescribe opioids for chronic pain.
60. Each Manufacturer Defendant has conducted, and has continued to conduct, a
marketing scheme designed to persuade doctors and patients that opioids can and should be used
for chronic pain, resulting in opioid treatment for a far broader group of patients who are much
more likely to become addicted and suffer other adverse effects from the long-term use of
opioids. In connection with this scheme, each Manufacturer Defendant spent, and continues to
spend, millions of dollars on promotional activities and materials that falsely deny or trivialize
the risks of opioids while overstating the benefits of using them for chronic pain.
61. The Manufacturer Defendants have made false and misleading claims, contrary
to the language on their drugs’ labels, regarding the risks of using their drugs that: (1)
downplayed the serious risk of addiction; (2) created and promoted the concept of
“pseudoaddiction” when signs of actual addiction began appearing and advocated that the signs
of addiction should be treated with more opioids; (3) exaggerated the effectiveness of screening
tools to prevent addiction; (4) claimed that opioid dependence and withdrawal are easily
managed; (5) denied the risks of higher opioid dosages; and (6) exaggerated the effectiveness of
Defendants have also falsely touted the benefits of long-term opioid use, including the
supposed ability of opioids to improve function and quality of life, even though there was
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reverse the popular and medical understanding of opioids and risks of opioid use. They
disseminated these messages directly, through their sales representatives, in speaker groups
led by physicians the Manufacturer Defendants recruited for their support of their
marketing messages, and through unbranded marketing and industry-funded front groups.
63. Defendants’ efforts have been successful. Opioids are now the most prescribed
class of drugs. Globally, opioid sales generated $11 billion in revenue for drug companies in
2010 alone; sales in the United States have exceeded $8 billion in revenue annually since 2009.28
In an open letter to the nation’s physicians in August 2016, the then-U.S. Surgeon General
expressly connected this “urgent health crisis” to “heavy marketing of opioids to doctors...
[m]any of [whom] were even taught – incorrectly – that opioids are not addictive when
prescribed for legitimate pain.”29 This epidemic has resulted in a flood of prescription
opioids available for illicit use or sale (the supply), and a population of patients physically and
psychologically dependent on them (the demand). And when those patients can no longer
afford or obtain opioids from licensed dispensaries, they often turn to the street to buy
herein, with knowledge that such conduct was creating the opioid nuisance and causing the
28
See Katherine Eban, Oxycontin: Purdue Pharma’s Painful Medicine, Fortune, Nov. 9, 2011,
http://fortune.com/2011/11/09/oxycontin-purdue-pharmas-painful-medicine/; David Crow,
Drugmakers Hooked on $10bn Opioid Habit, Fin. Times, Aug. 10, 2016, https://www.
ft.com/content/f6e989a8-5dac-11e6-bb77-a121aa8abd95.
29
Letter from Vivek H. Murthy, U.S. Surgeon General (Aug. 2016), http://turnthetiderx.org/.
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65. The Manufacturer Defendants spread their false and deceptive statements by
marketing their branded opioids directly to doctors and patients in and around the State,
independent third parties that they controlled to spread their false and deceptive statements
about the risks and benefits of opioids for the treatment of chronic pain throughout the State
66. The Manufacturer Defendants employed the same marketing plans and
strategies and deployed the same messages in and around the State, including in Plaintiff’s
Community, as they did nationwide. Across the pharmaceutical industry, “core message”
comprehensive approach ensures that the Manufacturer Defendants’ messages are accurately
and consistently delivered across marketing channels – including detailing visits, speaker
events, and advertising – and in each sales territory. The Manufacturer Defendants consider this
high level of coordination and uniformity crucial to successfully marketing their drugs.
national and regional sales representative training; national training of local medical liaisons,
the company employees who respond to physician inquiries; centralized speaker training;
single sets of visual aids, speaker slide decks, and sales training materials; and nationally
speakers were required to stick to prescribed talking points, sales messages, and slide decks, and
supervisors rode along with them periodically to both check on their performance and
compliance.
on two tracks. First, each Manufacturer Defendant conducted and continues to conduct
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advertising campaigns touting the purported benefits of their branded drugs. For example,
upon information and belief, the Manufacturer Defendants spent more than $14 million on
medical journal advertising of opioids in 2011, nearly triple what they spent in 2001.
69. Many of the Manufacturer Defendants’ branded ads deceptively portrayed the
benefits of opioids for chronic pain. For example, Endo distributed and made available on its
website opana.com a pamphlet promoting Opana ER with photographs depicting patients with
physically demanding jobs like construction worker, chef, and teacher, misleadingly implying
that the drug would provide long-term pain-relief and functional improvement. Upon
information and belief, Purdue also ran a series of ads, called “Pain Vignettes,” for OxyContin
in 2012 in medical journals. These ads featured chronic pain patients and recommended
OxyContin for each. One ad described a “54-year-old writer with osteoarthritis of the hands”
and implied that OxyContin would help the writer work more effectively.
70. The Manufacturer Defendants promoted the use of opioids for chronic pain
through “detailers” – sales representatives who visited individual doctors and medical staff in
their offices – and small-group speaker programs. They devoted massive resources to direct
sales contacts with doctors. Upon information and belief, in 2014 alone, the Manufacturer
Defendants spent in excess of $168 million on detailing branded opioids to doctors, more than
that marketing impacts prescribing habits, with face-to-face detailing having the greatest
influence. The Manufacturer Defendants purchase, manipulate and analyze some of the most
sophisticated data available in any industry, data available from IMS Health Holdings, Inc., to
track the rates of initial prescribing and renewal by individual doctors, which in turn allows
them to target, tailor, and monitor the impact of their core messages.
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72. The Manufacturer Defendants’ detailers have been reprimanded for their
deceptive promotions. In March 2010, for example, the FDA found that Actavis had been
distributing promotional materials that “minimize[] the risks associated with Kadian and
misleadingly suggest[] that Kadian is safer than has been demonstrated.” Those materials in
particular “fail to reveal warnings regarding potentially fatal abuse of opioids, use by
individuals other than the patient for whom the drug was prescribed.”30
73. The Manufacturer Defendants’ indirectly marketed their opioids using unbranded
advertising, paid speakers and “key opinion leaders” (“KOLs”), and industry-funded
organizations posing as neutral and credible professional societies and patient advocacy groups
Georgia through unbranded advertising – e.g., advertising that promotes opioid use generally
but does not name a specific opioid. This advertising was ostensibly created and disseminated by
independent third parties. But by funding, directing, reviewing, editing, and distributing this
disseminated by these third parties and acted in concert with them to falsely and misleadingly
advertising to avoid regulatory scrutiny because that advertising is not submitted to and
typically is not reviewed by the FDA. The Manufacturer Defendants also used third-party,
unbranded advertising to give the false appearance that the deceptive messages came from an
independent and objective source. The Manufacturer Defendants used third parties that they
30
Letter from Thomas Abrams, Dir., Div. of Drug Mktg., Advert., & Commc’ns, U.S. Food &
Drug Admin., to Doug Boothe, CEO, Actavis Elizabeth LLC (Feb. 18,2010),
http://www.fdanews.com/ext/resources/files/archives/a/ActavisElizabethLLC.pdf.
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funded, directed, and controlled to carry out and conceal their scheme to deceive doctors and
patients about the risks and benefits of long term opioid use for chronic pain.
76. Defendants also identified doctors to serve, for payment, on their speakers’
bureaus and to attend programs with speakers and meals paid for by Defendants. These speaker
programs provided: (1) an incentive for doctors to prescribe a particular opioid (so they might
be selected to promote the drug); (2) recognition and compensation for the doctors selected as
speakers; and (3) an opportunity to promote the drug through the speaker to his or her peers. On
information and belief, these presentations conveyed misleading information, omitted material
information, and failed to correct Defendants’ prior misrepresentations about the risks and
benefits of opioids.
77. The Manufacturer Defendants worked through third parties they controlled by:
(a) funding, assisting, encouraging, and directing doctors who served as KOLs, and (b)
funding, assisting, directing, and encouraging seemingly neutral and credible Front Groups.
The Manufacturer Defendants then worked together with those KOLs and Front Groups to taint
the sources that doctors and patients relied on for ostensibly “neutral” guidance, such as
treatment guidelines, CME programs, medical conferences and seminars, and scientific articles.
Thus, working individually and collectively, and through these Front Groups and KOLs, the
Manufacturer Defendants persuaded doctors and patients that what they have long known – that
opioids are addictive drugs, unsafe in most circumstances for long-term use – was untrue, and
78. In 2007, multiple States sued Purdue for engaging in unfair and deceptive
practices in its marketing, promotion, and sale of OxyContin. Certain states settled their claims in
a series of Consent Judgments that prohibited Purdue from making misrepresentations in the
promotion and marketing of OxyContin in the future. By using indirect marketing strategies,
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contributing the creation of misleading publications and prescribing guidelines which lack
reliable scientific basis and promote prescribing practices which have worsened the opioid crisis.
79. Doctors who are “pro-opioid” are one of the avenues that the Manufacturer
Defendants use to spread their false and deceptive statements about the risks and benefits of long-
term opioid use. The Manufacturer Defendants know that doctors rely heavily and less critically
on their peers for guidance, and KOLs provide the false appearance of unbiased and reliable
support for chronic opioid therapy. For example, the State of New York found in its
settlement with Purdue that the Purdue website “In the Face of Pain” failed to disclose that
doctors who provided testimonials on the site were paid by Purdue and concluded that
80. The Manufacturer Defendants also entered into arrangements with seemingly
unbiased and independent patient and professional organizations to promote opioids for the
treatment of chronic pain. Under the direction and control of the Manufacturer Defendants, these
“Front Groups” generated treatment guidelines, unbranded materials, and programs that favored
chronic opioid therapy. They also assisted the Manufacturer Defendants by responding to
negative articles, by advocating against regulatory changes that would limit opioid prescribing
in accordance with the scientific evidence, and by conducting outreach to vulnerable patient
81. These Front Groups depended on the Manufacturer Defendants for funding and,
in some cases, for survival. The Manufacturer Defendants also exercised control over programs
and materials created by these groups by collaborating on, editing, and approving their content,
and by funding their dissemination. In doing so, the Manufacturer Defendants made sure that
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the Front Groups would generate only the messages that the Manufacturer Defendants wanted to
distribute. Despite this, the Front Groups held themselves out as independent and serving the
needs of their members – whether patients suffering from pain or doctors treating those patients.
82. Defendants Cephalon, Endo, Janssen, and Purdue, in particular, utilized many
Front Groups, including many of the same ones. Several of the most prominent are described
below, but there are many others, including the American Pain Society (“APS”), American
Geriatrics Society (“AGS”), the Federation of State Medical Boards (“FSMB”), American
Chronic Pain Association (“ACPA”), the Center for Practical Bioethics (“CPB”), the U.S. Pain
83. The most prominent of the Manufacturer Defendants’ Front Groups was the
American Pain Foundation (“APF”), which, upon information and belief, received more than
$10 million in funding from opioid manufacturers from 2007 until it closed its doors in May
2012, primarily from Endo and Purdue. APF issued education guides for patients, reporters, and
policymakers that touted the benefits of opioids for chronic pain and trivialized their risks,
particularly the risk of addiction. APF also launched a campaign to promote opioids for
returning veterans, which has contributed to high rates of addiction and other adverse
outcomes – including death – among returning soldiers. APF also engaged in a significant
multimedia campaign – through radio, television and the internet – to educate patients about
their “right” to pain treatment, namely opioids. All of the programs and materials were
available nationally and were intended to reach citizens of the State and Plaintiff’s
31
See generally, e.g., Letter from Sen. Ron Wyden, U.S. Senate Comm. on Fin., to Sec. Thomas E. Price, U.S.
Dep’t of Health and Human Servs., (May 5, 2015),
https://www.finance.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/050517%20Senator%20Wyden%20to%20Secretary%20Price%20re
%20FDA%20Opioid%20Prescriber%20Working%20Group.pdf
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Community.
84. In 2009 and 2010, more than 80% of APF’s operating budget came from
pharmaceutical industry sources. Including industry grants for specific projects, APF received
about $2.3 million from industry sources out of total income of about $2.85 million in 2009; its
budget for 2010 projected receipts of roughly $2.9 million from drug companies, out of total
income of about $3.5 million. By 2011, upon information and belief, APF was entirely
dependent on incoming grants from defendants Purdue, Cephalon, Endo, and others to avoid
85. APF held itself out as an independent patient advocacy organization. It often
engaged in grassroots lobbying against various legislative initiatives that might limit opioid
prescribing, and thus the profitability of its sponsors. Upon information and belief, it was often
called upon to provide “patient representatives” for the Manufacturer Defendants’ promotional
activities, including for Purdue’s Partners Against Pain and Janssen’s Let’s Talk Pain. APF
functioned largely as an advocate for the interests of the Manufacturer Defendants, not
patients. Indeed, upon information and belief, as early as 2001, Purdue told APF that the basis
of a grant was Purdue’s desire to “strategically align its investments in nonprofit organizations
and publications for APF to pursue. APF then submitted grant proposals seeking to fund these
activities and publications, knowing that drug companies would support projects conceived as a
87. The U.S. Senate Finance Committee began looking into APF in May 2012 to
determine the links, financial and otherwise, between the organization and the manufacturers of
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objective and neutral third party, and the Manufacturer Defendants stopped funding it. Within
days of being targeted by Senate investigation, APF’s board voted to dissolve the organization
immediately.”32
88. Another front group for the Manufacturer Defendants was the American
Academy of Pain Medicine (“AAPM”). With the assistance, prompting, involvement, and
funding of the Manufacturer Defendants, the AAPM issued purported treatment guidelines and
sponsored and hosted medical education programs essential to the Manufacturer Defendants’
example, AAPM maintained a corporate relations council, whose members paid $25,000 per
year (on top of other funding) to participate. The benefits included allowing members to present
educational programs at off-site dinner symposia in connection with AAPM’s marquee event
– its annual meeting held in Palm Springs, California, or other resort locations. AAPM
describes the annual event as an “exclusive venue” for offering education programs to doctors.
Membership in the corporate relations council also allows drug company executives and
marketing staff to meet with AAPM executive committee members in small settings. Defendants
Endo, Purdue, and Cephalon were members of the council and presented deceptive
32
Charles Ornstein & Tracy Weber, Senate Panel Investigates Drug Companies’ Ties to Pain Groups,
Wash. Post, May 8, 2012,
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/senate-panel-investigates-drug-companies-ties-to-
pain-groups/2012/05/08/gIQA2X4qBU_story.html.
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“industry friendly,” with Endo advisors and speakers among its active members. Endo
attended AAPM conferences, funded its CMEs, and distributed its publications. The conferences
conference alone. AAPM’s presidents have included top industry-supported KOLs Perry Fine
and Lynn Webster. Dr. Webster was even elected president of AAPM while under a DEA
investigation.
91. The Manufacturer Defendants were able to influence AAPM through significant
and regular funding and via the leadership of pro-opioid KOLs within the organization.
92. In 1996, AAPM and APS jointly issued a consensus statement, “The Use of
Opioids for the Treatment of Chronic Pain,” which endorsed opioids to treat chronic pain
and claimed that the risk of a patients’ addiction to opioids was low. Dr. Haddox, who co-
authored the AAPM/APS statement, was a paid speaker for Purdue at the time. Dr.
Portenoy was the sole consultant. The consensus statement remained on AAPM’s website until
2011, and, upon information and belief, was taken down from AAPM’s website only after a
doctor complained.33
93. AAPM and APS issued their own guidelines in 2009 (“AAPM/APS
Guidelines”) and continued to recommend the use of opioids to treat chronic pain.34 Treatment
guidelines have been relied upon by doctors, especially the general practitioners and family
doctors targeted by the Manufacturer Defendants. Treatment guidelines not only directly
inform doctors’ prescribing practices, but are cited throughout the scientific literature and
33
The Use of Opioids for the Treatment of Chronic Pain: A Consensus Statement From the American
Academy of Pain Medicine and the American Pain Society, 13 Clinical J. Pain 6 (1997).
34
Roger Chou et al., Clinical Guidelines for the Use of Chronic Opioid Therapy in Chronic Non-
Cancer Pain, 10 J. Pain 113 (2009).
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referenced by third-party payors in determining whether they should cover treatments for
Purdue discussed treatment guidelines with doctors during individual sales visits.
94. At least fourteen of the 21 panel members who drafted the AAPM/APS
Guidelines, including KOLs Dr. Portenoy and Dr. Perry Fine of the University of Utah,
received support from Janssen, Cephalon, Endo, and Purdue. The 2009 Guidelines promote
opioids as “safe and effective” for treating chronic pain, despite acknowledging limited
evidence, and conclude that the risk of addiction is manageable for patients regardless of past
abuse histories.35 One panel member, Dr. Joel Saper, Clinical Professor of Neurology at
Michigan State University and founder of the Michigan Headache & Neurological Institute,
resigned from the panel because of his concerns that the 2009 Guidelines were influenced by
sponsoring organizations and committee members. These AAPM/APS Guidelines have been a
particularly effective channel of deception and have influenced not only treating physicians, but
also the body of scientific evidence on opioids; the Guidelines have been cited hundreds of times
in academic literature, were disseminated in the State and/or Plaintiff’s Community during the
relevant time period, are available online, and were reprinted in the Journal of Pain. The
Manufacturer Defendants widely referenced and promoted the 2009 Guidelines without
disclosing the lack of evidence to support them or the Manufacturer Defendants financial
spread their deceptive messages about the risks and benefits of long-term opioid therapy. For
35
Id.
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example, Defendants combined their efforts through the Pain Care Forum (“PCF”), which began
(including Cephalon, Endo, Janssen, and Purdue) and various Front Groups, almost all of which
received substantial funding from the Manufacturer Defendants. Among other projects, PCF
worked to ensure that an FDA-mandated education project on opioids was not unacceptably
negative and did not require mandatory participation by prescribers, which the Manufacturer
96. To falsely assure physicians and patients that opioids are safe, the Manufacturer
Defendants deceptively trivialized and failed to disclose the risks of long-term opioid use,
particularly the risk of addiction, through a series of misrepresentations that have been
conclusively debunked by the FDA and CDC. These misrepresentations – which are described
below – reinforced each other and created the dangerously misleading impression that: (1)
starting patients on opioids was low risk because most patients would not become addicted, and
because those at greatest risk for addiction could be identified and managed; (2) patients who
displayed signs of addiction probably were not addicted and, in any event, could easily be
weaned from the drugs; (3) the use of higher opioid doses, which many patients need to sustain
pain relief as they develop tolerance to the drugs, do not pose special risks; and (4) abuse-
deterrent opioids both prevent abuse and overdose and are inherently less addictive. The
Manufacturer Defendants have not only failed to correct these misrepresentations, they
Purdue Pharma L.P., have entered into settlement agreements with public entities that
prohibit them from making many of the misrepresentations identified in this Complaint. Yet
even afterward, each Manufacturer Defendant continued to misrepresent the risks and benefits of
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long-term opioid use in the State and Plaintiff’s Community and each continues to fail to correct
and unfair claims about the purportedly low risk of addiction include:
d. upon information and belief, Endo distributed a pamphlet with the Endo
logo entitled Living with Someone with Chronic Pain, which stated that:
“Most health care providers who treat people with pain agree that most
people do not develop an addiction problem;”
36
Am. Pain Found., Treatment Options: A Guide for People Living in Pain (2007) [hereinafter APF,
Treatment Options], https://assets.documentcloud.org/documents/277605/apf-treatmentoptions.pdf.
