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Health See other Health Articles Title: The Conspiracy That Allows Murder Without Accountability The Conspiracy That Allows Murder Without Accountability Analysis by Dr. Joseph Mercola September 29, 2021 STORY AT-A-GLANCE > In October 2020, Purdue Pharma owned and operated by members of the Sackler family pleaded guilty to federal criminal charges and reached a settlement totaling $8.3 billion. August 11, 2021, a federal judge granted the Sackler family legal immunity against future litigation At the end of October 2020, Purdue Pharma, owned and operated by members of the Sackler family, pleaded guilty to federal criminal charges and reached a settlement totaling $8.3 billion.1 The U.S. Department of Justice probe found Purdue had intentionally fueled the deadly opioid epidemic using unethical, untruthful and illegal marketing practices. At the time, Robert Weissman, president of Public Citizen, commented:2 For there to be accountability for the corporate-fueled opioid addiction epidemic, which has cruelly taken hundreds of thousands of lives, there must be prosecution of those members of the Sackler family who, along with other executives and owners, were responsible for Purdue Pharmas deadly deception, as well as a stripping away of their ill-gotten gains from an evil scheme to push addictive drugs for profit. Sackler Family Let Off Scot-Free Well, that simply wasnt to be. August 11, 2021, a federal judge granted the Sackler family legal immunity against future litigation over their role in the opioid epidemic.3 The obvious question is why? The Sacklers knew their drug was highly addictive and responsible for nearly half a million U.S. overdose deaths in the decade between 1999 and 2019,4 yet they chose to hide that fact and encouraged doctors to overprescribe. Purdues sales representatives were extensively coached on how to downplay the drugs addictive potential, claiming addiction occurred in less than 1% of patients being treated for pain. Meanwhile, research5 shows addiction affects as many as 26% of those using opioids for chronic noncancer pain. The results were predictable. Patients became addicted at record rates, and when they couldnt obtain more OxyContin, they turned to street drugs like heroin and fentanyl. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,6 841,000 Americans died from drug overdoses between 1999 and 2019, and opioids were involved in 70.6% of the overdose deaths that occurred in 2019. Its quite remarkable that our legal system is letting the Sacklers get off scot-free, seeing how they were clearly in charge of the companys deadly decisions.7,8,9 Adding insult to injury, the Sacklers decided to cash in on the problem they created by developing and selling addiction treatment.10,11 As reported by Nation of Change:12 Purdue will be bankrupt, but members of the multi-billionaire Sackler family who were responsible for the decisions that led to these deaths and profited the most from Purdues opioid dealings will gain near-total immunity from future litigation. By the time the settlement is paid out they most likely will be as wealthy as they ever were. So where does personal responsibility come in? Hold the Sacklers Accountable in the Public Sphere In 2018, Paul Hanly, a leading attorney in the case against Purdue, referred to the Sacklers as a crime family
drug dealers in nice suits and dresses.13 Indeed, yet the Sacklers had carefully built a public image of themselves as a family of philanthropists, donating a fraction of their ill-gotten wealth to prestigious medical schools and fancy museums through the years. As noted by Nation of Change, In return for the donation, honorees are imbued with moral approval. Well, its time to retract that moral approval, and the only ones who can do that is us. We need to demand that those who took Sacklers donations recognize the harm the family has done, and strip the Sacklers of their honors. Richard Sackler and other family members involved in this tragedy deserve to be shamed, Nation of Change writes.14 Institutions that took their blood money should remove the Sackler name from their centers, professorships, buildings, and pediments. If they wont be held accountable in a court of law, they must be held accountable at least in the public sphere. In the video below, Patrick Bet-David interviews Dr. Chris Johnson, an emergency medicine physician, about the opioid epidemic and the role of unethical drug companies. As noted by Johnson, drug companies appear to view fines for illegal activities as a routine business expense. Its a great business model. They can easily afford the fines if caught so shareholders are protected, and no one goes to jail. The only people who get hurt are the patients. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
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