Current:Home > NewsAppeals panel asks West Virginia court whether opioids distribution can cause a public nuisance -FundGuru
Appeals panel asks West Virginia court whether opioids distribution can cause a public nuisance
NovaQuant Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-07 19:21:24
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — A federal appeals court asked West Virginia’s highest court Monday whether opioid distributions can cause a public nuisance as it reviews a landmark lawsuit against three major U.S. drug distributors accused of causing a health crisis in one of the state’s counties.
In July 2022, a federal judge in Charleston, West Virginia, ruled in favor of AmerisourceBergen Drug Co., Cardinal Health Inc. and McKesson Corp. The lawsuit accused them of distributing 81 million pills over eight years in Cabell County, which has been ravaged by opioid addiction.
The verdict came nearly a year after closing arguments in a bench trial in the lawsuit filed by Cabell County and the city of Huntington.
The lawsuit alleged the distributors created a public nuisance and ignored the signs that the area was being ravaged by addiction. But U.S. District Judge Faber said West Virginia’s Supreme Court has only applied public nuisance law in the context of conduct that interferes with public property or resources. He said to extend the law to cover the marketing and sale of opioids “is inconsistent with the history and traditional notions of nuisance.”
The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond, Virginia, sent a certified question to the West Virginia Supreme Court, which states: “Under West Virginia’s common law, can conditions caused by the distribution of a controlled substance constitute a public nuisance and, if so, what are the elements of such a public nuisance claim?”
If the Supreme court answers the question “no,” that means the current appeal is over, according to the 4th Circuit.
The appeals court noted that the West Virginia Mass Litigation Panel, which works to resolve complex cases in state court, has concluded in several instances that opioid distribution “can form the basis of a public nuisance claim under West Virginia common law.”
In his decision, Faber also noted that the plaintiffs offered no evidence that the defendants distributed controlled substances to any entity that didn’t hold a proper registration from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration or the state Board of Pharmacy. The defendants also had suspicious monitoring systems in place as required by the Controlled Substances Act, he said.
In 2021 in Cabell County, an Ohio River county of 93,000 residents, there were 1,067 emergency responses to suspected overdoses — significantly higher than each of the previous three years — with at least 162 deaths. In the first two months of this year, suspected overdoses prompted at least 115 emergency room visits, according to preliminary data from the state Department of Human Services’ Office of Drug Control Policy.
The plaintiffs had sought more than $2.5 billion that would have gone toward abatement efforts. The goal of the 15-year abatement plan would have been to reduce overdoses, overdose deaths and the number of people with opioid use disorder.
Thousands of state and local governments have sued over the toll of opioids. The suits relied heavily on claims that the companies created a public nuisance by failing to monitor where the powerful prescriptions were ending up. Most of the lawsuits settled as part of a series of nationwide deals that could be worth more than $50 billion. But there wasn’t a decisive trend in the outcomes of those that have gone to trial.
veryGood! (942)
Related
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- Newborn baby found dead in restroom at New Mexico hospital, police investigation underway
- Airstrike on northern Iraq military airport kills 3
- 14-year-old arrested in fatal shooting in Florida
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- A railroad worker was crushed to death in Ohio by a remote-controlled train. Unions have concerns
- Pennsylvania police search for 9 juveniles who escaped from detention facility during a riot
- Deal Alert: Get a NuFACE The FIX Line Smoothing Device & Serum Auto-Delivery For Under $100
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- Kirsten Dunst Proves Her Son Is a Spider-Man Fan—Despite Not Knowing She Played MJ
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- A look at the prisoners Iran and US have identified previously in an exchange
- Missing Maine man found alive after being trapped in his truck in a mud pit for two days
- Turkey’s President Erdogan and Elon Musk discuss establishing a Tesla car factory in Turkey
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- UK Labour leader Keir Starmer says he’ll seek closer ties with the EU if he wins the next election
- The Red Cross: Badly needed food, medicine shipped to Azerbaijan’s breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region
- UK Labour leader Keir Starmer says he’ll seek closer ties with the EU if he wins the next election
Recommendation
The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
$6 billion in Iranian assets once frozen in South Korea now in Qatar, key for prisoner swap with US
Praise be! 'The Nun 2' holds box office top spot in second week with $14.7M
A ‘person of interest’ has been detained in the killing of a Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Fantasy football sizzlers, fizzlers: Return of Raheem Must-start
A Florida man bought a lottery ticket with his Publix sub. He won $5 million.
Georgia still No. 1, while Alabama, Tennessee fall out of top 10 of the US LBM Coaches Poll