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opioid-prescription guideline issued by the CDC (the “2016 CDC Guideline”) explains that there
is “[e]xtensive evidence” of the “possible harms of opioids (including opioid use disorder [an
alternative term for opioid addiction], [and] overdose . . .).”39 The 2016 CDC Guideline further
explains that “[o]pioid pain medication use presents serious risks, including overdose and
opioid use disorder” and that “continuing opioid therapy for 3 months substantially
Am. Pain Found., A Policymaker’s Guide to Understanding Pain and Its Management 6 (2011)
37
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100. The FDA further exposed the falsity of Defendants’ claims about the low risk
of addiction when it announced changes to the labels for extended-release and long-acting
(“ER/LA”) opioids in 2013 and for immediate release (“IR”) opioids in 2016. In its
announcements, the FDA found that “most opioid drugs have ‘high potential for abuse’” and
that opioids “are associated with a substantial risk of misuse, abuse, NOWS [neonatal opioid
withdrawal syndrome], addiction, overdose, and death.” According to the FDA, because of the
“known serious risks” associated with long-term opioid use, including “risks of addiction, abuse,
and misuse, even at recommended doses, and because of the greater risks of overdose and
death,” opioids should be used only “in patients for whom alternative treatment options” like non-
101. The State of New York, in a 2016 settlement agreement with Endo, found
that opioid “use disorders appear to be highly prevalent in chronic pain patients treated with
opioids, with up to 40% of chronic pain patients treated in specialty and primary care
outpatient centers meeting the clinical criteria for an opioid use disorder.42 Endo had
claimed on its www.opana.com website that “[m]ost healthcare providers who treat patients with
40
Id. at 2, 25.
41
Letter from Janet Woodcock, M.D., Dir., Ctr. For Drug Evaluation and Research, U.S. Food and Drug
Admin., v. U.S. Dep’t of Health and Human Servs., to Andrew Koldny, M.D., President, Physicians for
Responsible Opioid Prescribing (Sept. 10, 2013),
https://www.regulations.gov/contentStreamer?documentId=FDA-2012-P-0818-
0793&attachmentNumber=1&contentType=pdf.; Letter from Janet Woodcock, M.D., Dir., Ctr. For Drug
Evaluation and Research, U.S. Food and Drug Admin., U.S. Dep’t of Health and Human Servs., to Peter R.
Mathers & Jennifer A. Davidson, Kleinfeld, Kaplan and Becker, LLP (Mar. 22, 2016),
https://www.regulations.gov/contentStreamer?documentId=FDA-2014-P-0205-
0006&attachmentNumber=1&contentType=pdf.
42
Assurance of Discontinuance, In re Endo Health Solutions Inc. and Endo Pharm. Inc. (Assurance
No. 15-228), at 16, https://ag.ny.gov/pdfs/Endo_AOD_030116-Fully_Executed.pdf.
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pain agree that patients treated with prolonged opioid medicines usually do not become
addicted,” but the State of New York found that Endo had no evidence for that statement.
Consistent with this, Endo agreed not to “make statements that . . . opioids generally are
non-addictive” or “that most patients who take opioids do not become addicted” in New
York. Endo remains free, however, to make those statements in this State.
102. In addition to mischaracterizing the highly addictive nature of the drugs they
the signs of addiction. Specifically, the Manufacturer Defendants misrepresented, to doctors and
patients, that warning signs and/or symptoms of addiction were, instead, signs of undertreated
pain (i.e. pseudoaddiction) – and instructed doctors to increase the opioid prescription dose for
103. To this end, one of Purdue’s employees, Dr. David Haddox, invented a
phenomenon called “pseudoaddiction.” KOL Dr. Portenoy popularized the term. Examples of the
b. Janssen sponsored, funded, and edited the Let’s Talk Pain website, which in
2009 stated: “pseudoaddiction . . . refers to patient behaviors that may
occur when pain is under-treated . . . Pseudoaddiction is different from true
addiction because such behaviors can be resolved with effective pain
management;”
43
Scott M. Fishman, M.D., Responsible Opioid Prescribing: A Physician’s Guide (2007) at 62.
44
See Scott M. Fishman, M.D., Responsible Opioid Prescribing: A Physician’s Guide (2d ed. 2012)
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e. upon information and belief, Purdue sponsored a CME program titled “Path
of the Patient, Managing Chronic Pain in Younger Adults at Risk for
Abuse”. In a role play, a chronic pain patient with a history of drug abuse
tells his doctor that he is taking twice as many hydrocodone pills as
directed. The narrator notes that because of pseudoaddiction, the doctor
should not assume the patient is addicted even if he persistently asks for a
specific drug, seems desperate, hoards medicine, or “overindulges in
unapproved escalating doses.” The doctor treats this patient by prescribing a
high-dose, long-acting opioid.
104. In the 2016 CDC Guideline, the CDC rejects the validity of the
pseudoaddiction fallacy invented by a Purdue employee as a reason to push more opioid drugs
pseudoaddiction falsehood, a third category of false, deceptive, and unfair practice is the
Manufacturer Defendants’ false instructions that addiction risk screening tools, patient
contracts, urine drug screens, and similar strategies allow them to reliably identify and safely
especially insidious because the Manufacturer Defendants aimed them at general practitioners
and family doctors who lack the time and expertise to closely manage higher-risk patients on
opioids. The Manufacturer Defendants’ misrepresentations made these doctors feel more
comfortable prescribing opioids to their patients, and patients more comfortable starting on opioid
45
Id. at 2, 25.
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106. The 2016 CDC Guideline confirms the falsity of these claims. The
Guideline explains that there are no studies assessing the effectiveness of risk mitigation
the Manufacturer Defendants’ false assurances regarding the alleged ease of eliminating opioid
dependence. The Manufacturer Defendants falsely claimed that opioid dependence can easily
be addressed by tapering and that opioid withdrawal is not a problem, but they failed to disclose
the increased difficulty of stopping opioids after long-term use. In truth, the 2016 CDC
Guideline explains that the symptoms of opioid withdrawal include abdominal pain, vomiting,
diarrhea, sweating, tremor, tachycardia, drug cravings, anxiety, insomnia, spontaneous abortion
46
Id. at 11.
47
Id. at 26.
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Upon information and belief, a CME sponsored by Endo, entitled Persistent Pain in the
Older Adult, claimed that withdrawal symptoms can be avoided by tapering a patient’s
opioid dose by 10% - 20% for 10 days. And Purdue sponsored APF’s A Policymaker’s Guide
to Understanding Pain & Its Management, which claimed that “[s]ymptoms of physical
dependence can often be ameliorated by gradually decreasing the dose of medication during
109. A fifth category of false, deceptive, and unfair statements the Manufacturer
Defendants made to sell more drugs is that opioid dosages could be increased indefinitely
without added risk. The ability to escalate dosages was critical to Defendants’ efforts to
market opioids for long-term use to treat chronic pain because, absent this misrepresentation,
doctors would have abandoned treatment when patients built up tolerance and lower dosages
did not provide pain relief. The Manufacturer Defendants’ deceptive claims include:
48
APF, Policymaker’s Guide, supra, at 32.
49
APF, Treatment Options, supra, at 12.
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f. upon information and belief, Purdue’s in the Face of Pain website promoted
the notion that if a patient’s doctor does not prescribe what, in the patient’s
view, is a sufficient dosage of opioids, he or she should find another doctor
who will.
50
Margo McCaffery & Chris Pasero, Endo Pharm., Understanding Your Pain: Taking Oral Opioid
Analgesics (Russell K Portenoy, M.D., ed., 2004).
51
APF, Policymaker’s Guide, supra, at 32.
52
The College on Problems of Drug Dependence, About the College, http://cpdd.org (last visited April
9, 2018).
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NFP argued in an amicus brief to the United States Fourth Circuit Court of
Appeals that “there is no ‘ceiling dose’” for opioids.53
110. Once again, the 2016 CDC Guideline reveals that the Manufacturer
Defendants’ representations regarding opioids were lacking in scientific evidence. The 2016
CDC Guideline clarifies that the “[b]enefits of high-dose opioids for chronic pain are not
established” while the “risks for serious harms related to opioid therapy increase at higher opioid
dosage.”54 More specifically, the CDC explains that “there is now an established body of
scientific evidence showing that overdose risk is increased at higher opioid dosages.”55 The
CDC also states that there is an increased risk “for opioid use disorder, respiratory depression,
and death at higher dosages.”56 That is why the CDC advises doctors to “avoid increasing
of some of their opioids has created false impressions that these opioids can cure addiction
and abuse.
112. The Manufacturer Defendants made misleading claims about the ability of their
advertisements for the 2012 reformulation of Opana ER claimed that it was designed to be crush
resistant, in a way that suggested it was more difficult to abuse. This claim was false. The FDA
warned in a 2013 letter that Opana ER Extended-Release Tablets’ “extended- release features
53
Brief of APF, supra, at 9.
54
2016 CDC Guideline, supra note 50, at 22–23.
55
Id. at 23-24.
56
Id. at 21.
57
Id. at 16.
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can be compromised, causing the medication to ‘dose dump,’ when subject to . . . forms of
Opana ER can be prepared for snorting using commonly available methods and “readily
prepared for injection.”59 The letter discussed “the troubling possibility that a higher (and rising)
own studies, which it failed to disclose, showed that Opana ER could still be ground and chewed.
In June 2017, the FDA requested that Opana ER be removed from the market.
113. To convince doctors and patients that opioids should be used to treat chronic
pain, the Manufacturer Defendants also had to persuade them that there was a significant upside
to long-term opioid use. But as the CDC Guideline makes clear, “[n]o evidence shows a long-
term benefit of opioids in pain and function versus no opioids for chronic pain with outcomes
examined at least 1 year later (with most placebo-controlled randomized trials ≤ 6 weeks in
duration)” and that other treatments were more or equally beneficial and less harmful than
long-term opioid use.61 The FDA, too, has recognized the lack of evidence to support long-term
opioid use. Despite this, Defendants falsely and misleadingly touted the benefits of long-term
opioid use and falsely and misleadingly suggested that these benefits were supported by
scientific evidence.
114. Some illustrative examples of the Manufacturer Defendants’ false claims are:
58
Letter from Janet Woodcock, M.D., Dir., Ctr. For Drug Evaluation and Research, U.S. Food and Drug
Admin., U.S. Dep’t of Health and Human Servs., to Robert Barto, Vice President, Reg. Affairs, Endo
Pharm. Inc. (May 10, 2013), at 5.
59
Id. at 6.
60
Id. at 6, n. 21.
61
Id. at 15.
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work, relieve “stress on your body and your mental health,” and help patients
enjoy their lives;
62
APF, Treatment Options, supra.
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j. Endo was the sole sponsor, through NIPC, of a series of CMEs entitled
“Persistent Pain in the Older Patient.”63 Upon information and belief, a
CME disseminated via webcast claimed that chronic opioid therapy has
been “shown to reduce pain and improve depressive symptoms And cognitive
functioning;”
115. As the FDA and other agencies have made clear for years, these claims have
116. In 2010, the FDA warned Actavis, in response to its advertising of Kadian
described above, that “we are not aware of substantial evidence or substantial clinical
experience demonstrating that the magnitude of the effect of the drug [Kadian] has in alleviating
pain, taken together with any drug-related side effects patients may experience . . . results in any
overall positive impact on a patient’s work, physical and mental functioning, daily activities, or
63
E.g., NIPC, Persistent Pain and the Older Patient (2007),
https://www.painedu.org/Downloads/NIPC/Activities/B173_Providence_RI_%20Invite.pdf.
64
APF, Policymaker’s Guide, supra, at 29.
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enjoyment of life.”65 And in 2008, upon information and belief, the FDA sent a warning letter to
an opioid manufacturer, making it clear “that [the claim that] patients who are treated with the
drug experience an improvement in their overall function, social function, and ability to perform
daily activities . . . has not been demonstrated by substantial evidence or substantial clinical
experience.”
exaggerated the risks of competing medications like NSAIDs, so that doctors and patients would
look to opioids first for the treatment of chronic pain. Once again, these misrepresentations by
the Manufacturer Defendants contravene pronouncements by and guidance from the FDA
and CDC based on the scientific evidence. Indeed, the FDA changed the labels for ER/LA
opioids in 2013 and IR opioids in 2016 to state that opioids should only be used as a last resort
“in patients for which alternative treatment options” like non-opioid drugs “are inadequate.”
And the 2016 CDC Guideline states that NSAIDs, not opioids, should be the first-line treatment
for chronic pain, particularly arthritis and lower back pain.66 Purdue misleadingly promoted
OxyContin as being unique among opioids in providing 12 continuous hours of pain relief with
one dose. In fact, OxyContin does not last for 12 hours – a fact that Purdue has known at all times
relevant to this action. Upon information and belief, Purdue’s own research shows that
OxyContin wears off in under six hours in one quarter of patients and in under 10 hours in more
than half. This is because OxyContin tablets release approximately 40% of their active
medicine immediately, after which release tapers. This triggers a powerful initial response,
but provides little or no pain relief at the end of the dosing period, when less medicine is
released. This phenomenon is known as “end of dose” failure, and the FDA found in 2008 that a
65
Letter from Thomas Abrams to Doug Boothe, supra note 32.
66
2016 CDC Guideline, supra, at 12.
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“substantial proportion” of chronic pain patients taking OxyContin experience it. This not
only renders Purdue’s promise of 12 hours of relief false and deceptive, it also makes
OxyContin more dangerous because the declining pain relief patients experience toward the
end of each dosing period drives them to take more OxyContin before the next dosing period
begins, quickly increasing the amount of drug they are taking and spurring growing dependence.
118. Purdue’s competitors were aware of this problem. For example, upon information
and belief, Endo ran advertisements for Opana ER referring to “real” 12-hour dosing.
Nevertheless, Purdue falsely promoted OxyContin as if it were effective for a full 12 hours. Upon
information and belief, Purdue’s sales representatives continue to tell doctors that OxyContin
119. Front Groups supported by Purdue likewise echoed these representations. For
example, in an amicus brief submitted to the Supreme Court of Ohio by the American Pain
Foundation, the National Foundation for the Treatment of Pain and the Ohio Pain Initiative in
120. Cephalon deceptively marketed its opioids Actiq and Fentora for chronic pain
even though the FDA has expressly limited their use to the treatment of cancer pain in opioid
tolerant individuals. Both Actiq and Fentora are extremely powerful fentanyl-based IR
67
Reply Brief of Amicus Curiae of the American Pain Foundation, The National Foundation for the
Treatment of Pain and the Ohio Pain Initiative Supporting Appellants, Howland v. Purdue Pharma L.P.,
No. 2003-1538 (Ohio Apr. 13, 2004), 2004 WL 1637768, at *4 (footnote omitted).
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opioids. Neither is approved for or has been shown to be safe or effective for chronic pain.
Indeed, the FDA expressly prohibited Cephalon from marketing Actiq for anything but cancer
pain, and refused to approve Fentora for the treatment of chronic pain because of the potential
harm, including the high risk of “serious and life-threatening adverse events” and abuse – which
are greatest in non-cancer patients. The FDA also issued a Public Health Advisory in 2007
emphasizing that Fentora should only be used for cancer patients who are opioid-tolerant and
should not be used for any other conditions, such as migraines, post- operative pain, or pain due to
injury.68 Specifically, the FDA advised that Fentora “is only approved for breakthrough cancer
pain in patients who are opioid-tolerant, meaning those patients who take a regular, daily, around-
campaign to promote Actiq and Fentora for chronic pain and other non-cancer conditions for
which it was not approved, appropriate, and for which it is not safe. As part of this campaign,
Cephalon used CMEs, speaker programs, KOLs, journal supplements, and detailing by its sales
representatives to give doctors the false impression that Actiq and Fentora are safe and effective
68
See U.S. Food & Drug Admin., Public Health Advisory: Important Information for the Safe Use of
Fentora (fentanyl buccal tablets) (Sept. 26, 2007),
https://www.fda.gov/Drugs/DrugSafety/PostmarketDrugSafetyInformationforPatientsandProviders/ucm051
273.htm.
69
Id.
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122. Cephalon’s deceptive marketing gave doctors and patients the false impression
that Actiq and Fentora were not only safe and effective for treating chronic pain, but were also
123. Purdue also unlawfully and unfairly failed to report or address illicit and
unlawful prescribing of its drugs, despite knowing about it for years. Purdue’s sales
prescribing its drugs. Rather than report these doctors to state medical boards or law
enforcement authorities (as Purdue is legally obligated to do) or cease marketing to them,
Purdue used the list to demonstrate the high rate of diversion of OxyContin – the same
OxyContin that Purdue had promoted as less addictive – in order to persuade the FDA to bar the
manufacture and sale of generic copies of the drug because the drug was too likely to be
abused. In an interview with the Los Angeles Times, Purdue’s senior compliance officer
acknowledged that in five years of investigating suspicious pharmacies, Purdue failed to take
action – even where Purdue employees personally witnessed the diversion of its drugs. The same
was true of prescribers; despite its knowledge of illegal prescribing, Purdue did not report that a
Los Angeles clinic prescribed more than 1.1 million OxyContin tablets and that Purdue’s
district manager described it internally as “an organized drug ring” until years after law
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enforcement shut it down. In doing so, Purdue protected its own profits at the expense of public
124. Like Purdue, Endo has been cited for its failure to set up an effective system
for identifying and reporting suspicious prescribing. In its settlement agreement with Endo,
the State of New York found that Endo failed to require sales representatives to report signs of
abuse, diversion, and inappropriate prescribing; paid bonuses to sales representatives for detailing
prescribers who were subsequently arrested or convicted for illegal prescribing; and failed to
prevent sales representatives from visiting prescribers whose suspicious conduct had caused
Defendants identified and targeted susceptible prescribers and vulnerable patient populations
in the U.S., including this State and Plaintiff’s Community. For example, the Manufacturer
Defendants focused their deceptive marketing on primary care doctors, who were more likely
to treat chronic pain patients and prescribe them drugs, but were less likely to be educated
about treating pain and the risks and benefits of opioids and therefore more likely to accept the
126. The Manufacturer Defendants also targeted vulnerable patient populations like
the elderly and veterans, who tend to suffer from chronic pain. The Manufacturer Defendants
targeted these vulnerable patients even though the risks of long-term opioid use were
significantly greater for them. For example, the 2016 CDC Guideline observes that existing
evidence confirms that elderly patients taking opioids suffer from elevated fall and fracture risks,
70
Harriet Ryan et al., More Than 1 Million Oxycontin Pills Ended Up in the Hands of Criminals and
Addicts. What the Drugmaker Knew, L.A. Times, July 10, 2016, http://www.latimes.com/projects/la-me-
oxycontin-part2/.
