Attorney General Bob Ferguson filed a lawsuit against the three largest distributors of prescription opioids in Washington state on March 12, arguing that they failed to alert law enforcement of suspicious opioid orders, and illegally shipped those orders into Washington for years, and contributed to the illegal supply of opioids, fueling the state’s opioid epidemic.
Ferguson’s lawsuit, filed today in King County Superior Court, asserts that McKesson Corp., Cardinal Health Inc. and AmerisourceBergen Drug Corp. made billions of dollars feeding the opioid epidemic, shipping huge amounts of oxycodone, fentanyl, hydrocodone and other prescription opioids into the state even when they knew or should have known those drugs were likely to end up in the hands of drug dealers and addicts.
Opioid distributors are legally required to monitor the size and frequency of prescription opioid orders to identify suspicious orders that could be diverted into the illegal drug market. Distributors are required to stop these suspicious shipments and report them to the federal Drug Enforcement Agency.
Instead, McKesson, Cardinal Health and AmerisourceBergen have faced repeated actions from the DEA for continuously failing to stop and report suspicious opioid shipments, paying hundreds of millions in fines for their failure to follow the rules.
“We are woefully under-resourced when it comes to treatment. The people who are responsible for this epidemic should [be] paying for it,” Ferguson said. “We are going to hold these companies accountable and get more money into our communities for treatment.”
McKesson, Cardinal Health and AmerisourceBergen supply the majority of opioids coming into Washington state. They are listed in the top 15 of the Fortune 500 list based on 2017 revenue.
Between 2006 and 2014, these three companies supplied more than 2 billion opioid pills to Washington.
In 2014, for example, McKesson, Cardinal Health and AmerisourceBergen shipped enough opioids to Pend Oreille County to supply every single resident with dozens of pills. In 2009, McKesson alone supplied enough for dozens of pills for every resident of the county. The specific shipment numbers are currently under seal.
The DEA requires distributors to monitor orders, looking for specific factors that can identify suspicious shipments. Those factors include increases in quantity and frequency, as well as changes in ordering patterns.
When distributors identify suspicious orders, they are required to stop the shipment and notify the DEA. Ferguson asserts that, even when their internal monitoring should have flagged suspicious orders, the companies shipped them anyway without notifying the DEA.
Based on shipping data, a conservative calculation suggests these companies may have shipped more than 250,000 suspicious orders into Washington state between 2006 and 2014. A less conservative calculation puts that number more than 3 ½ times that high, at nearly a million.
McKesson, Cardinal Health and AmerisourceBergen have faced multiple actions by the DEA and others for failing to monitor and stop suspicious orders. McKesson has faced more than $160 million in fines, with the DEA determining that the company filled “hundreds of suspicious orders placed by pharmacies participating in illicit internet schemes, but failed to report the orders to DEA.”
Cardinal has been fined five times for a total of nearly $100 million since 2008, while DEA suspended AmerisourceBergen’s distributor licenses in 2007 for failing to adequately monitor and report suspicious orders.
The DEA noted that, between June 2008, … but reported just 16 orders as suspicious.”
Washington’s opioid epidemic
Prescriptions and sales of opioids in Washington skyrocketed more than 500 percent between 1997 and 2011. In 2011, at the peak of overall sales in Washington, more than 112 million daily doses of all prescription opioids were dispensed in the state — enough for a 16-day supply for every woman, man and child in Washington.
In 2015, there were eight counties with more prescriptions than population, led by Asotin, with nearly 1.5 prescriptions per person. The other counties were Clallam, Grays Harbor, Columbia, Garfield, Pend Oreille, Lewis and Benton.
In 2008, there were 16 counties with more prescriptions than people.
Between 2006 and 2017, opioid overdoses killed more than 8,000 Washingtonians, more than were killed by car accidents or firearms. The majority of drug overdose deaths in Washington state involve opioids.
The epidemic has strained Washington’s health care system. Between 2009 and 2014, the rate of opioid-related hospital and clinic stays increased by more than 60 percent in Washington state.
Opioids are also devastating families. A 2018 internal survey of Washington state Assistant Attorneys General handling child abuse and neglect cases revealed that nearly half of their child dependency cases and about 40 percent of parental rights termination cases are impacted by opioids.
Relief
Ferguson accuses McKesson, Cardinal Health and AmerisourceBergen of violating the state Consumer Protection Act for filling thousands of suspicious orders in Washington state without adequately identifying them or reporting them. Their actions, Ferguson asserts, helped fuel the opioid epidemic in Washington state.
Ferguson’s lawsuit seeks civil penalties and damages from the companies. He also asks the court to order the distributors to give up the profits they made in Washington as a result of their illegal conduct. Sales of opioids are worth billions every year nationwide, and Washington’s portion is expected to be in the millions.
The surrendered profits will be used to remediate the effects of the opioid epidemic, possibly funding treatment, education and more.
Senior Counsel Peter Helmberger and Assistant Attorneys General Martha Rodriguez Lopez, Andrew Hughes, and Tad Robinson O’Neill are handling the case for Washington.
Related articles:
• San Juan County, Town of Friday Harbor officials plan to reduce drug use, crimes
• Experience with an opioid addict | Reporter’s notebook
• San Juan County joins national opioid lawsuit