Unsettled How the Purdue Pharma bankruptcy failed the victims of the American overdose crisis

Ryan Hampton

Book - 2021

In September 2019, Purdue Pharma--the maker of OxyContin and a company controlled by the infamous billionaire Sackler family--filed for bankruptcy to protect itself from 2,600 lawsuits for its role in fueling the U.S. overdose crisis. Author and activist Ryan Hampton served as co-chair of the official creditors committee that acted as a watchdog during the process, one of only four victims appointed among representatives of big insurance companies, hospitals, and pharmacies. He entered the case believing that exposing the Sacklers and mobilizing against Purdue would be enough to right the scales of justice. But he soon learned that behind closed doors, justice had plenty of other competition--and it came with a hefty price tag. Unsettled is... the inside story of Purdue's excruciating Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings, the company's eventual restructuring, and the Sackler family's evasion of any true accountability. It's also the untold story of how a group of determined ordinary people tried to see justice done against the odds--and in the face of brutal opposition from powerful institutions and even government representatives. Although America was envisioned as an equitable place, where the vulnerable are protected from the greed of the powerful, the corporate-bankruptcy process betrays those values. In its heart of hearts, this system is built to shield the ultra-wealthy, exploit loopholes for political power, promote gross wealth inequality, and allow companies such as Purdue Pharma to run amok. The real story of the Purdue bankruptcy wasn't that the billion-dollar corporation was a villain, a serial federal offender. No matter what the media said, Purdue didn't do this alone. They were aided and abetted by the very systems and institutions that were supposed to protect Americans. Even on-your-side elected officials worked against Purdue's victims--maintaining the status quo at all costs. Americans deserve to know exactly who is responsible for failing to protect people over profits--and what a human life is worth to corporations, billionaires, and lawmakers. Unsettled is what happened behind closed doors--the story of a sick, broken system that destroyed millions of lives and let the Sacklers off almost scot-free.

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Subjects
Published
New York : St. Martin's Press 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
Ryan Hampton (author)
Other Authors
Claire Rudy Foster (author), Hillel Aron
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
xiii, 322 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781250273161
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • 1. Billions Served
  • 2. A Sleeping Giant
  • 3. The Blizzard Was Coming
  • 4. Flesh and Blood
  • 5. Unchecked Power
  • 6. The Death Curve
  • 7. Last Month's Tuna Roll
  • 8. Lawyers, Meds, and Money
  • 9. Toothless
  • 10. "A Legal Fiction"
  • 11. The Breaking Point
  • Conclusion: The Way Out
  • After
  • Acknowledgments
  • In Memoriam
  • Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An opioid-victims' advocate vents his fury about the Purdue Pharma bankruptcy that allowed the Sackler family to avoid prison and keep most of their fortune. Several years into his recovery from opioid addiction, Hampton had a modest knowledge of the law when the Department of Justice appointed him to the official Unsecured Creditors Committee in the Purdue bankruptcy case. He soon became co-chair of the nine-member group, which included four private citizens as well as institutional heavyweights like CVS Pharmacy and which had a fiduciary duty to thousands of claimants against Purdue. The author combines the sarcasm of an early Bill Bryson travelogue with the disbelief of Alice in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland in this breezy but informative memoir of his falling down a rabbit hole of negotiation, mediation, and Zoom calls as he pushed for a fair shake for victims. Many of his frustrations involved the Sacklers' army of nuclear-strength law firms like Jones Day, "the firm that had previously represented such stand-up characters as the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company and the bin Laden family." Other maddening setbacks involved cash grabs by states that hadn't spent much of the federal money they'd already received to fight the opioid crisis, power plays that deprived victims of urgently needed financial help. Hampton finds it small comfort that Purdue ultimately pleaded guilty to multiple felonies and agreed to pay about $750 million to victims, or up to $48,000 per death from a Purdue product. "This wasn't a bankruptcy," writes the author, "it was a heist." Hampton recaps some of the background on the opioid crisis found in stellar books such as Chris McGreal's American Overdose and Patrick Radden Keefe's Empire of Pain, but he offers a unique firsthand perspective on a bankruptcy he credibly portrays as yet another injustice to Purdue's victims. A passionate, well-informed insider's account of one of the most controversial bankruptcies in U.S. history. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.