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reduced renal function and medication clearance, and a smaller window between safe and unsafe
dosages.71 The 2016 CDC Guideline concludes that there must be “additional caution and
increased monitoring” to minimize the risks of opioid use in elderly patients. Id. at 27. The
same is true for veterans, who are more likely to use anti-anxiety drugs (benzodiazepines)
for post- traumatic stress disorder, which interact dangerously with opioids.
deceptive statements regarding material facts and further concealed material facts, in the course
actions were intentional and/or unlawful. Such statements include, but are not limited to, those set
128. Defendants Purdue, Endo, Jansen, Cephalon and Actavis, made and/or
disseminated deceptive statements, and concealed material facts in such a way to make their
71
2016 CDC Guideline, supra, at 13.
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129. The Manufacturer Defendants, both individually and collectively, made, promoted,
and profited from their misrepresentations about the risks and benefits of opioids for
chronic pain even though they knew that their misrepresentations were false and deceptive. The
history of opioids, as well as research and clinical experience establish that opioids are highly
addictive and are responsible for a long list of very serious adverse outcomes. The FDA warned
Defendants of this, and Defendants had access to scientific studies, detailed prescription data,
and reports of adverse events, including reports of addiction, hospitalization, and death – all
of which clearly described the harm from long-term opioid use and that patients were
suffering from addiction, overdose, and death in alarming numbers. More recently, the FDA
and CDC have issued pronouncements, based on medical evidence, that conclusively expose the
falsity of Defendants’ misrepresentations, and Endo and Purdue have recently entered agreements
in New York prohibiting them from making some of the same misrepresentations described in
this Complaint.
130. At all times relevant to this Complaint, the Manufacturer Defendants took steps to
avoid detection of and to fraudulently conceal their deceptive marketing and unlawful, unfair,
and fraudulent conduct. For example, the Manufacturer Defendants disguised their role in the
deceptive marketing of chronic opioid therapy by funding and working through third parties like
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Front Groups and KOLs. The Manufacturer Defendants purposefully hid behind the assumed
credibility of these individuals and organizations and relied on them to vouch for the accuracy
and integrity of the Manufacturer Defendants’ false and deceptive statements about the risks and
benefits of long-term opioid use for chronic pain. Defendants also never disclosed their role in
shaping, editing, and approving the content of information and materials disseminated by these
promotional and “educational” materials in emails, correspondence, and meetings with KOLs,
Front Groups, and public relations companies that were not, and have not yet become, public.
For example, PainKnowledge.org, which is run by the NIPC, did not disclose Endo’s
involvement. Other Manufacturer Defendants, such as Purdue and Janssen, ran similar websites
131. The Manufacturer Defendants manipulated their promotional materials and the
scientific literature to make it appear that these documents were accurate, truthful, and supported
by objective evidence when they were not. The Manufacturer Defendants distorted the
meaning or import of studies they cited and offered them as evidence for propositions the
studies did not support. The Manufacturer Defendants invented “pseudoaddiction” and
the medical community with false and misleading information about ineffectual strategies to
avoid or control opioid addiction. The Manufacturer Defendants recommended to the medical
community that dosages be increased, without disclosing the risks. The Manufacturer
Defendants spent millions of dollars over a period of years on a misinformation campaign aimed
at highlighting opioids’ alleged benefits, disguising the risks, and promoting sales. The lack of
support for the Manufacturer Defendants’ deceptive messages was not apparent to medical
professionals who relied upon them in making treatment decisions, nor could it have been
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successfully concealed from the medical community, patients, and health care payors facts
sufficient to arouse suspicion of the claims that the Plaintiff now asserts. Plaintiff did not know
of the existence or scope of the Manufacturer Defendants’ industry-wide fraud and could not have
132. The Distributor Defendants owe a duty under both federal law (21 U.S.C. § 823, 21
CFR 1301.74) and Georgia law (O.C.G.A. § 26-4-115), to monitor, detect, investigate, refuse
to fill, and report suspicious orders of prescription opioids originating from the State of
Georgia and City of Savannah, as well as those orders which the Distributor Defendants knew
or should have known were likely to be diverted into the State of Georgia and City of Savannah.
133. The foreseeable harm from a breach of these duties is the diversion of prescription
134. Each Distributor Defendant repeatedly and purposefully breached its duties under
state and federal law. Such breaches are a direct and proximate causes of the widespread
diversion of prescription opioids for nonmedical purposes into the State of Georgia and City of
Savannah.
135. The unlawful diversion of prescription opioids is a direct and proximate cause of
the opioid epidemic, prescription opioid abuse, addiction, morbidity and mortality in the State
of Georgia and City of Savannah. This diversion and the epidemic are direct causes of harms
136. The opioid epidemic in Georgia, including inter alia in the City of Savannah,
137. The opioid epidemic in the City of Savannah is a public nuisance and remains
unabated.
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herein, with knowledge that such conduct was creating the opioid nuisance and causing the harms
139. Opioids are a controlled substance and are categorized as “dangerous drugs” under
Georgia law. See O.C.G.A. § 16-13-71. These “Schedule II” drugs are controlled substances
140. As wholesale drug distributors, each Distributor Defendant was required under
141. Each Distributor Defendant is licensed by the Georgia Board of Pharmacy and is
controlled substances and assumed a duty to comply with all security requirements imposed
142. Each Distributor Defendant was further required to register with the DEA, pursuant
to the federal Controlled Substance Act. See 21 U.S.C. § 823(b), (e); 28 C.F.R. § 0.100. Each
of Schedule II controlled substances with a duty to comply with all security requirements
143. Each Distributor Defendant has an affirmative duty under federal and Georgia law
to act as a gatekeeper guarding against the diversion of the highly addictive, dangerous opioid
drugs. Federal law requires that Distributors of Schedule II drugs, including opioids, must
maintain “effective control against diversion of particular controlled substances into other than
legitimate medical, scientific, and industrial channels.” 21 U.S.C. §§ 823(b)(1); O.C.G.A. § 26-4-
115(b)(2).
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144. The Georgia Pharmacy Board requires that drug wholesalers “shall maintain
records of unusual orders of controlled substances received by the registrant and shall
inform the Office of the Director of the Georgia Drugs and Narcotics Agency (GDNA) of
145. Federal regulations, similarly impose a non-delegable duty upon wholesale drug
distributors to “design and operate a system to disclose to the registrant suspicious orders of
controlled substances. The registrant [distributor] shall inform the Field Division Office of the
Administration in his area of suspicious orders when discovered by the registrant. Suspicious
orders include orders of unusual size, orders deviating substantially from a normal pattern,
146. “Suspicious orders” include orders of an unusual size, orders of unusual frequency
or orders deviating substantially from a normal pattern. See 21 CFR 1301.74(b); Georgia Rule
480-20-.02(1). These criteria are disjunctive and are not all inclusive. For example, if an order
deviates substantially from a normal pattern, the size of the order does not matter and the order
should be reported as suspicious. Likewise, a wholesale distributor need not wait for a normal
pattern to develop over time before determining whether a particular order is suspicious. The
size of an order alone, regardless of whether it deviates from a normal pattern, is enough to
trigger the wholesale distributor’s responsibility to report the order as suspicious. The
determination of whether an order is suspicious depends not only on the ordering patterns of the
particular customer but also on the patterns of the entirety of the wholesale distributor’s
customer base and the patterns throughout the relevant segment of the wholesale distributor
industry.
147. In addition to reporting all suspicious orders, distributors must also stop
shipment on any order which is flagged as suspicious and only ship orders which were flagged
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as potentially suspicious if, after conducting due diligence, the distributor can determine that the
order is not likely to be diverted into illegal channels. See Southwood Pharm., Inc., 72 Fed. Reg.
36, 487, 36, 501 (Drug Enf’t Admin. July 3, 2007); Masters Pharmaceutical, Inc. v. Drug
Enforcement Administration, No. 15-11355 (D.C. Cir. June 30, 2017). Regardless, all flagged
148. These prescription drugs are regulated to provide a “closed” system intended
to reduce the widespread diversion of these drugs out of legitimate channels into the illicit
market, while at the same time providing the legitimate drug industry with a unified
approach to narcotic and dangerous drug control. See, 1970 U.S.C.C.A.N. 4566, 4571-72.
149. Different entities supervise the discrete links in the chain that separate a
consumer from a controlled substance. Statutes and regulations define each participant’s role
and responsibilities.72
150. As the DEA advised the Distributor Defendants in a letter to them dated
September 27, 2006, wholesale distributors are “one of the key components of the distribution
chain. If the closed system is to function properly … distributors must be vigilant in deciding
whether a prospective customer can be trusted to deliver controlled substances only for lawful
72
Brief for Healthcare Distribution Management Association and National Association of Chain
Drug Stores as Amici Curiae in Support of Neither Party, Masters Pharm., Inc. v. U.S. Drug Enf’t
Admin. (No. 15-1335) (D.C. Cir. Apr. 4, 2016), 2016 WL 1321983, at *22 [hereinafter Brief for
HDMA and NACDS]. The Healthcare Distribution Management Association (HDMA or HMA)-now
known as the Healthcare Distribution Alliance (HDA)-is a national, not-for-profit trade association that
represents the nation’s primary, full-service healthcare distributors whose membership includes, among
others: AmerisourceBergen Drug Corporation, Cardinal Health, Inc., and McKesson Corporation. See
generally HDA, About, https://www.healthcaredistribution.org/about (last visited Aug. 21, 2017). The
National Association of Chain Drug Stores (NACDS) is a national, not-for-profit trade association
that represents traditional drug stores and supermarkets and mass merchants with pharmacies whose
membership includes, among others: Walgreen Company, CVS Health, Rite Aid Corporation and
Walmart. See generally NACDS, Mission, https://www.nacds.org/ about/mission/ (last visited Aug.
21, 2017).
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has a substantial and detrimental effect on the health and general welfare of the American
people.”73
151. The Distributor Defendants have admitted that they are responsible for
152. The DEA sent a letter to each of the Distributor Defendants on September 27,
2006, warning that it would use its authority to revoke and suspend registrations when
appropriate. The letter expressly states that a distributor, in addition to reporting suspicious
orders, has a “statutory responsibility to exercise due diligence to avoid filling suspicious
orders that might be diverted into other than legitimate medical, scientific, and industrial
channels.”75 The letter also instructs that “distributors must be vigilant in deciding whether a
prospective customer can be trusted to deliver controlled substances only for lawful
purposes.”76 The DEA warns that “even just one distributor that uses its DEA registration to
73
See Letter from Joseph T. Rannazzisi, Deputy Assistant Adm’r, Office of Diversion Control, Drug.
Enf’t Admin., U.S. Dep’t of Justice, to Cardinal Health (Sept. 27, 2006) [hereinafter Rannazzisi Letter]
(“This letter is being sent to every commercial entity in the United States registered with the Drug
Enforcement Agency (DEA) to distribute controlled substances. The purpose of this letter is to reiterate
the responsibilities of controlled substance distributors in view of the prescription drug abuse problem our
nation currently faces.”), filed in Cardinal Health, Inc. v. Holder, No. 1:12-cv-00185-RBW (D.D.C. Feb.
10, 2012), ECF No. 14-51.
74
See Brief for HDMA and NACDS, supra note 85, 2016 WL 1321983, at *4 (“[R]egulations . . . in
place for more than 40 years require distributors to report suspicious orders of controlled substances to
DEA based on information readily available to them (e.g., a pharmacy’s placement of unusually frequent
or large orders).”).
75
Rannazzisi Letter, supra, at 2.
76
Id. at 1.
77
Id. at 2.
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153. The DEA sent a second letter to each of the Distributor Defendants on
December 27, 2007.78 This letter reminds the Defendants of their statutory and regulatory
duties to “maintain effective controls against diversion” and “design and operate a system to
disclose to the registrant suspicious orders of controlled substances.”79 The letter further
explains:
The regulation also requires that the registrant inform the local
DEA Division Office of suspicious orders when discovered by the
registrant. Filing a monthly report of completed transactions (e.g.,
“excessive purchase report” or “high unity purchases”) does not meet
the regulatory requirement to report suspicious orders. Registrants are
reminded that their responsibility does not end merely with the filing
of a suspicious order report. Registrants must conduct an
independent analysis of suspicious orders prior to completing a
sale to determine whether the controlled substances are likely to be
diverted from legitimate channels. Reporting an order as suspicious
will not absolve the registrant of responsibility if the registrant knew, or
should have known, that the controlled substances were being diverted.
78
See Letter from Joseph T. Rannazzisi, Deputy Assistant Adm’r, Office of Diversion Control, Drug.
Enf’t Admin., Dep’t of Justice, to Cardinal Health (Dec. 27, 2007), filed in Cardinal Health, Inc. v. Holder,
No. 1:12-cv- 00185-RBW (D.D.C. Feb. 10, 2012), ECF No. 14-8.
79
Id.
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154. Finally, the DEA letter references the Revocation of Registration issued in
Southwood Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 72 Fed. Reg. 36, 487-01 (July 3, 2007), which discusses the
obligation to report suspicious orders and “some criteria to use when determining whether
an order is suspicious.”81
80
Id.
81
Id.
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155. The Distributor Defendants admit that they “have not only statutory and
regulatory responsibilities to detect and prevent diversion of controlled prescription drugs, but
156. The Distributor Defendants knew they were required to monitor, detect, and
that distributors are “[a]t the center of a sophisticated supply chain” and therefore “are uniquely
situated to perform due diligence in order to help support the security of the controlled
substances they deliver to their customers.” The guidelines set forth recommended steps in
the “due diligence” process, and note in particular: If an order meets or exceeds a distributor’s
distributor as an order of interest, the distributor should not ship to the customer, in fulfillment of
that order, any units of the specific drug code product as to which the order met or exceeded a
hydrocodone and/or oxycodone, to retailers in the State of Georgia and City of Savannah
and/or to retailers from which Defendants knew prescription opioids were likely to be diverted
158. Each Distributor Defendant owes a duty to monitor and detect suspicious orders
of prescription opioids.
82
See Brief of HDMA, supra, 2012 WL 1637016, at *2.
83
Healthcare Distribution Management Association (HDMA) Industry Compliance Guidelines:
Reporting Suspicious Orders and Preventing Diversion of Controlled Substances, filed in Cardinal
Health, Inc. v. Holder, No. 12-5061 (D.C. Cir. Mar. 7, 2012), Doc. No. 1362415 (App’x B).
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159. Each Distributor Defendant owes a duty under federal and state law to
160. Each Distributor Defendant owes a duty under federal and state law to
161. Each Distributor Defendant owes a duty under federal and state law to prevent
the diversion of prescription opioids into illicit markets in the State of Georgia and City of
Savannah.
162. The foreseeable harm resulting from a breach of these duties is the diversion
of prescription opioids for nonmedical purposes and subsequent plague of opioid addiction.
163. The foreseeable harm resulting from the diversion of prescription opioids
for nonmedical purposes is abuse, addiction, morbidity and mortality in the City of Savannah
164. Because distributors handle such large volumes of controlled substances, and
are the first major line of defense in the movement of legal pharmaceutical controlled
substances from legitimate channels into the illicit market, it is incumbent on distributors to
deviate from these checks and balances, the closed system collapses.84
Plaintiff’s community, and/or to pharmacies from which the Distributor Defendants knew the
opioids were likely to be diverted into Plaintiff’s community, is excessive for the medical need
of the community and facially suspicious. Some red flags are so obvious that no one who
engages in the legitimate distribution of controlled substances can reasonably claim ignorance of
84
See Rannazzisi Decl. ¶ 10, filed in Cardinal Health, Inc. v. Holder, No. 1:12-cv-00185-RBW (D.D.C.
Feb. 10, 2012), ECF No. 14-2.
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them.85
from the State of Georgia and/or the City of Savannah, or which the Distributor Defendants
knew were likely to be diverted to the City of Savannah, to the federal and state authorities,
size, orders deviating substantially from a normal pattern and/or orders of unusual frequency in
the State of Georgia and City of Savannah, and/or in areas from which the Distributor
investigate, refuse and report suspicious orders of prescription opiates originating from the
State of Georgia and/or the City of Savannah, and/or in areas from which the Distributor
controls against diversion of prescription opiates into other than legitimate medical, scientific,
170. The Distributor Defendants breached their duty to “design and operate a system
to disclose to the registrant suspicious orders of controlled substances” and failed to inform
the authorities including the DEA of suspicious orders when discovered, in violation of their
85
Masters Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 80 Fed. Reg. 55, 418-01, 55, 482 (Sept. 15, 2015) (citing Holiday
CVS, L.L.C.,d/b/a CVS/Pharmacy Nos. 219 and 5195, 77 Fed. Reg. 62, 316, 62, 322 (2012)).
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171. The Distributor Defendants breached their duty to exercise due diligence to
avoid filling suspicious orders that might be diverted into channels other than legitimate medical,
172. The federal and state laws at issue here are public safety laws.
intentional.
175. The Distributor Defendants refuse to abide by the duties imposed by federal
and state law which are required to legally acquire and maintain a license to distribute
prescription opiates.
176. The Distributor Defendants acted with actual malice in breaching their duties,
i.e., they have acted with a conscious disregard for the rights and safety of other persons, and
an extended period of time, in violation of public safety statutes, and without reporting the
conduct or criminal indifference to civil obligations affecting the rights of others and
with their legal duties under state and federal law and have wrongfully and repeatedly
disavowed those duties in an effort to mislead regulators and the public regarding the
86
See Cardinal Health, Inc. v. Holder, 846 F. Supp. 2d 203, 206 (D.D.C. 2012).
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179. Distributor Defendants have refused to recognize any duty beyond reporting
suspicious orders. In Masters Pharmaceuticals, the HDMA, a trade association run by the
Distributor Defendants, and the NACDS submitted amicus briefs regarding the legal duty of
wholesale distributors. Inaccurately denying the legal duties that the wholesale drug industry
a. The Associations complained that the “DEA has required distributors not
only to report suspicious orders, but to investigate orders (e.g., by
interrogating pharmacies and physicians) and take action to halt suspicious
orders before they are filled;”87
b. The Associations argued that, “DEA now appears to have changed its
position to require that distributors not only report suspicious orders, but
investigate and halt suspicious orders. Such a change in agency position
must be accompanied by an acknowledgment of the change and a reasoned
explanation for it. In other words, an agency must display awareness that it
is changing position and show that there are good reasons for the new
policy. This is especially important here, because imposing intrusive
obligation on distributors threatens to disrupt patient access to needed
prescription medications;”88
87
Brief for HDMA and NACDS, supra, 2016 WL 1321983, at *4–5.
88
Id. at *8.
89
Id. at *14.
90
Id. at *22.
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to DEA and its agents to investigate and halt suspicious orders;”91 and
180. The positions taken by the trade groups is emblematic of the position taken by
the Distributor Defendants in a futile attempt to deny their legal obligations to prevent
181. The Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia recently issued its
opinion affirming that a wholesale drug distributor does, in fact, have duties beyond
reporting. Masters Pharm., Inc. v. Drug Enf’t Admin., 861 F.3d 206 (D.C. Cir. 2017). The
D.C. Circuit Court upheld the revocation of Master Pharmaceutical’s license and determined
that DEA regulations require that in addition to reporting suspicious orders, distributors must
“decline to ship the order, or conduct some ‘due diligence’ and--if it is able to determine
that the order is not likely to be diverted into illegal channels--ship the order.” Id. at 212. Master
investigations and filled suspicious orders. Id. at 218–19, 226. A distributor’s investigation
must dispel all the red flags giving rise to suspicious circumstance prior to shipping a
suspicious order. Id. at 226. The Circuit Court also rejected the argument made by the HDMA and
NACDS (quoted above), that, allegedly, the DEA had created or imposed new duties. Id. at 220.
182. Wholesale Distributor McKesson has recently been forced to specifically admit
to breach of its duties to monitor, report, and prevent suspicious orders. Pursuant to an
91
Id. at *24-25.
92
Id. at *26.
93
See Brief of HDMA, supra, 2012 WL 1637016, at *3 (arguing the wholesale distributor industry
“does not know the rules of the road because” they claim (inaccurately) that the “DEA has not adequately
explained them”).
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McKesson and the DEA in January 2017, McKesson admitted that, at various times during the
period from January 1, 2009 through the effective date of the Agreement (January 17, 2017) it
“did not identify or report to [the] DEA certain orders placed by certain pharmacies which should
have been detected by McKesson as suspicious based on the guidance contained in the
DEA Letters.”94 Further, the 2017 Agreement specifically finds that McKesson “distributed
controlled substances to pharmacies even though those McKesson Distribution Centers should
have known that the pharmacists practicing within those pharmacies had failed to fulfill their
prescriptions issued for legitimate medical purposes by practitioners acting in the usual course of
during this time period, it “failed to maintain effective controls against diversion of particular
controlled substances into other than legitimate medical, scientific and industrial channels by
sales to certain of its customers in violation of the CSA and the CSA’s implementing regulations,
21 C.F.R. Part 1300 et seq., at the McKesson Distribution Centers.”96 Due to these violations,
McKesson agreed that its authority to distribute controlled substances would be partially
suspended.97
in which McKesson also admitted failure to report suspicious orders of controlled substances to
94
See Administrative Memorandum of Agreement between the U.S. Dep’t of Justice, the Drug Enf’t
Admin., and the McKesson Corp. (Jan. 17, 2017), https://www.justice.gov/opa/press-
release/file/928476/download.
95
Id. at 4.
96
Id.
97
Id. at 6.
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the DEA.98 In the 2008 Settlement Agreement, McKesson “recognized that it had a duty to
monitor its sales of all controlled substances and report suspicious orders to DEA,” but had
failed to do so.99 The 2017 Memorandum of Agreement documents that McKesson continued
to breach its admitted duties by “fail[ing] to properly monitor its sales of controlled
obligations.”100 As a result of these violations, McKesson was fined and required to pay to
184. Even though McKesson had been sanctioned in 2008 for failure to comply with
its legal obligations regarding controlling diversion and reporting suspicious orders, and even
though McKesson had specifically agreed in 2008 that it would no longer violate those
obligations, McKesson continued to violate the laws in contrast to its written agreement not to
do so.
obligations, the DEA has repeatedly taken administrative action to attempt to force
compliance. For example, in May 2014, the United States Department of Justice, Office of the
Inspector General, Evaluation and Inspections Divisions, reported that the DEA issued final
98
Id. at 4.
99
Id.
100
Id.; see also Settlement Agreement and Release between the U.S. and McKesson Corp., at 5 (Jan. 17,
2017) [hereinafter 2017 Settlement Agreement and Release] (“McKesson acknowledges that, at various
times during the Covered Time Period [2009-2017], it did not identify or report to DEA certain orders
placed by certain pharmacies, which should have been detected by McKesson as suspicious, in a manner
fully consistent with the requirements set forth in the 2008 MOA.”), https://www.justice.gov/opa/press-
release/file/928471/download.
101
See 2017 Settlement Agreement and Release, supra, at 6.
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decisions in 178 registrant actions between 2008 and 2012.102 The Office of Administrative Law
Judges issued a recommended decision in a total of 117 registrant actions before the DEA
issued its final decision, including 76 actions involving orders to show cause and 41 actions
a. on April 24, 2007, the DEA issued an Order to Show Cause and Immediate
Suspension Order against the AmerisourceBergen Orlando, Florida
distribution center (“Orlando Facility”) alleging failure to maintain effective
controls against diversion of controlled substances. On June 22, 2007,
AmerisourceBergen entered into a settlement that resulted in the
suspension of its DEA registration;
b. on November 28, 2007, the DEA issued an Order to Show Cause and
Immediate Suspension Order against the Cardinal Health Auburn,
Washington Distribution Center (“Auburn Facility”) for failure to
maintain effective controls against diversion of hydrocodone;
e. on January 30, 2008, the DEA issued an Order to Show Cause and
Immediate Suspension Order against the Cardinal Health Stafford, Texas
Distribution Center (“Stafford Facility”) for failure to maintain effective
controls against diversion of hydrocodone;
102
Evaluation and Inspections Div., Office of the Inspector Gen., U.S. Dep’t of Justice, The Drug
Enforcement Administration’s Adjudication of Registrant Actions 6 (2014),
https://oig.justice.gov/reports/2014/e1403.pdf.
103
Id.
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i. on December 23, 2016, Cardinal Health agreed to pay a $44 million fine
to the DEA to resolve the civil penalty portion of the administrative action
taken against its Lakeland, Florida Distribution Center; and
186. Rather than abide by their non-delegable duties under public safety laws,
the Distributor Defendants, individually and collectively through trade groups in the industry,
pressured the U.S. Department of Justice to “halt” prosecutions and lobbied Congress to strip
the DEA of its ability to immediately suspend distributor registrations. The result was a “sharp
drop in enforcement actions” and the passage of the “Ensuring Patient Access and Effective Drug
Enforcement Act” which, ironically, raised the burden for the DEA to revoke a distributor’s
license from “imminent harm” to “immediate harm” and provided the industry the right to
“cure” any violations of law before a suspension order can be issued. 104
104
See Lenny Bernstein & Scott Higham, Investigation: The DEA Slowed Enforcement While the
Opioid Epidemic Grew Out of Control, Wash. Post, Oct. 22, 2016,
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the Distributor Defendants undertook to fraudulently convince the public that they were
complying with their legal obligations, including those imposed by licensing regulations.
Through such statements, the Distributor Defendants attempted to assure the public they were
188. For example, a Cardinal Health executive claimed that it uses “advanced
analytics” to monitor its supply chain, and represented that it was being “as effective and
efficient as possible in constantly monitoring, identifying, and eliminating any outside criminal
activity.”105 Given the sales volumes and the company’s history of violations, this executive
was either not telling the truth, or, if Cardinal Health had such a system, it ignored the
results.
controlled substance monitoring program to help identify suspicious orders,” and claimed it is
“deeply passionate about curbing the opioid epidemic in our country.”106 Again, given
https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/the-dea-slowed- enforcement-while-the-opioid-
epidemic-grew-out-of-control/2016/10/22/aea2bf8e-7f71-11e6-8d13-d7c704ef9fd9_story.html; Lenny
Bernstein & Scott Higham, Investigation: U.S. Senator Calls for Investigation of DEA
EnforcementSlowdown Amid Opioid Crisis, Wash. Post, Mar. 6, 2017,
https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/us-senator-calls-for-investigation-of-dea-
enforcement-slowdown/2017/03/06/5846ee60-028b-11e7-b1e9-a05d3c21f7cf_story.html; Eric Eyre,
DEA Agent: “We Had No Leadership” in WV Amid Flood of Pain Pills, Charleston Gazette Mail, Feb.
18, 2017, http://www.wvgazettemail.com/news/20170218/dea-agent-we-had-no-leadership-in-wv-
amid-flood-of-pain-pills-.
105
Lenny Bernstein et al., How Drugs Intended for Patients Ended Up in the Hands of Illegal Users:
“No One Was Doing Their Job,” Wash. Post, Oct. 22, 2016,
https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/how-drugs-intended-for-patients-ended-up-in-the-hands-
of-illegal-users-no-one-was-doing-their-job/2016/10/22/10e79396-30a7-11e6-8ff7-
7b6c1998b7a0_story.html.
106
Scott Higham et al., Drug Industry Hired Dozens of Officials from the DEA as the Agency Tried to
Curb Opioid Abuse, Wash. Post, Dec. 22, 2016, https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/key-
officials-switch-sides-from- dea-to-pharmaceutical-industry/2016/12/22/55d2e938-c07b-11e6-b527-
949c5893595e_story.html.
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McKesson’s historical conduct, this statement is either false, or the company ignored
substance monitoring programs, the Distributor Defendants successfully concealed the facts
sufficient to arouse suspicion of the claims that the Plaintiff now asserts. The Plaintiff did not
know of the existence or scope of Defendants’ industry-wide fraud and could not have acquired
191. The opioid epidemic continues unabated in the United States, the State of
192. The epidemic still continues because the fines and suspensions imposed by the
DEA do not change the conduct of the industry. The distributors, including the Distributor
Defendants, pay fines as a cost of doing business in an industry that generates billions of
dollars in annual revenue. They hold multiple DEA registration numbers and when one
193. The wrongful actions and omissions of the Distributor Defendants which have
caused the diversion of opioids and which have been a substantial contributing factor to and/or
proximate cause of the opioid crisis are alleged in greater detail in the City of Savannah’s
194. The Distributor Defendants have abandoned their duties imposed under federal and
state law, taken advantage of a lack of DEA law enforcement, and abused the privilege of
195. The same legal duties to prevent diversion, and to monitor, report, and prevent
suspicious orders of prescription opioids that were incumbent upon the Distributor Defendants
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were also legally required of the Manufacturer Defendants under federal law.
196. Like the Distributor Defendants, the Manufacturer Defendants were required to
register with the DEA to manufacture schedule II controlled substances, like prescription
were also required to monitor, report, and prevent suspicious orders of controlled substances:
The registrant shall design and operate a system to disclose to the registrant
suspicious orders of controlled substances. The registrant shall inform the
Field Division Office of the Administration in his area of suspicious orders
when discovered by the registrant. Suspicious orders include orders of
unusual size, orders deviating substantially from a normal pattern, and
orders of unusual frequency.
21 C.F.R. § 1301.74. See also 21 C.F.R. § 1301.02 (“Any term used in this part shall have the
definition set forth in section 102 of the Act (21 U.S.C. 802) or part 1300 of this chapter.”);
21 C.F.R. § 1300.01 (“Registrant means any person who is registered pursuant to either section
303 or section 1008 of the Act (21 U.S.C. 823 or 958).” Like the Distributor Defendants,
198. The Manufacturer Defendants had access to and possession of the information
necessary to monitor, report, and prevent suspicious orders and to prevent diversion. The
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distributor sells the manufacturer’s product at a price below a specified rate. After a
requests a chargeback from the manufacturer and, in exchange for the payment, the
distributor identifies to the manufacturer the product, volume and the pharmacy to which it sold
the product. Thus, the Manufacturer Defendants knew – just as the Distributor Defendants
knew – the volume, frequency, and pattern of opioid orders being placed and filled. The
Manufacturer Defendants built receipt of this information into the payment structure for the
199. Federal statutes and regulations are clear: just like opioid distributors,
opioid manufacturers are required to “design and operate a system to disclose . . . suspicious orders
200. The Department of Justice has recently confirmed the suspicious order
obligations clearly imposed by federal law upon opioid manufacturers, fining Mallinckrodt $35
million for failure to report suspicious orders of controlled substances, including opioids, and
201. In the press release accompanying the settlement, the Department of Justice
stated: Mallinckrodt did not meet its obligations to detect and notify DEA of suspicious orders of
controlled substances such as oxycodone, the abuse of which is part of the current opioid
epidemic. These suspicious order monitoring requirements exist to prevent excessive sales of
controlled substances, like oxycodone . . . . Mallinckrodt’s actions and omissions formed a link in
107
See Press Release, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Mallinckrodt Agrees to Pay Record $35 Million Settlement
for Failure to Report Suspicious Orders of Pharmaceutical Drugs and for Recordkeeping Violations (July
11, 2017), https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/mallinckrodt-agrees-pay-record-35-million-settlement-failure-
report-suspicious-orders
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the chain of supply that resulted in millions of oxycodone pills being sold on the street. . . .
202. Among the allegations resolved by the settlement, the government alleged
“Mallinckrodt failed to design and implement an effective system to detect and report
‘suspicious orders’ for controlled substances – orders that are unusual in their frequency, size,
or other patterns . . . [and] Mallinckrodt supplied distributors, and the distributors then supplied
various U.S. pharmacies and pain clinics, an increasingly excessive quantity of oxycodone pills
Mallinckrodt MOA”) avers “[a]s a registrant under the CSA, Mallinckrodt had a
review and monitor these sales and report suspicious orders to DEA.”110
204. The 2017 Mallinckrodt MOA further details the DEA’s allegations
by its registration and failure to operate an effective suspicious order monitoring system and
to report suspicious orders to the DEA when discovered as required by and in violation of 21
108
Id.
109
Id.
110
Administrative Memorandum of Agreement between the United States Department of Justice, the
Drug Enforcement Agency, and Mallinckrodt, plc. and its subsidiary Mallinckrodt, LLC (July 10,
2017), https://www.justice.gov/usao-edmi/press-release/file/986026/download. (“2017 Mallinckrodt
MOA”).
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C.F.R. § 1301.74(b). The above includes, but is not limited to Mallinckrodt's alleged failure to:
c. detect and report to the DEA orders deviating substantially from normal
patterns including, but not limited to, those identified in letters from the
DEA Deputy Assistant Administrator, Office of Diversion Control, to
registrants dated September 27, 2006 and December 27, 2007:
206. Mallinckrodt agreed that its “system to monitor and detect suspicious orders
did not meet the standards outlined in letters from the DEA Deputy Administrator, Office of
Diversion Control, to registrants dated September 27, 2006 and December 27, 2007.”
Mallinckrodt further agreed that it “recognizes the importance of the prevention of diversion of
the controlled substances they manufacture” and would “design and operate a system that meets
the requirements of 21 CFR 1301.74(b) . . . [such that it would] utilize all available transaction
111
2017 Mallinckrodt MOA at p. 2-3.
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agrees to notify DEA of any diversion and/or suspicious circumstances involving any
207. Mallinckrodt acknowledged that “[a]s part of their business model Mallinckrodt
collects transaction information, referred to as chargeback data, from their direct customers
(distributors). The transaction information contains data relating to the direct customer sales
of controlled substances to "downstream" registrants.” Mallinckrodt agreed that, from this data, it
would “report to the DEA when Mallinckrodt concludes that the chargeback data or other
208. The same duties imposed by federal law on Mallinckrodt were imposed upon all
Distributor Defendants.
209. The same business practices utilized by Mallinckrodt regarding “charge backs” and
receipt and review of data from opioid distributors regarding orders of opioids were utilized
industry-wide among opioid manufacturers and distributors, including, upon information and
210. Through, inter alia, the charge back data, the Manufacturer Defendants could
211. The Manufacturer Defendants failed to monitor, report, and halt suspicious orders
212. The Manufacturer Defendants’ failures to monitor, report, and halt suspicious
213. The Manufacturer Defendants misrepresented their compliance with federal law.
112
Id. at 3-4.
113
Id.
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214. The wrongful actions and omissions of the Manufacturer Defendants which have
caused the diversion of opioids and which have been a substantial contributing factor to and/or
proximate cause of the opioid crisis are alleged in greater detail in Plaintiff’s racketeering
allegations below.
215. The Manufacturer Defendants’ actions and omissions in failing to effective prevent
diversion and failing to monitor, report, and prevent suspicious orders have enabled the
216. As the Manufacturer Defendants’ efforts to expand the market for opioids increased
so have the rates of prescription and sale of their products — and the rates of opioid- related
substance abuse, hospitalization, and death among the people of the State of Georgia and City of
Savannah. The Distributor Defendants have continued to unlawfully ship these massive
quantities of opioids into communities like the Plaintiff’s Community, fueling the epidemic.
218. The increased abuse of prescription painkillers along with growing sales has
opiates and the use of non-prescription opioids, like heroin, the large-scale distribution of
opioids to the State of Georgia and City of Savannah and areas from which such opioids are
being diverted into Plaintiff’s Community, has caused the Defendant-caused opioid epidemic to
114
See Califf et al., supra.
115
See Press Release, Ctrs. for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. Dep’t of Health and Human
Servs., supra.
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220. Prescription opioid abuse, addiction, morbidity, and mortality are hazards to public
221. Heroin abuse, addiction, morbidity, and mortality are hazards to public health and
222. Defendants repeatedly and purposefully breached their duties under state and
federal law, and such breaches are direct and proximate causes of, and/or substantial factors
leading to, the widespread diversion of prescription opioids for nonmedical purposes into the
City of Savannah.
223. The unlawful diversion of prescription opioids is a direct and proximate cause of,
and/or substantial factor leading to, the opioid epidemic, prescription opioid abuse, addiction,
morbidity and mortality in the State of Georgia and City of Savannah. This diversion and the
224. Defendants intentional and/or unlawful conduct resulted in direct and foreseeable,
past and continuing, economic damages for which Plaintiff seeks relief, as alleged herein.
225. Plaintiff also seeks the means to abate the epidemic created by Defendants’
responsibility for the financial burdens their conduct has inflicted upon the Plaintiff and
Plaintiff’s Community.
116
See Office of Nat’l Drug Control Policy, Exec. Office of the President, Epidemic: Responding to
America’s Prescription Drug Abuse Crisis (2011),
https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/ondcp/rx_abuse_plan.pdf.
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228. Plaintiff contends it continues to suffer harm from the unlawful actions by
the Defendants.
229. The continued tortious and unlawful conduct by the Defendants causes a
repeated or continuous injury. The damages have not occurred all at once but have continued
to occur and have increased as time progresses. The tort is not completed nor have all the
damages been incurred until the wrongdoing ceases. The wrongdoing and unlawful activity by
230. Defendants are equitably estopped from relying upon a statute of limitations
defense because they undertook efforts to purposefully conceal their unlawful conduct and
fraudulently assure the public, including the State of Georgia and City of Savannah, that they
were undertaking efforts to comply with their obligations under the state and federal
controlled substances laws, all with the goal of protecting their registered manufacturer or
distributor status in the State and to continue generating profits. Notwithstanding the
allegations set forth above, the Defendants affirmatively assured the public, including the State
of Georgia and City of Savannah, that they are working to curb the opioid epidemic.
231. The Distributor Defendants have also concealed and prevented discovery of
information, including data from the ARCOS database, that will confirm their identities and
232. The Manufacturer Defendants distorted the meaning or import of studies they cited
and offered them as evidence for propositions the studies did not support. The Manufacturer
Manufacturer Defendants provided the medical community with false and misleading
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disclosing the risks. Manufacturer Defendants spent millions of dollars over a period of years
risks, and promoting sales. The medical community, consumers, the State of Georgia and
City of Savannah were duped by the Manufacturer Defendants’ campaign to misrepresent and
conceal the truth about the opioid drugs that they were aggressively pushing in the State of
regarding their purported compliance with their obligations under the law and consent orders.
234. The Plaintiff’s claims are further subject to equitable tolling, stemming from
Defendants’ knowingly and fraudulently concealing the facts alleged herein. As alleged
herein, Defendants knew of the wrongful acts set forth above, and had material information
pertinent to their discovery, and concealed them from the Plaintiff. The Plaintiff did not know,
or could not have known through the exercise of reasonable diligence, of its cause of action, as a
235. The purposes of the statutes of limitations period are satisfied because Defendants
cannot claim prejudice due to a late filing where the Plaintiff filed suit promptly upon
discovering the facts essential to its claims, described herein, which Defendants knowingly
concealed.
236. In light of their statements to the media, in legal filings, and settlements, it is clear
that Defendants had actual or constructive knowledge that their conduct was deceptive, in that
237. Defendants continually and secretly engaged in their scheme to avoid compliance
with their legal obligations. Only Defendants and their agents knew or could have known about
Defendants’ unlawful actions because Defendants made deliberate efforts to conceal their
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conduct. As a result of the above, the Plaintiff was unable to obtain vital information bearing on
CAUSES OF ACTION
COUNT I
PUBLIC NUISANCE
(Against All Defendants)
239. Defendants, individually and acting through their employees and agents, and in
concert with each other, have engaged in conduct or omissions which endanger or injure the
by their production, promotion, and marketing of opioids for use by residents of the City of
Savannah.
240. Defendants’ actions have caused hurt, inconvenience and damage to all members
of the public.
241. Defendants’ conduct and subsequent sale of its opioid products is not only
unlawful, but has also resulted in substantial and unreasonable interference with the public health
and safety.
conduct has so severely impacted public health on every geographic and demographic level that
an “epidemic.” It has caused deaths, serious injuries, and a severe disruption of public peace,
order and safety; it is ongoing, and it is producing permanent and long-lasting damage. The harm
caused by Defendants’ conduct is not fanciful, or such as would affect only one of fastidious
taste, rather Defendants’ conduct is such that it affects ordinary, reasonable persons. See
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O.C.G.A. § 41-1-1.
244. The public nuisance created by Defendants is within the control of the Defendants.
245. The public nuisance created by Defendants is the result of repeated and continuing
conduct which requires the expenditure of funds by Plaintiff on an ongoing and continuous basis.
distribute, and sell prescription opioids that Defendants know, or reasonably should know, will
Savannah, resulting in addiction and abuse, an elevated level of crime, death and injuries to the
residents of the City of Savannah, a higher level of fear, discomfort and inconvenience to the
247. Defendants have unlawfully and/or intentionally caused and permitted dangerous
drugs under their control to be diverted so as to injure the City of Savannah and its residents.
conduct was illegal. Defendants’ failures to maintain effective controls against diversion
include Defendants’ failure to effectively monitor for suspicious orders, report suspicious
249. Defendants have caused a significant and unreasonable interference with the public
health, safety, welfare, peace, comfort and convenience, and ability to be free from
causing such opioids to be distributed and sold, where Defendants know, or reasonably
should know, such opioids will be diverted and possessed and/or used illegally in the City of
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251. Defendants’ actions have been of a continuing nature and have produced a
significant effect upon the public’s rights, including the public’s right to health and safety.
252. A violation of any rule or law controlling the distribution of a drug of abuse in
opioids that they allow and/or cause to be illegally distributed and possessed in the City of
Savannah will be diverted, leading to abuse, addiction, crime, and public health costs.
255. Because of the continued use and addiction caused by these illegally distributed
opioids, the public will continue to fear for its health, safety and welfare, and will be
256. Defendants know, or reasonably should know, that their conduct will have an
ongoing detrimental effect upon the public health, safety and welfare, and the public’s ability
to be free from disturbance and reasonable apprehension of danger to person and property.
257. Defendants know, or reasonably should know, that their conduct causes an
unreasonable invasion of the public right to health, safety and welfare and the public’s ability
to be free from disturbance and reasonable apprehension of danger to person and property.
258. Defendants are aware, and at a bare minimum certainly should be aware, of the
unreasonable interference that their conduct has caused in the City of Savannah. Defendants
are in the business of manufacturing, marketing, selling, and distributing prescription drugs,
including opioids, which are specifically known to Defendants to be dangerous under federal
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which the defendants know, or reasonably should know, will likely be diverted for non-
legitimate, non-medical use, is reasonably foreseeable and creates a strong likelihood that these
illegal distributions of opioids will cause death and injuries to residents in the City of
Savannah and otherwise significantly and unreasonably interfere with public health, safety and
welfare, and with the public’s right to be free from disturbance and reasonable apprehension
260. Defendants’ conduct makes it easier for persons to divert prescription opioids,
261. Defendants’ actions were, at the least, a substantial factor in opioids becoming
widely available and widely used for non-medical purposes. Because of Defendants’
special positions within the closed system of opioid distribution, without Defendants’
actions, opioid use would not have become so widespread, and the enormous public health hazard
of prescription opioid and heroin overuse, abuse, and addiction that now exists would have
been averted.
262. The presence of diverted prescription opioids in the City of Savannah, and the
proximately results in significant costs to the Plaintiff in order to enforce the law, equip its
police force and treat the victims of opioid abuse and addiction.
263. Stemming the flow of illegally distributed prescription opioids, and abating the
nuisance caused by the illegal flow of opioids, will help to alleviate this problem, save lives,
prevent injuries and make the City of Savannah a safer place to live.
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264. Defendants’ conduct is a direct and proximate cause of deaths and injuries to the
residents of the City of Savannah, costs borne by the City of Savannah, and a significant and
unreasonable interference with public health, safety and welfare, and with the public’s right to be
free from disturbance and reasonable apprehension of danger to person and property.
265. Defendants’ conduct constitutes a public nuisance and, if unabated, will continue
to threaten the health, safety and welfare of the residents of the City of Savannah, creating an
atmosphere of fear and addiction that tears at the residents’ sense of well-being and security.
Plaintiff has a clearly ascertainable right to abate conduct that perpetuates this nuisance.
266. Defendants’ actions created and expanded the abuse of opioids, which are
dangerously addictive, and the ensuing associated plague of prescription opioid and heroin
addiction. Defendants knew the dangers to public health and safety that diversion of
opioids would create in the City of Savannah, however, Defendants intentionally and/or
unlawfully failed to maintain effective controls against diversion through proper monitoring,
reporting and refusal to fill suspicious orders of opioids. Defendants intentionally and/or
refusing to fill suspicious orders or taking other measures to maintain effective controls against
diversion. Defendants intentionally and/or unlawfully continued to ship and failed to halt
and/or unlawfully marketed opioids in manners they knew to be false and misleading. Such
267. Defendants knew the prescription opioids have a high likelihood of being diverted.
caused such opioids to be distributed without maintaining effective controls against diversion,
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including monitoring, reporting, and refusing shipment of suspicious orders, that the opioids
would be diverted, and create an opioid abuse nuisance in the City of Savannah.
268. Defendants acted recklessly, negligently and/or carelessly, in breach of their duties
to maintain effective controls against diversion, thereby creating an unreasonable risk of harm.
269. Defendants acted with actual malice because Defendants acted with a conscious
disregard for the rights and safety of other persons, and said actions have a great probability of
270. The damages available to the Plaintiff include, inter alia, recoupment of
governmental costs, flowing from an ongoing and persistent public nuisance which the
government seeks to abate. Defendants’ conduct is ongoing and persistent, and the Plaintiff seeks
271. Plaintiff seeks to abate the nuisance and harm created by Defendants’ conduct,
272. As a direct result of Defendants’ conduct, the Plaintiff has suffered actual injury
and damages including, but not limited to, significant expenses for police, emergency, health,
273. The Plaintiff has sustained specific and special injuries because its damages
include, inter alia, health services, law enforcement expenditures, and costs related to opioid
274. The Plaintiff further seeks to abate the nuisance created by the Defendants’
unreasonable, unlawful, intentional, ongoing, continuing, and persistent actions and omissions
275. Plaintiff seeks all legal and equitable relief as allowed by law, including inter alia
abatement, compensatory damages, and punitive damages from the Defendants for the
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creation of a public nuisance, attorney fees and costs, and pre- and post-judgment interest.
276. Defendants’ intentional and unlawful actions and omissions and unreasonable
277. Defendants are aware, and at a bare minimum should be aware, of the
unreasonable interference that their conduct has caused in the City of Savannah.
opioids, which are specifically known to Defendants to be dangerous because inter alia these
drugs are defined under federal and state law as substances posing a high potential for abuse
and severe addiction. Defendants created an absolute nuisance. Defendants’ actions created and
expanded the abuse of opioids, drugs specifically codified as constituting severely harmful
substances.
278. The public nuisance created by Defendants’ actions is substantial and unreasonable,
has caused and continues to cause significant harm to the community, and the harm inflicted
outweighs any offsetting benefit. The staggering rates of opioid and heroin use resulting from
the Defendants’ abdication of their gate-keeping and diversion prevention duties, and the
Manufacturer Defendants’ fraudulent marketing activities, have caused harm to the entire
b. even children have fallen victim to the opioid epidemic. Easy access to
prescription opioids made opioids a recreational drug of choice among
teenagers. Even infants have been born addicted to opioids due to
prenatal exposure, causing severe withdrawal symptoms and lasting
developmental impacts;
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h. the diversion of opioids into the secondary, criminal market and the
increased number of individuals who abuse or are addicted to opioids
increased the demands on health care services and law enforcement;
i. the significant and unreasonable interference with the public rights caused
by Defendants’ conduct taxed the human, medical, public health, law
enforcement, and financial resources of the Plaintiff’s Community; and
279. Plaintiff has sustained, and continues to sustain, specific and special injuries
because its damages include inter alia law enforcement expenditures and other services, as
Plaintiff does not seek damages for the wrongful death, physical personal injury, serious
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281. Plaintiff seeks all legal and equitable relief as allowed by law, other than such
damages disavowed herein, including inter alia injunctive relief, restitution, disgorgement of
profits, compensatory and punitive damages, and all damages allowed by law to be paid by the
Defendants, attorney fees and costs, and pre- and post-judgment interest.
COUNT II
RACKETEER INFLUENCED AND CORRUPT ORGANIZATIONS ACT
18 U.S.C. 1961, et seq., O.C.G.A. § 16-14-1, et seq.
(Against All Defendants)
283. Plaintiff brings this Count on behalf of itself against the following Defendants, as
defined above: Purdue, Cephalon, Janssen, Endo, Mallinckrodt, Actavis, McKesson, Cardinal,
and AmerisourceBergen (collectively, for purposes of this Count, the “RICO Defendants”).
284. The RICO Defendants conducted and continue to conduct their business through
legitimate and illegitimate means in the form of an association-in-fact enterprise and/or a legal
entity enterprise. At all relevant times, the RICO Defendants were “persons” under 18 U.S.C. §
1961(3) and O.C.G.A. § 16-14-1, et seq. and because they are entities capable of holding, and do
285. Section 1962(c) of RICO makes it unlawful “for any person employed by or
associated with any enterprise engaged in, or the activities of which affect, interstate or
18 U.S.C. § 1962(c); United State v. Turkette, 452 U.S. 576, 580 (1981).
286. O.C.G.A. § 16-4-4 makes it unlawful “for any person, through a pattern of
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indirectly, any interest in or control of any enterprise, real property, or personal property of any
nature, including money,” and makes it unlawful for “any person employed by or associated
with any enterprise to conduct or participate in, directly or indirectly, such enterprise
corporation, association, or other legal entity, and any union or group of individuals
associated in fact although not a legal entity.” 18 U.S.C. § 1961(4); Turkette, 452 U.S. at 580;
Boyle v. U.S., 556 U.S. 938, 944 (2009). The definition of “enterprise” in Section 1961(4)
includes legitimate and illegitimate enterprises within its scope. Specifically, the section
“describes two separate categories of associations that come within the purview of an
other ‘legal entities,’ and the second covering ‘any union or group of individuals associated
in fact although not a legal entity.’” Turkette, 452 U.S. at 577. The second category is not a
proprietorship, partnership, corporation, business trust, union chartered under the laws of this
state, or other legal entity; or any unchartered union, association, or group of individuals
associated in fact although not a legal entity; and it includes illicit as well as licit enterprises
289. For over a decade, the RICO Defendants aggressively sought to bolster their
revenue, increase profit, and grow their share of the prescription painkiller market by
unlawfully and surreptitiously increasing the volume of opioids they sold. However, the RICO
Defendants are not permitted to engage in a limitless expansion of their market through the
unlawful sales of regulated painkillers. As “registrants,” the RICO Defendants operated and
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continue to operate within the “closed-system” created under the Controlled Substances Act, 21
U.S.C. § 821, et seq. (the “CSA”). The CSA restricts the RICO Defendants’ ability to
manufacture or distribute Schedule II substances like opioids by requiring them to: (1) register
to manufacture or distribute opioids; (2) maintain effective controls against diversion of the
controlled substances that they manufacturer or distribute; (3) design and operate a system to
identify suspicious orders of controlled substances, halt such unlawful sales, and report them to
the DEA; and (4) make sales within a limited quota set by the DEA for the overall production of
290. The closed-system created by the CSA, including the establishment of quotas,
was specifically intended to reduce or eliminate the diversion of Schedule II substances like
opioids from “legitimate channels of trade” to the illicit market by controlling the quantities of the
ambitions, members of the Opioid Diversion Enterprise (as defined below) systematically and
fraudulently violated their statutory duty to maintain effective controls against diversion of their
drugs, to design and operate a system to identify suspicious orders of their drugs, to halt
unlawful sales of suspicious orders, and to notify the DEA of suspicious orders.118 As discussed
in detail below, through the RICO Defendants’ scheme, members of the Opioid Diversion
Enterprise repeatedly engaged in unlawful sales of painkillers which, in turn, artificially and
illegally increased the annual production quotas for opioids allowed by the DEA.119 In doing so,
117
1970 U.S.C.C.A.N. 4566 at 5490; see also Testimony of Joseph T. Rannazzisi before the Caucus on
International Narcotics Control, United States Senate, May 5, 2015 (available at
https://www.drugcaucus.senate.gov/sites/default/files/Rannazzisi%20Testimony_0.pdf).
118
21 U.S.C. § 823(a)(1), (b)(1); 21 C.F.R. § 1301.74(b)-(c).
119
21 C.F.R. § 1303.11(b); 21 C.F.R. § 1303.23.
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the RICO Defendants allowed hundreds of millions of pills to enter the illicit market which
between the Manufacturer Defendants and the Distributor Defendants, and executed in
perfect harmony by each of them. In particular, each of the RICO Defendants were
associated with, and conducted or participated in, the affairs of the RICO enterprise
(defined below and referred to collectively as the “Opioid Diversion Enterprise”), whose
purpose was to engage in the unlawful sales of opioids, deceive the public and federal and state
regulators into believing that the RICO Defendants were faithfully fulfilling their statutory
obligations. The RICO Defendants’ scheme allowed them to make billions in unlawful sales
of opioids and, in turn, increase and/or maintain high production quotas with the purpose of
ensuring unlawfully increasing revenues, profits, and market share. As a direct result of the
RICO Defendants’ fraudulent scheme, course of conduct, and pattern of racketeering activity,
they were able to extract billions of dollars of revenue from the addicted American public,
while entities like the Plaintiff experienced tens of millions of dollars of injury caused by the
explained in detail below, the RICO Defendants’ misconduct violated Section 1962(c) and
O.C.G.A. § 16-14-6 and Plaintiff is entitled to treble damages for its injuries under 18 U.S.C. §
enterprise within the meaning of 18 U.S.C. § 1961(4), through which the RICO Defendants
conducted their pattern of racketeering activity in this jurisdiction and throughout the United
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States. Specifically, the Healthcare Distribution Alliance (the “HDA”)120 is a distinct legal
entity that satisfies the definition of a RICO enterprise. The HDA is a non-profit corporation
formed under the laws of the District of Columbia and doing business in Virginia. As a non-
profit corporation, HDA qualifies as an “enterprise” within the definition set out in 18 U.S.C. §
participant, and/or sponsor of the HDA and utilized the HDA to conduct the Opioid
Diversion Enterprise and to engage in the pattern of racketeering activity that gives rise to the
Count.
295. Each of the RICO Defendants is a legal entity separate and distinct from the
HDA. And, the HDA serves the interests of distributors and manufacturers beyond the RICO
Defendants. Therefore, the HDA exists separately from the Opioid Diversion Enterprise, and
each of the RICO Defendants exists separately from the HDA. Therefore, the HDA may serve
as a RICO enterprise.
296. The legal and association-in-fact enterprises alleged in the previous and
subsequent paragraphs were each used by the RICO Defendants to conduct the Opioid
and association-in-fact enterprises alleged in the previous and subsequent paragraphs are
pleaded in the alternative and are collectively referred to as the “Opioid Diversion Enterprise.”
297. Recognizing that there is a need for greater scrutiny over controlled substances
due to their potential for abuse and danger to public health and safety, the United States
120
Health Distribution Alliance, History, Health Distribution Alliance, (last accessed on April 9, 2018),
https://www.healthcaredistribution.org/about/hda-history.
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Congress enacted the Controlled Substances Act in 1970.121 The CSA and its implementing
regulations created a closed-system of distribution for all controlled substances and listed
chemicals.122 Congress specifically designed the closed chain of distribution to prevent the
diversion of legally produced controlled substances into the illicit market.123 As reflected in
comments from United States Senators during deliberation on the CSA, the “[CSA] is designed
to crack down hard on the narcotics pusher and the illegal diverters of pep pills and goof
balls.”124 Congress was concerned with the diversion of drugs out of legitimate channels of
distribution when it enacted the CSA and acted to halt the “widespread diversion of
[controlled substances] out of legitimate channels into the illegal market.”125 Moreover, the
closed-system was specifically designed to ensure that there are multiple ways of identifying
and preventing diversion through active participation by registrants within the drug delivery
chain.126 All registrants -- manufacturers and distributors alike --must adhere to the specific
security, recordkeeping, monitoring and reporting requirements that are designed to identify or
121
Joseph T. Rannazzisi Decl. ¶ 4, Cardinal Health, Inc. v. Eric Holder, Jr., Attorney General, D.D.C.
Case No. 12-cv-185 (Document 14-2 February 10, 2012).
122
See H.R. Rep. No. 91-1444, 1970 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 4566.
123
Gonzalez v. Raich, 545 U.S. 1, 12-14 (2005); 21 U.S.C. § 801(20; 21 U.S.C. §§ 821-824, 827, 880;
H.R. Rep. No. 91-1444, 1970 U.S.C.C.A.N. 4566, 4572 (Sept. 10, 1970).
124
See H.R. Rep. No. 91-1444, 1970 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 4566; 116 Cong. Rec. 977-78 (Comments of Sen.
Dodd, Jan 23, 1970).
125
See Testimony of Joseph T. Rannazzisi before the Caucus on International Narcotics Control, United
State Senate, May 5, 2015 (available at
https://www.drugcaucus.senate.gov/sites/default/files/Rannazzisi%20Testimony_0.pdf).
126
See Statement of Joseph T. Rannazzisi before the Caucus on International Narcotics Control United
States Senate, July 18, 2012 (available at
https://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/testimonies/witnesses/attachments/07/18/12/07-18-12-dea-
rannazzisi.pdf).
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prevent diversion.127 When registrants at any level fail to fulfill their obligations, the necessary
checks and balances collapse.128 The result is the scourge of addiction that has occurred.
298. In 2006 and 2007, the DEA issued multiple letters to the Distributor
diversion of particular controlled substances, design and operate a system to disclose suspicious
orders, and to inform the DEA of any suspicious orders.129 The DEA also published
suggested questions that a distributor should ask prior to shipping controlled substances, in
299. Central to the closed-system created by the CSA was the directive that the
DEA determine quotas of each basic class of Schedule I and II controlled substances each year.
The quota system was intended to reduce or eliminate diversion from “legitimate channels of
trade” by controlling the “quantities of the basic ingredients needed for the manufacture of
[controlled substances], and the requirement of order forms for all transfers of these drugs.”131
When evaluating production quotas, the DEA was instructed to consider the following
information:
127
Id.
128
Joseph T. Rannazzisi Decl. ¶ 10, Cardinal Health, Inc. v. Eric Holder, Jr., Attorney General, D.D.C.
Case No. 12-cv-185 (Document 14-2 February 10, 2012).
129
Joseph T. Rannazzisi, In Reference to Registration # RC0183080 (September 27, 2006); Joseph T.
Rannazzisi, In Reference to Registration # RC0183080 (December 27, 2007).
130
Suggested Questions a Distributor should ask prior to shipping controlled substances, Drug
Enforcement Administration (available at
https://www.deadiversion.usdoj.gov/mtgs/pharm_industry/14th_pharm/levinl_ques.pdf).
131
1970 U.S.C.C.A.N. 4566 at 5490; see also Testimony of Joseph T. Rannazzisi before the Caucus on
International Narcotics Control, United States Senate, May 5, 2015 (available at
https://www.drugcaucus.senate.gov/sites/default/files/Rannazzisi%20Testimony_0.pdf).
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300. Other factors included changes in the currently accepted medical use of
substances manufactured for a basic class; the economic and physical availability of raw
materials; yield and sustainability issues; potential disruptions to production; and unforeseen
emergencies.132
II, like prescription opioids, that is (1) not expressly authorized by its registration and by a
fact enterprise formed for the purpose of unlawfully increasing sales, revenues and profits by
disregarding their statutory duty to identify, investigate, halt and report suspicious orders of
opioids and diversion of their drugs into the illicit market, in order to unlawfully increase the
quotas set by the DEA and allow them to collectively benefit from the unlawful formation
of a greater pool of prescription opioids from which to profit. The RICO Defendants
conducted their pattern of racketeering activity in this jurisdiction and throughout the United
132
See Testimony of Joseph T. Rannazzisi before the Caucus on International Narcotics Control, United
State Senate, May 5, 2015 (available at
https://www.drugcaucus.senate.gov/sites/default/files/Rannazzisi%20Testimony_0.pdf).
133
Id. (citing 21 U.S.C. 842(b)).
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303. The opioid epidemic has its origins in the mid-1990s when, between 1997 and
2007, per capita purchase of methadone, hydrocodone, and oxycodone increased 13-fold, 4-fold,
and 9-fold, respectively. By 2010, enough prescription opioids were sold in the United States
to medicate every adult in the country with a dose of 5 milligrams of hydrocodone every 4
hours for 1 month.134 On information and belief, the Opioid Diversion Enterprise has been
304. The Opioid Diversion Enterprise was and is a shockingly successful endeavor.
It has been conducting business uninterrupted since its genesis. But, it was not until recently that
United States and State regulators finally began to unravel the extent of the enterprise and the toll
305. At all relevant times, the Opioid Diversion Enterprise: (a) had an existence
separate and distinct from each RICO Defendant; (b) was separate and distinct from the pattern
of racketeering in which the RICO Defendants engaged; (c) was an ongoing and continuing
organization consisting of legal entities, including each of the RICO Defendants; (d)
characterized by interpersonal relationships among the RICO Defendants; (e) had sufficient
longevity for the enterprise to pursue its purpose; and (f) functioned as a continuing unit.
Turkette, 452 U.S. at 580; Boyle, 556 U.S. at 944 (2009). Each member of the Opioid
racketeering activity, and shared in the astounding growth of profits supplied by fraudulently
134
Keyes KM, Cerdá M, Brady JE, Havens JR, Galea S. Understanding the Rural-Urban
Differences in Nonmedical Prescription Opioid Use and Abuse in the United States. Am J Public
Health. 2014;104(2):e52-9.
135
Matthew Perrone, Pro-Painkiller echo chamber shaped policy amid drug epidemic, The Center
for Public Integrity (April 9, 2018), https://www.publicintegrity.org/2016/09/19/20201/pro-painkiller-
echo-chamber-shaped-policy-amid-drug-epidemic.
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inflating opioid sales generated as a result of the Opioid Diversion Enterprise’s disregard for
their duty to prevent diversion of their drugs into the illicit market and then requesting the
DEA increase production quotas, all so that the RICO Defendants would have a larger pool of
306. The Opioid Diversion Enterprise also engaged in efforts to lobby against the
DEA’s authority to hold the RICO Defendants liable for disregarding their duty to
prevent diversion. Members of the Pain Care Forum (described in greater detail below) and
the Healthcare Distribution Alliance lobbied for the passage of legislation to weaken the
DEA’s enforcement authority. The Ensuring Patient Access and Effective Drug
Enforcement Act significantly reduced the DEA’s ability to issue orders to show cause and to
suspend and/or revoke registrations.136 The HDA and other members of the Pain Care Forum
state candidates, political action committees and political parties. Plaintiff is informed and
believes that the Pain Care Forum and its members poured at least $3.5 million into
lobbying efforts in this jurisdiction while the HDA devoted over a million dollars a year to its
136
See HDMA is now the Healthcare Distribution Alliance, Pharmaceutical Commerce, (June
13, 2016, updated July 6,2016), http://pharmaceuticalcommerce.com/business-and-finance/hdma-
now-healthcare-distribution- alliance/; Lenny Bernstein & Scott Higham, Investigation: The DEA
Slowed Enforcement While the Opioid Epidemic Grew Out of Control, Wash. Post, Oct. 22, 2016,
https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/the-dea-slowed-enforcement-while-the-opioid-pidemic-
grew-out-of-control/2016/10/22/aea2bf8e-7f71-11e6-8d13- d7c704ef9fd9_story.html; Lenny
Bernstein & Scott Higham, Investigation: U.S. Senator Calls for Investigation of DEA Enforcement
Slowdown Amid Opioid Crisis, Wash. Post, Mar. 6, 2017,
https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/us-senator-calls-for-investigation-of-dea-
enforcement-slowdown/2017/03/06/5846ee60-028b-11e7-b1e9-a05d3c21f7cf_story.html; Eric Eyre,
DEA Agent: “We Had no Leadership” in WV Amid Flood of Pain Pills, Charleston Gazette-Mail,
Feb. 18, 2017, http://www.wvgazettemail.com/news/20170218/dea-agent-we-had-no-leadership-
in-wv-amid-flood-of-pain-pills.
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307. The Opioid Diversion Enterprise functioned by selling prescription opioids. While
there are some legitimate uses and/or needs for prescription opioids, the RICO Defendants,
through their illegal enterprise, engaged in a pattern of racketeering activity, that involves a
fraudulent scheme to increase revenue by violating State and Federal laws requiring the
for the illicit drug market. The goal of Defendants’ scheme was to increase profits from opioid
sales. But, Defendants’ profits were limited by the production quotas set by the DEA, so the
Defendants refused to identify, investigate and/or report suspicious orders of their prescription
opioids being diverted into the illicit drug market. The end result of this strategy was to
increase and maintain artificially high production quotas of opioids so that there was a larger
pool of opioids for Defendants to manufacture and distribute for public consumption.
308. The Opioid Diversion Enterprise engaged in, and its activities affected, interstate
and foreign commerce because the enterprise involved commercial activities across states lines,
such as manufacture, sale, distribution, and shipment of prescription opioids throughout the
County and this jurisdiction, and the corresponding payment and/or receipt of money from the
309. Within the Opioid Diversion Enterprise, there were interpersonal relationships and
common communication by which the RICO Defendants shared information on a regular basis.
These interpersonal relationships also formed the organization of the Opioid Diversion
Enterprise. The Opioid Diversion Enterprise used their interpersonal relationships and
communication network for the purpose of conducting the enterprise through a pattern of
racketeering activity.
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310. Each of the RICO Defendants had a systematic link to each other through joint
continuing coordination of activities. The RICO Defendants participated in the operation and
management of the Opioid Diversion Enterprise by directing its affairs, as described herein.
While the RICO Defendants participated in, and are members of, the enterprise, they each
have a separate existence from the enterprise, including distinct legal statuses, different offices
and roles, bank accounts, officers, directors, employees, individual personhood, reporting
311. The RICO Defendants exerted substantial control over the Opioid Diversion
Enterprise by their membership in the Pain Care Forum, the HDA, and through their
contractual relationships.
312. The Pain Care Forum (“PCF”) has been described as a coalition of drugmakers,
trade groups and dozens of non-profit organizations supported by industry funding. The PCF
recently became a national news story when it was discovered that lobbyists for members of
the PCF quietly shaped federal and state policies regarding the use of prescription opioids for
313. The Center for Public Integrity and The Associated Press obtained “internal
documents shed[ding] new light on how drugmakers and their allies shaped the national
response to the ongoing wave of prescription opioid abuse.”137 Specifically, PCF members
spent over $740 million lobbying in the nation’s capital and in all 50 statehouses on an array of
137
Matthew Perrone, Pro-Painkiller echo chamber shaped policy amid drug epidemic, The Center for
Public Integrity (September 19, 2017, 12:01 a.m.),
https://www.publicintegrity.org/2016/09/19/20201/pro-painkiller-echo-chamber-shaped-policy-amid-
drug-epidemic (emphasis added).
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314. Not surprisingly, each of the RICO Defendants who stood to profit from
lobbying in favor of prescription opioid use is a member of and/or participant in the PCF.139 In
2012, membership and participating organizations included the HDA (of which all RICO
Defendants are members), Endo, Purdue, Johnson & Johnson (the parent company for
Janssen Pharmaceuticals), Actavis (i.e., Allergan), and Teva (the parent company of
Cephalon).140 Each of the Manufacturer Defendants worked together through the PCF to
advance the interests of the enterprise. But, the Manufacturer Defendants were not alone. The
minimum, through their trade organization, the HDA.141 Plaintiff is informed and believes that
315. The 2012 Meeting Schedule for the Pain Care Forum is particularly revealing
on the subject of the Defendants’ interpersonal relationships. The meeting schedule indicates
that meetings were held in the D.C. office of Powers Pyles Sutter & Verville on a monthly basis,
unless otherwise noted. Local members were “encouraged to attend in person” at the monthly
meetings. And, the meeting schedule indicates that the quarterly and year-end meetings
138
Id.
139
PAIN CARE FORUM 2012 Meetings Schedule, (last updated December 2011),
https://assets.documentcloud.org/documents/3108982/PAIN-CARE-FORUM-Meetings-Schedule-amp.pdf
140
Id. Plaintiff is informed and believes that Mallinckrodt became an active member of the PCF
sometime after 2012.
141
Id. The Executive Committee of the HDA (formerly the HDMA) currently includes the Chief
Executive Officer, Pharmaceutical Segment for Cardinal Health, Inc., the Group President,
Pharmaceutical Distribution and Strategic Global Source for AmerisourceBergen Corporation, and the
President, U.S. Pharmaceutical for McKesson Corporation. Executive Committee, Healthcare
Distribution Alliance (accessed on April 9, 2018),
https://www.healthcaredistribution.org/about/executive-committee.
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316. The 2012 Pain Care Forum Meeting Schedule demonstrates that each of the
Defendants participated in meetings on a monthly basis, either directly or through their trade
organization, in a coalition of drugmakers and their allies whose sole purpose was to shape the
national response to the ongoing prescription opioid epidemic, including the concerted
317. Second, the HDA – or Healthcare Distribution Alliance – led to the formation of
interpersonal relationships and an organization between the RICO Defendants. Although the
entire HDA membership directory is private, the HDA website confirms that each of the
Distributor Defendants and the Manufacturer Defendants named in the Complaint, including
Actavis (i.e., Allergan), Endo, Purdue, Mallinckrodt and Cephalon were members of the
HDA.142 And, the HDA and each of the Distributor Defendants, eagerly sought the active
membership and participation of the Manufacturer Defendants by advocating that one of the
318. In fact, the HDA touted the benefits of membership to the Manufacturer
Defendants, advocating that membership included the ability to, among other things,
“network one on one with manufacturer executives at HDA’s members-only Business and
“opportunities to host and sponsor HDA Board of Directors events,” “participate on HDA
committees, task forces and working groups with peers and trading partners,” and “make
142
Manufacturer Membership, Healthcare Distribution Alliance, (accessed on April 9, 2018),
https://www.healthcaredistribution.org/about/membership/manufacturer.
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connections.”143 Clearly, the HDA and the Distributor Defendants believed that membership
319. The application for manufacturer membership in the HDA further indicates
the level of connection that existed between the RICO Defendants.144 The manufacturer
membership application must be signed by a “senior company executive,” and it requests that
the manufacturer applicant identify a key contact and any additional contacts from within its
company. The HDA application also requests that the manufacturer identify its current
distribution information and its most recent year end net sales through any HDA distributors,
including but not limited to, Defendants AmerisourceBergen, Cardinal Health, and McKesson.145
320. After becoming members, the Distributors and Manufacturers were eligible
143
Manufacturer Membership Benefits, Healthcare Distribution Alliance, (accessed on April 9, 2018),
https://www.healthcaredistribution.org/~/media/pdfs/membership/manufacturer-membership-
benefits.ashx?la=en.
144
Manufacturer Membership Application, Healthcare Distribution Alliance, (accessed on
September 14, 2017),
https://www.healthcaredistribution.org/~/media/pdfs/membership/manufacturer-membership-
application.ashx?la=en.
145
Id.
146
Councils and Committees, Healthcare Distribution Alliance, (accessed on September 14, 2017),
https://www.healthcaredistribution.org/about/councils-and-committees
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147
Id.
148
Id.
149
Id.
150
Id.
151
Id.
152
Id.
153
Id.
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321. The councils, committees, task forces and working groups provided the
Manufacturer and Distributor Defendants with the opportunity to work closely together in
322. The HDA also offers a multitude of conferences, including annual business
and leadership conferences. The HDA, and the Distributor Defendants advertise these
executives, thought leaders and influential managers . . . to hold strategic business discussions
on the most pressing industry issues.”155 The conferences also gave the Manufacturer and
Distributor Defendants “unmatched opportunities to network with [their] peers and trading
partners at all levels of the healthcare distribution industry.”156 The HDA and its conferences
were significant opportunities for the Manufacturer and Distributor Defendants to interact at a
high-level of leadership. And, it is clear that the Manufacturer Defendants embraced this
working together and exchanging information and driving the unlawful sales of their
154
Id.
155
Business and Leadership Conference – Information for Manufacturers, Healthcare Distribution
Alliance, (accessed on September 14, 2017), https://www.healthcaredistribution.org/events/2015-business-
and-leadership-conference/blc-for-manufacturers.
156
Id.
157
2015 Distribution Management Conference and Expo, Healthcare Distribution Alliance, (accessed
on September 14, 2017), https://www.healthcaredistribution.org/events/2015-distribution-management-
conference.
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opioids through their contractual relationships, including chargebacks and vault security
programs.
paying rebates and/or chargebacks to the Distributor Defendants for sales of prescription
acknowledged by the HDA, there is an industry-wide practice whereby the Manufacturers paid
information and belief, these contracts were negotiated at the highest levels, demonstrating
ongoing relationships between the Manufacturer and Distributor Defendants. In return for the
rebates and chargebacks, the Distributor Defendants provided the Manufacturer Defendants
with detailed information regarding their prescription opioid sales, including purchase orders,
acknowledgements, ship notices, and invoices.160 The Manufacturer Defendants used this
information to gather high-level data regarding overall distribution and direct the Distributor
325. The contractual relationships among the RICO Defendants also include vault
security programs. The RICO Defendants are required to maintain certain security protocols
158
Lenny Bernstein & Scott Higham, The government’s struggle to hold opioid manufacturers
accountable, The Washington Post, (April 2, 2017),
https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/investigations/dea-
mallinckrodt/?utm_term=.cd8b791812cab24cc81cc356; see also, Letter from Sen. Claire McCaskill, (July
27, 2017), https//www.mccaskill.senate.gov/imo/media/image/july-opioid-investigation-letter-
manufacturers.png; Letter from Sen. Claire McCaskill, (July 27, 2017),
https://www.mccaskill.senate.gov/imo/media/image/july-opioid-investigation-letter-manufacturers.png;
Letters From Sen. Claire McCaskill, (March 28, 2017), https://www.mccaskill.senate.gov/opioid-
investigation; Purdue Managed Markets, Purdue Pharma, (accessed on September 14, 2017),
http://www.purduepharma.com/payers/managed-markets/.
159
Id.
160
Webinars, Healthcare Distribution Alliance, (accessed on September 14, 2017),
https://www.healthcaredistribution.org/resources/webinar-leveraging-edi.
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and storage facilities for the manufacture and distribution of their opiates. Plaintiff is
informed and believes that manufacturers negotiated agreements whereby the Manufacturers
installed security vaults for Distributors in exchange for agreements to maintain minimum
sales performance thresholds. Plaintiff is informed and believes that these agreements were
used by the RICO Defendants as a tool to violate their reporting and diversion duties in order to
326. Taken together, the interaction and length of the relationships between and among
the Manufacturer and Distributor Defendants reflects a deep level of interaction and
cooperation between two groups in a tightly knit industry. The Manufacturer and Distributor
Defendants were not two separate groups operating in isolation or two groups forced to work
together in a closed system. The RICO Defendants operated together as a united entity,
working together on multiple fronts, to engage in the unlawful sale of prescription opioids.
The HDA and the Pain Care Forum are but two examples of the overlapping relationships,
and concerted joint efforts to accomplish common goals and demonstrates that the leaders of
327. According to articles published by the Center for Public Integrity and The
Associated Press, the Pain Care Forum -- whose members include the Manufacturers and the
Distributors’ trade association has been lobbying on behalf of the Manufacturers and
Distributors for “more than a decade.”161 And, from 2006 to 2016 the Distributors and
Manufacturers worked together through the Pain Care Forum to spend over $740 million
lobbying in the nation’s capital and in all 50 statehouses on issues including opioid-related
161
Matthew Perrone, Pro-Painkiller Echo Chamber Shaped Policy Amid Drug Epidemic, The Center for
Public Integrity (September 19, 2017, 12:01 a.m.), https://www.publicintegrity.org/2016/09/19/20201/pro-
painkiller-echo-chamber-shaped-policy-amid-drug-epidemic.
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measures.162 Similarly, the HDA has continued its work on behalf of Distributors and
328. As described above, the RICO Defendants began working together as early as
2006 through the Pain Care Forum and/or the HDA to promote the common purpose of their
enterprise. Plaintiff is informed and believes that the RICO Defendants worked together as an
329. During the time period alleged in this Complaint, the RICO Defendants
exerted control over, conducted and/or participated in the Opioid Diversion Enterprise by
fraudulently failing to comply with their Federal and State obligations to identify, investigate
and report suspicious orders of opioids in order to prevent diversion of those highly addictive
substances into the illicit market, to halt such unlawful sales and, in doing so, to increase
claiming that they were complying with their obligations to maintain effective controls
claiming that they were complying with their obligations to design and operate a system to
162
Id.
163
HDA History, Healthcare Distribution Alliance, (accessed on April 9, 2018),
https://www.healthcaredistribution.org/about/hda-history.
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claiming that they were complying with their obligation to notify the DEA of any suspicious
333. Defendants paid nearly $800 million dollars to influence local, state and
federal governments through joint lobbying efforts as part of the Pain Care Forum. The
RICO Defendants were all members of their Pain Care Forum either directly or indirectly through
the HDA. The lobbying efforts of the Pain Care Forum and its members, included efforts to
pass legislation making it more difficult for the DEA to suspend and/or revoke the
opioids.
334. The RICO Defendants exercised control and influence over the distribution
335. The RICO Defendants applied political and other pressure on the DOJ and DEA
to halt prosecutions for failure to report suspicious orders of prescription opioids and lobbied
Congress to strip the DEA of its ability to immediately suspend registrations pending
investigation by passing the “Ensuring Patient Access and Effective Drug Enforcement
Act.”164
164
See HDMA is now the Healthcare Distribution Alliance, Pharmaceutical Commerce, (June 13,
2016, updated July 6, 2016), http://pharmaceuticalcommerce.com/business-and-finance/hdma-now-
healthcare-distribution-alliance/; Lenny Bernstein & Scott Higham, Investigation: The DEA Slowed
Enforcement While the Opioid Epidemic Grew Out of Control, Wash. Post, Oct. 22, 2016,
https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/the-dea-slowed-enforcement-while-the-opioid-
epidemic-grew-out-of-control/2016/10/22/aea2bf8e-7f71-11e6-8d13-d7c704ef9fd9_story.html; Lenny
Bernstein & Scott Higham, Investigation: U.S. Senator Calls for Investigation of DEA Enforcement
Slowdown Amid Opioid Crisis, Wash. Post, Mar. 6, 2017,
https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/us-senator-calls-for-investigation-of-dea-enforcement-
slowdown/2017/03/06/5846ee60-028b-11e7-b1e9-a05d3c21f7cf_story.html; Eric Eyre, DEA Agent:
“We Had no Leadership” in WV Amid Flood of Pain Pills, Charleston Gazette-Mail, Feb. 18, 2017,
http://www.wvgazettemail.com/news/20170218/dea-agent-we-had-no-leadership-in-wv-amid-flood-of-
pain-pills.
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and chargebacks to incentivize unlawful opioid prescription sales. Plaintiff is informed and
believes that the Manufacturer Defendants used the chargeback program to acquire detailed high-
level data regarding sales of the opioids they manufactured. And, Plaintiff is informed and
believes that the Manufacturer Defendants used this high-level information to direct the
Distributor Defendants’ sales efforts to regions where prescription opioids were selling in larger
volumes.
Production Quotas, year after year by submitting net disposal information that the
Manufacturer Defendants knew included sales that were suspicious and involved the diversion of
opioids that had not been properly investigated or reported by the RICO Defendants.
338. The Distributor Defendants developed “know your customer” questionnaires and
files. This information, compiled pursuant to comments from the DEA in 2006 and 2007 was
intended to help the RICO Defendants identify suspicious orders or customers who were
likely to divert prescription opioids.165 On information and belief, the “know your customer”
questionnaires informed the RICO Defendants of the number of pills that the pharmacies sold,
how many non-controlled substances are sold compared to controlled substances, whether the
pharmacy buys from other distributors, the types of medical providers in the area, including
pain clinics, general practitioners, hospice facilities, cancer treatment facilities, among others, and
165
Suggested Questions a Distributor should ask prior to shipping controlled substances, Drug
Enforcement Administration (available at
https://www.deadiversion.usdoj.gov/mtgs/pharm_industry/14th_pharm/levinl_ques.pdf); Richard
Widup, Jr., Kathleen H. Dooley, Esq. Pharmaceutical Production Diversion: Beyond the PDMA, Purdue
Pharma and McQuite Woods LLC,(available at https://www.mcguirewoods.com/news-
resources/publications/lifesciences/product_diversion_beyond_pdma.pdf).
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339. The RICO Defendants refused to identify, investigate and report suspicious
orders to the DEA when they became aware of the same despite their actual knowledge of drug
diversion rings. The RICO Defendants refused to identify suspicious orders and diverted drugs
despite the DEA issuing final decisions against the Distributor Defendants in 178 registrant
actions between 2008 and 2012166 and 117 recommended decision in registrant actions from
The Office of Administrative Law Judges. These numbers include 76 actions involving orders to
show cause and 41 actions involving immediate suspension orders -- all for failure to report
suspicious orders.167
340. Defendants’ scheme had decision-making structure that was driven by the
Defendants worked together to control the State and Federal Government’s response to the
a systematic refusal to maintain effective controls against diversion, and identify suspicious
341. The RICO Defendants worked together to control the flow of information
and influence state and federal governments and political candidates to pass legislation that was
pro-opioid. The Manufacturer and Distributor Defendants did this through their participation in
342. The RICO Defendants also worked together to ensure that the Aggregate
Production Quotas, Individual Quotas and Procurement Quotas allowed by the DEA stayed high
166
Evaluation and Inspections Div., Office of the Inspector Gen., U.S. Dep’t of Justice, The Drug
Enforcement Administration’s Adjudication of Registrant Actions 6 (2014),
https://oig.justice.gov/reports/2014/e1403.pdf.
167
Id.
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and ensured that suspicious orders were not reported to the DEA. By not reporting suspicious
orders or diversion of prescription opioids, the RICO Defendants ensured that the DEA had no
basis for refusing to increase or decrease the production quotas for prescription opioids due
to diversion of suspicious orders. The RICO Defendants influenced the DEA production
168
Harriet Ryan, et al., More than 1 million OxyContin pills ended up in the hands of criminals and
addicts. What the drugmaker knew, Los Angeles Times, (July 10, 2016),
http://www.latimes.com/projects/la-me-oxycontin-part2/
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343. The scheme devised and implemented by the RICO Defendants amounted to a
diversion, and all designed and operated to ensure the continued unlawful sale of controlled
substances.
344. The RICO Defendants conducted and participated in the conduct of the Opioid
1961(B) and O.C.G.A. § 16-14-3(3), including mail fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1341) and wire fraud
(18 U.S.C. § 1343); and 18 U.S.C. § 1961(D) and O.C.G.A. § 16-14-3(5)(A)(xxxiv) by the
dealing in a controlled substance or listed chemical (as defined in section 102 of the Controlled
345. The RICO Defendants carried out, or attempted to carry out, a scheme to defraud
federal and state regulators, and the American public by knowingly conducting or participating
activity within the meaning of 18 U.S.C. § 1961(1) that employed the use of mail and wire
facilities, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341 (mail fraud) and § 1343 (wire fraud).
346. The RICO Defendants committed, conspired to commit, and/or aided and abetted
in the commission of at least two predicate acts of racketeering activity (i.e. violations of 18
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U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 1343) within the past ten years. The multiple acts of racketeering activity
that the RICO Defendants committed, or aided and abetted in the commission of, were related to
each other, posed a threat of continued racketeering activity, and therefore constitute a “pattern of
racketeering activity.” The racketeering activity was made possible by the RICO Defendants’
regular use of the facilities, services, distribution channels, and employees of the Opioid
Diversion Enterprise. The RICO Defendants participated in the scheme to defraud by using mail,
telephone and the Internet to transmit mailings and wires in interstate or foreign commerce.
347. The RICO Defendants used, directed the use of, and/or caused to be used, thousands
of interstate mail and wire communications in service of their scheme through virtually
with their mandatory reporting requirements and the actions necessary to carry out their unlawful
goal of selling prescription opioids without reporting suspicious orders or the diversion of
348. In devising and executing the illegal scheme, the RICO Defendants devised and
knowingly carried out a material scheme and/or artifice to defraud by means of materially false
purpose of executing the illegal scheme, the RICO Defendants committed these
racketeering acts, which number in the thousands, intentionally and knowingly with the
349. The RICO Defendants’ predicate acts of racketeering (18 U.S.C. § 1961(1))
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350. The RICO Defendants’ use of the mail and wires includes, but is not limited to, the
parties that were foreseeably caused to be sent as a result of the RICO Defendants’ illegal
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351. On information and belief, the RICO Defendants (and/or their agents), for the
purpose of executing the illegal scheme, sent and/or received (or caused to be sent and/or
related documents by mail or by private carrier affecting interstate commerce, including the
following:
352. Purdue manufactures multiple forms of prescription opioids, including but not
limited to: OxyContin, MS Contin, Dilaudid/Dilaudid HP, Butrans, Hysingla ER, and
Targiniq ER. Purdue manufactured and shipped these prescription opioids to the Distributor
Defendants in this jurisdiction, who shipped Purdue’s prescription opioids throughout this
jurisdiction.
353. Cephalon manufactures multiple forms of prescription opioids, including but not
limited to: Actiq and Fentora. Cephalon manufactured and shipped these prescription
opioids to the Distributor Defendants in this jurisdiction., who shipped Teva’s prescription
manufactured and shipped its prescription opioids to the Distributor Defendants in this
355. Endo manufactures multiple forms of prescription opioids, including but not
limited to: Opana/Opana ER, Percodan, Percocet, and Zydone. Endo manufactured and
shipped its prescription opioids to the Distributor Defendants in Georgia, who shipped Janssen’s
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356. Actavis manufactures multiple forms of prescription opioids, including but not
limited to: Kadin and Norco, as well as generic versions of the drugs known as Kadian,
Duragesic and Opana. Actavis manufactured and shipped its prescription opioids to the
Distributor Defendants in this jurisdiction, who shipped Actavis’ prescription opioids throughout
this jurisdiction.
not limited to: Exalgo and Roxicodone, who shipped Mallinckrodt’s prescription opioids
358. The RICO Defendants also used the internet and other electronic facilities to carry
out their scheme and conceal the ongoing fraudulent activities. Specifically, the RICO
Defendants made misrepresentations about their compliance with Federal and State laws
requiring them to identify, investigate and report suspicious orders of prescription opioids and/or
359. At the same time, the RICO Defendants misrepresented the superior safety features
preventing diversion of prescription opioids and that they complied with all state and federal
opioids.
360. Plaintiff is also informed and believes that the RICO Defendants utilized the
361. The RICO Defendants also communicated by U.S. Mail, by interstate facsimile,
and by interstate electronic mail and with various other affiliates, regional offices, regulators,
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362. The mail and wire transmissions described herein were made in furtherance of
Defendants’ scheme and common course of conduct to deceive regulators and the public that
Defendants were complying with their state and federal obligations to identify and report
suspicious orders of prescription opioids all while Defendants were knowingly allowing
millions of doses of prescription opioids to divert into the illicit drug market. The RICO
Defendants’ scheme and common course of conduct was intended to increase or maintain
high production quotas for their prescription opioids from which they could profit.
363. Many of the precise dates of the fraudulent uses of the U.S. mail and interstate wire
facilities have been deliberately hidden, and cannot be alleged without access to Defendants’
books and records. But, Plaintiff has described the types of, and in some instances,
occasions on which the predicate acts of mail and/or wire fraud occurred. They include
thousands of communications to perpetuate and maintain the scheme, including the things and
364. The RICO Defendants did not undertake the practices described herein in isolation,
but as part of a common scheme. These actions violate 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c). Various other
persons, firms, and corporations, including third-party entities and individuals not named as
defendants in this Complaint, may have contributed to and/or participated in the scheme with the
RICO Defendants and have performed acts in furtherance of the scheme to increase revenues,
increase market share, and /or minimize the losses for the RICO Defendants.
365. The RICO Defendants aided and abetted others in the violations of the above laws,
thereby rendering them indictable as principals in the 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 1343 offenses.
366. The RICO Defendants hid from the general public, and suppressed and/or ignored
warnings from third parties, whistleblowers and governmental entities, about the reality of the
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suspicious orders that the RICO Defendants were filling on a daily basis -- leading to the
diversion of a tens of millions of doses of prescriptions opioids into the illicit market.
367. The RICO Defendants, with knowledge and intent, agreed to the overall objective
of their fraudulent scheme and participated in the common course of conduct to commit acts of
368. For the Defendants’ fraudulent scheme to work, each of the Defendants had to
agree to implement similar tactics regarding marketing prescription opioids and refusing to report
suspicious orders.
predicate acts for years. The predicate acts constituted a variety of unlawful activities, each
conducted with the common purpose of obtaining significant monies and revenues from the
sale of their highly addictive and dangerous drugs. The predicate acts also had the same or
similar results, participants, victims, and methods of commission. The predicate acts were related
370. The predicate acts all had the purpose of generating significant revenue and profits
for the RICO Defendants while Plaintiff was left with substantial injury to its business
through the damage that the prescription opioid epidemic caused. The predicate acts were
committed or caused to be committed by the RICO Defendants through their participation in the
371. The pattern of racketeering activity alleged herein and the Opioid Diversion
Enterprise are separate and distinct from each other. Likewise, Defendants are distinct from the
enterprise.
372. The pattern of racketeering activity alleged herein is continuing as of the date of
this Complaint and, upon information and belief, will continue into the future unless
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373. Many of the precise dates of the RICO Defendants’ criminal actions at issue here
have been hidden and cannot be alleged without access to Defendants’ books and records.
Indeed, an essential part of the successful operation of the Opioids Addiction and Opioid
374. Each instance of racketeering activity alleged herein was related, had similar
purposes, involved the same or similar participants and methods of commission, and had
similar results affecting similar victims, including consumers in this jurisdiction and the
Plaintiff. Defendants calculated and intentionally crafted the Opioid Diversion Enterprise and
their scheme to increase and maintain their increased profits, without regard to the effect
such behavior would have on consumers in this jurisdiction, its citizens or the Plaintiff. In
designing and implementing the scheme, at all times Defendants were cognizant of the fact
that those in the manufacturing and distribution chain rely on the integrity of the
pharmaceutical companies and ostensibly neutral third parties to provide objective and reliable
information regarding Defendants’ products and their manufacture and distribution of those
products. The Defendants were also aware that Plaintiff and the citizens of this jurisdiction
rely on the Defendants to maintain a closed system and to protect against the non-medical
375. By intentionally refusing to report and halt suspicious orders of their prescription
376. It was foreseeable to Defendants that refusing to report and halt suspicious orders,
as required by the CSA and Code of Federal Regulations, would harm Plaintiff by allowing the
flow of prescriptions opioids from appropriate medical channels into the illicit drug market.
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377. The last racketeering incident occurred within five years of the commission of a
378. The RICO Defendants conducted and participated in the conduct of the affairs of
the Opioid Diversion Enterprise through a pattern of racketeering activity as defined in 18 U.S.C.
chemical (as defined in section 102 of the Controlled Substance Act), punishable under any law
379. The RICO Defendants committed crimes that are punishable as felonies under the
laws of the United States. Specifically, 21 U.S.C. § 483(a)(4) makes it unlawful for any person
to knowingly or intentionally furnish false or fraudulent information in, or omit any material
information from, any application, report, record or other document required to be made, kept or
filed under this subchapter. A violation of section 483(a)(4) is punishable by up to four years in
380. Each of the RICO Defendants qualify as registrants under the CSA. Their status as
registrants under the CSA requires that they maintain effective controls against diversion of
controlled substances in schedule I or II, design and operate a system to disclose to the registrant
suspicious orders of controlled substances., and inform the DEA of suspicious orders when
381. Pursuant to the CSA and the Code of Federal Regulations, the RICO Defendants
were required to make reports to the DEA of any suspicious orders identified through the design
382. The RICO Defendants knowingly and intentionally furnished false or fraudulent
information in their reports to the DEA about suspicious orders, and/or omitted material
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information from reports, records and other document required to be filed with the DEA
including the Manufacturer Defendants’ applications for production quotas. Specifically, the
RICO Defendants were aware of suspicious orders of prescription opioids and the diversion
of their prescription opioids into the illicit market, and failed to report this information to
the DEA in their mandatory reports and their applications for production.
383. For example, The DEA and DOJ began investigating McKesson in 2013
regarding its monitoring and reporting of suspicious controlled substances orders. On April 23,
2015, McKesson filed a Form-8-K announcing a settlement with the DEA and DOJ wherein it
admitted to violating the CSA and agreed to pay $150 million and have some of its DEA
registrations suspended on a staggered basis. The settlement was finalized on January 17,
2017.169
Defendants’ willful violation of the CSA and Code of Federal Regulations as it relates to
reporting suspicious orders of prescription opioids. In 2016, the Los Angeles Times reported
that Purdue was aware of a pill mill operating out of Los Angeles yet failed to alert the DEA.170
The LA Times uncovered that Purdue began tracking a surge in prescriptions in Los
Angeles, including one prescriber in particular. A Purdue sales manager spoke with
company officials in 2009 about the prescriber, asking “Shouldn’t the DEA be contacted about
169
McKesson, McKesson Finalizes Settlement with U.S. Department of Justice and U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration to Resolve Past Claims, About McKesson / Newsroom / Press Releases,
(January 17, 2017(), http://www.mckesson.com/about-mckesson/newsroom/press-
releases/2017/mckesson-finalizes-settlement-with-doj-and-dea-to-resolve-past-claims/.
170
Harriet Ryan, et al., More than 1 million OxyContin pills ended up in the hands of criminals and
addicts. What the drugmaker knew, Los Angeles Times, (July 10, 2016),
http://www.latimes.com/projects/la-me-oxycontin-part2/.
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this?” and adding that she felt “very certain this is an organized drug ring.”171 Despite knowledge
of the staggering amount of pills being issued in Los Angeles, and internal discussion of the
problem, “Purdue did not shut off the supply of highly addictive OxyContin and did not tell
authorities what it knew about Lake Medical until several years later when the clinic was out of
business and its leaders indicted. By that time, 1.1 million pills had spilled into the hands of
385. Finally, Mallinckrodt was recently the subject of a DEA and Senate
investigation for its opioid practices. Specifically, in 2011, the DEA targeted Mallinckrodt
arguing that it ignored its responsibility to report suspicious orders as 500 million of its pills
ended up in Florida between 2008 and 2012.173 After six years of DEA investigation,
summarized the case by saying that Mallinckrodt’s response was that everyone knew what was
386. Plaintiff is informed and believes that the foregoing examples reflect the
RICO Defendants’ pattern and practice of willfully and intentionally omitting information from
their mandatory reports to the DEA as required by 21 C.F.R. § 1301.74. This conclusion is
supported by the sheer volume of enforcement actions available in the public record against the
171
Id.
172
Id.
173
Lenny Bernstein & Scott Higham, The government’s struggle to hold opioid manufacturers
accountable, The Washington Post, (April 2, 2017),
https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/investigations/dea-mallinckrodt/?utm_term=.b24cc81cc356.
This number accounted for 66% of all oxycodone sold in the state of Florida during that time.
174
Id.
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Distributor Defendants.175
387. On April 24, 2007, the DEA issued an Order to Show Cause and
center (“Orlando Facility”) alleging failure to maintain effective controls against diversion of
controlled substances. On June 22, 2007, AmerisourceBergen entered into a settlement that
388. On November 28, 2007, the DEA issued an Order to Show Cause and Immediate
Suspension Order against the Cardinal Health Auburn, Washington Distribution Center
hydrocodone;
389. On December 5, 2007, the DEA issued an Order to Show Cause and Immediate
Suspension Order against the Cardinal Health Lakeland, Florida Distribution Center (“Lakeland
390. On December 7, 2007, the DEA issued an Order to Show Cause and Immediate
Suspension Order against the Cardinal Health Swedesboro, New Jersey Distribution Center
hydrocodone;
391. On January 30, 2008, the DEA issued an Order to Show Cause and Immediate
Suspension Order against the Cardinal Health Stafford, Texas Distribution Center (“Stafford
175
Evaluation and Inspections Div., Office of the Inspector Gen., U.S. Dep’t of Justice, The Drug
Enforcement Administration’s Adjudication of Registrant Actions 6 (2014),
https://oig.justice.gov/reports/2014/e1403.pdf.
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Memorandum of Agreement (“2008 MOA”) with the DEA which provided that McKesson would
“maintain a compliance program designed to detect and prevent the diversion of controlled
393. On September 30, 2008, Cardinal Health entered into a Settlement and Release
Agreement and Administrative Memorandum of Agreement with the DEA related to its
Auburn Facility, Lakeland Facility, Swedesboro Facility and Stafford Facility. The document
also referenced allegations by the DEA that Cardinal failed to maintain effective controls against
394. On February 2, 2012, the DEA issued an Order to Show Cause and Immediate
Suspension Order against the Cardinal Health Lakeland, Florida Distribution Center (“Lakeland
395. On December 23, 2016, Cardinal Health agreed to pay a $44 million fine to the
DEA to resolve the civil penalty portion of the administrative action taken against its
Memorandum Agreement with the DEA wherein it agreed to pay a $150,000,000 civil
penalty for violation of the 2008 MOA as well as failure to identify and report suspicious orders
at its facilities in Aurora CO, Aurora IL, Delran NJ, LaCrosse WI, Lakeland FL, Landover
MD, La Vista NE, Livonia MI, Methuen MA, Santa Fe Springs CA, Washington Courthouse OH
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397. These actions against the Distributor Defendants confirm that the Distributors knew
they had a duty to maintain effective controls against diversion, design and operate a
system to disclose suspicious orders, and to report suspicious orders to the DEA. These
actions also demonstrate, on information and belief, that the Manufacturer Defendants were aware
of the enforcement against their Distributors and the diversion of the prescription opioids and a
398. The pattern of racketeering activity alleged herein is continuing as of the date of
this Complaint and, upon information and belief, will continue into the future unless
399. Many of the precise dates of Defendants’ criminal actions at issue herein were
hidden and cannot be alleged without access to Defendants’ books and records. Indeed, an
essential part of the successful operation of the Opioid Diversion Enterprise depended upon the
400. Each instance of racketeering activity alleged herein was related, had similar
purposes, involved the same or similar participants and methods of commission, and had
similar results affecting similar victims, including consumers in this jurisdiction and the
Plaintiff. Defendants calculated and intentionally crafted the diversion scheme to increase and
maintain profits from unlawful sales of opioids, without regard to the effect such behavior
would have on this jurisdiction, its citizens or the Plaintiff. The Defendants were aware that
Plaintiff and the citizens of this jurisdiction rely on the Defendants to maintain a closed system
of manufacturing and distribution to protect against the non-medical diversion and use of
401. By intentionally refusing to report and halt suspicious orders of their prescription
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402. It was foreseeable to Defendants that refusing to report and halt suspicious orders,
as required by the CSA and Code of Federal Regulations would harm Plaintiff by allowing the
flow of prescriptions opioids from appropriate medical channels into the illicit drug market.
403. The last racketeering incident occurred within five years of the commission of a
404. At all relevant times, the RICO Defendants were associated with the Opioid
Diversion Enterprise and agreed and conspired to violate 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c) and O.C.G.A. §
16-14-4(c), that is, they agreed to conduct and participate, directly and indirectly, in the
conduct of the affairs of the Opioid Diversion Enterprise through a pattern of racketeering
activity.
405. Defendants conspired, as alleged more fully above, by conducting the affairs of the
D. Damages
406. The RICO Defendants’ violations of law and their pattern of racketeering activity
directly and proximately caused Plaintiff injury in its business and property because
Plaintiff paid for costs associated with the opioid epidemic, as described above in language
407. Plaintiff’s injuries, and those of its citizens, were proximately caused by
Defendants’ racketeering activities. But for the RICO Defendants’ conduct, Plaintiff would not
have paid the health services and law enforcement services and expenditures required as a result
408. Plaintiff’s injuries and those of its citizens were directly caused by the RICO
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409. Plaintiff was most directly harmed and there is no other Plaintiff better suited to
410. Plaintiff seeks all legal and equitable relief as allowed by law, including inter alia
actual damages, treble damages, equitable relief, forfeiture as deemed proper by the Court,
attorney’s fees and all costs and expenses of suit and pre- and post-judgment interest.
COUNT III
NEGLIGENCE
(Against All Defendants)
412. Plaintiff seeks economic damages which were the foreseeable result of Defendants’
413. Under State law, to establish actionable negligence, one must show in addition to
the existence of a duty, a breach of that duty, and injury resulting proximately therefrom. All
marketing, selling, and distributing highly dangerous opioid drugs to the State of Georgia and
City of Savannah.
415. Each Defendant had an obligation to exercise due care in manufacturing, marketing,
selling, and distributing highly dangerous opioid drugs in the State of Georgia and City of
Savannah.
416. The existence of a duty depends on the foreseeability of the injury. Each Defendant
owed a duty to the Plaintiff because the injuries alleged herein was foreseeable, and in fact
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have anticipated that the scourge of opioid addiction would wreak havoc on communities, and
the significant costs which would be imposed upon the governmental entities associated with
those communities. The closed system of opioid distribution whereby wholesale distributors
are the gatekeepers between manufacturers and pharmacies, and wherein all links in the
chain have a duty to prevent diversion, exists for the purpose of controlling dangerous
aggressively pushing highly addictive opioids for chronic pain would result in the severe harm
turning to the illegal drug market as a result of a drug addiction that was foreseeable to the
Manufacturer Defendants.
420. The escalating amounts of addictive drugs flowing through Defendants’ businesses,
and the sheer volume of these prescription opioids, further alerted Defendants that
addiction was fueling increased consumption and that legitimate medical purposes were not
being served.
421. Distributor Defendants breached their duties to exercise due care in the business
failing to monitor for, failing to report, and filling highly suspicious orders time and again.
Because the very purpose of these duties was to prevent the resulting harm – diversion of highly
addictive drugs for non- medical purposes – the causal connection between Defendants’ breach
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422. Distributor Defendants misrepresented their compliance with their duties under the
law and concealed their noncompliance and shipments of suspicious orders of opioids to the
State of Georgia and City of Savanah and destinations from which they knew opioids were
likely to be diverted into the City of Savanah, in addition to other misrepresentations alleged
423. Manufacturer Defendants breached their duties to exercise due care in the business
Substances, and by misrepresenting the nature of the drugs and aggressively promoting them
for chronic pain for which they knew the drug were not safe or suitable.
424. The Manufacturer Defendants misrepresented and concealed the addictive nature
of prescription opioids and its lack of suitability for chronic pain, in addition to other
425. All Defendants breached their duties to prevent diversion and report and halt
suspicious orders, and all Defendants misrepresented their compliance with their legal
duties.
426. Defendants’ breaches were intentional and/or unlawful, and Defendants’ conduct
breaches of duty and misrepresentations caused, bears a causal connection with, and/or
429. Defendants were selling dangerous drugs statutorily categorized as posing a high
potential for abuse and severe dependence. Defendants’ knowingly traded in drugs that
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monitor for, report, and halt suspicious orders, breached their duties to prevent diversion, and,
further, misrepresented what their duties were and their compliance with their legal duties.
losses) resulting from Defendants’ actions and omissions. Plaintiff does not seek damages for the
wrongful death, physical personal injury, serious emotional distress, or any physical damage to
432. Plaintiff seeks all legal and equitable relief as allowed by law, other than such
damages disavowed herein, including inter alia injunctive relief, restitution, disgorgement of
profits, compensatory and punitive damages, and all damages allowed by law to be paid by the
Defendants, attorney fees and costs, and pre- and post-judgment interest.
COUNT IV
NEGLIGENCE PER SE
(Against Distributor Defendants)
434. O.C.G.A. § 26-4-115 is a public safety law. Each Defendant had a duty under, inter
alia, this law to maintain effective controls against diversion of prescription opioids and to guard
436. Defendants’ actions and omissions were intentional and/or unlawful, and
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437. It was foreseeable that the breach of duty described herein would result in the
addictive opioids, including violating public safety statutes requiring that as wholesale drug
distributors, Defendants could only distribute these dangerous drugs under a closed system - a
of statutory and regulatory duties caused, bears a causal connection with, and proximately
losses) resulting from Defendants’ negligence per se. Plaintiff does not seek damages for the
wrongful death, physical personal injury, serious emotional distress, or any physical damage to
441. Plaintiff seeks all legal and equitable relief as allowed by law, except as expressly
disavowed herein, including inter alia injunctive relief, restitution, disgorgement of profits,
compensatory and punitive damages, and all damages allowed by law to be paid by the
Distributor Defendants, attorney fees and costs, and pre- and post-judgment interest.
COUNT V
DECEPTIVE TRADE PRACTICES
O.C.G.A. § 10-1-370, et seq.
(Against All Defendants)
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443. Defendants violated O.C.G.A. §10-1-370, et. seq., because they engaged in
444. Defendants committed repeated and willful unfair or deceptive acts or practices,
445. Each Defendant represented that opioids had certain characteristics, approvals,
uses, and benefits that were false and failed to report and/or prevent the diversion of highly
446. Because of the dangerously addictive nature of these drugs, the Defendants’
manufacturing, marketing, sales, and/or distribution practices unlawfully caused an opioid and
heroin plague and epidemic in the State of Georgia and City of Savannah. Each Defendant
had a non-delegable duty to guard against and prevent the diversion of prescription opioids to other
447. The Defendants also omitted material facts, causing confusion or misunderstanding
448. The Defendants failed to disclose the material facts that inter alia they were not in
compliance with laws and regulations requiring that they maintain a system to prevent
diversion, protect against addiction and severe harm, and specifically monitor, investigate, report,
and refuse suspicious orders. But for these material factual omissions, Defendants would not
have been able to sell opioids, and the Distributor Defendants would not have been able to
prescription medications they manufactured, marketed, and sold had characteristics, uses, or
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450. The Manufacturer Defendants also wrongfully misrepresented that the opioids were
safe and effective when such representations were untrue, false, and misleading.
material facts and omitted material facts, which tended to deceive and/or did in fact
deceive.
452. Because of the dangerously addictive nature of these drugs, which the Manufacturer
Defendants concealed and misrepresented, they lacked medical value, and in fact caused
addiction and overdose deaths; therefore, Defendants’ sales and marketing of opioids
453. The Manufacturer Defendants made deceptive representations about the use of
opioids to treat chronic non-cancer pain. Each Manufacturer Defendant also omitted or
concealed material facts and failed to correct prior misrepresentations and omissions about the
risks and benefits of opioids. Each Defendant’s omissions rendered even their seemingly
and omissions constitute a willful course of conduct which continues to this day.
456. State law prohibits representing that goods or services have sponsorship, approval,
characteristics, uses, or benefits that they do not have. State law further prohibits representing
457. Defendants committed repeated and willful unfair or deceptive acts or practices,
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458. Each Defendant failed to report and/or prevent the diversion of highly addictive
prescription drugs.
459. Because of the dangerously addictive nature of these drugs, the Distributor
opioid and heroin plague and epidemic in the State of Georgia and City of Savannah. Each
Defendant had a non-delegable duty to guard against and prevent the diversion of
prescription opioids to other than legitimate medical, scientific, and industrial channels.
460. The Defendants also omitted material facts, causing confusion or misunderstanding
461. The Defendants failed to disclose the material facts that inter alia they were not in
compliance with laws and regulations requiring that they maintain a system to prevent
diversion, protect against addiction and severe harm, and specifically monitor, investigate, report,
and refuse suspicious orders. But for these material factual omissions, Defendants would not
have been able to sell opioids, and the Distributor Defendants would not have been able to
prescription medications they manufactured, marketed, and sold had characteristics, uses, or
463. The Manufacturer Defendants also wrongfully misrepresented that the opioids were
safe and effective when such representations were untrue, false, and misleading.
material facts and omitted material facts, which had a tendency to deceive and/or did in fact
deceive.
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465. Because of the dangerously addictive nature of these drugs, which the Manufacturer
Defendants concealed and misrepresented, they lacked medical value, and in fact caused
addiction and overdose deaths; therefore, Defendants’ sales and marketing of opioids
466. The Manufacturer Defendants made deceptive representations about the use of
opioids to treat chronic non-cancer pain. Each Manufacturer Defendant also omitted or
concealed material facts and failed to correct prior misrepresentations and omissions about the
risks and benefits of opioids. Each Defendant’s omissions rendered even their seemingly
469. Plaintiff seeks recovery of costs and attorneys’ fees in accordance with O.C.G.A. §
10-1-373.
COUNT VI
FALSE STATEMENT IN ADVERTISING
(Against All Defendants)
471. Defendants’ efforts to market and sell opioids in the City of Savannah as identified
472. Defendants knew, or through the exercise of reasonable care should have known,
that statements made in marketing opioids in the City of Savannah were untrue.
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473. Plaintiff seeks injunctive relief to cause the cessation of Defendants’ false
COUNT VII
VIOLATION OF LEGAL DUTY
(Against Distributor Defendants)
475. The Distributor Defendants failed to disclose suspicious sales of opioids as required
by federal law (21 U.S.C. § 823, 21 CFR 1301.74) and Georgia law (O.C.G.A. § 26-4-115).
476. Pursuant to O.C.G.A. § 51-1-6 a cause of action will lie for breach of a duty arising
injury to Plaintiff.
478. The purpose of the disclosure requirement for suspicious sales of opioids is to alert
governing agencies and governments to the potential for abuse and harm resulting from large
479. Plaintiff falls within the class of persons that 21 U.S.C. § 823, 21 CFR
480. The expense incurred by Plaintiff in combating the opioid epidemic is the harm that
the reporting requirements of 21 U.S.C. § 823, 21 CFR 1301.74, and O.C.G.A. § 26-4-115 were
482. Plaintiff seeks all legal and equitable relief as allowed by law.
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COUNT VIII
PUNITIVE DAMAGES
484. Defendants’ conduct, as set forth herein above, showed willful misconduct,
malice, fraud, wantonness, oppression, and that entire want of care which raises the
485. Defendants’ conduct, as set forth herein above, evidenced a specific intent to
cause harm, as defined by law, to Plaintiff. Accordingly, Plaintiff is entitled to recover punitive
damages from Defendants in an amount to be determined by the jury, not subject to any cap or
limit.
WHEREFORE, the City of Savannah requests a trial by jury and prays that the Court grant
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