In The Rise And Fall Of The Sacklers' Opioid Empire, An American Dream Turns Toxic (2024)

Empire of Pain: The Secret History of the Sackler Dynasty by Patrick Radden Keefe Doubleday hide caption

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Doubleday

In The Rise And Fall Of The Sacklers' Opioid Empire, An American Dream Turns Toxic (2)

Empire of Pain: The Secret History of the Sackler Dynasty by Patrick Radden Keefe

Doubleday

Late in Patrick Radden Keefe's brutal, multigenerational treatment of the Sackler family, Empire of Pain, he offers a jarring anecdote.

It's 2019. The scandal surrounding OxyContin, Purdue Pharma and the Sacklers' role in America's devastating opioid epidemic is front-page news. Hundreds of people are dying every day from overdoses.

But Joss Sackler, a designer and businesswoman married to David Sackler (who had left Purdue Pharma's board a year earlier) is busy in New York City hustling up a crowd for her spring fashion line.

Celebrities are understandably reluctant to lend their fame to a Sackler-branded gala. So Joss Sackler and her staff send a personal invite to the "singer, tabloid-icon and fabled hell-raiser" Courtney Love.

Along with the invite they offer a $100,000 enticement and the promise of a custom-made dress "embroidered with 24-karat gold thread."

"The irony was almost too much to contemplate," Keefe writes. Love had struggled for years with addiction to opioids, including OxyContin. She was barely a year sober at the time.

According to Love, she declined the Sacklers' cash. In an interview at the time with the New York Post's Page Six, she called the offer "shameless and offensive." (In an interview last year with Women's Wear Daily, Joss Sackler disputed this account and said no formal offer was made to Love.)

By now the wrenching arc of the Sackler family's rise and fall is fairly well known.

Though never quite making the cut as members of America's name-brand aristocracy, such as the Guggenheims or Rockefellers (or more recently, the Kardashians and the Trumps), the Sacklers still made their mark as one of the country's philanthropic dynasties.

It was an impressive feat. The children and grandchildren of Jewish grocers from Brooklyn wound up doling out cash to institutions ranging from the Louvre in Paris to Tufts University in the Boston area.

In exchange, their name was literally carved in stone over the entrances to prestigious medical schools and world-class art galleries. Not so long ago the Sacklers were compared to the Medicis.

Machiavellian might be the label used now.

Because of journalists such as Keefe, we've learned how members of the Sackler family worked behind the scenes, goading their sales reps to push more and more (and ever more) OxyContin into America's medicine cabinets.

Introduced in the late 1990s by the Sackler's private company, Purdue Pharma, the prescription painkiller was marketed to doctors and patients as less risky, less prone to addiction and abuse.

It was a runaway bestseller, earning the Sacklers more than $10 billion in profits. But it turned out all those claims about the drug's safety weren't true. Oxy became the seed corn for an opioid epidemic that has killed roughly half a million Americans.

Remarkably, while business boomed and deaths soared, the Sacklers succeeded for nearly two decades in downplaying their ties to Purdue Pharma.

They seemed to want their name on just about everything — from designer labels to ancient Egyptian monuments displayed at the Met — except those little bottles of OxyContin.

And nobody seemed to care much where their money came from, so long as they kept writing big checks.

Then came Keefe's exposé published in The New Yorker in 2017, which connected the dots in devastating fashion.

"The Sacklers have always excelled at the confidence game of marketing," Keefe wrote, "and it struck me that the greatest trick they ever pulled was to write the family out of the history of the family business."

At long last, the firewall between the Sacklers' image as high-brow philanthropists and their work as opioid merchants had begun to crumble.

These days it's hard to remember it ever existed. There have been anti-Sackler protests at the Tate and the Guggenheim. Members of Congress from both parties have taken to referring to members of the family as "sickening," "criminal" and "obscene."

The Sacklers, who deny any personal wrongdoing and who have never been charged with crimes, have been described as drug dealers while facing an ever-growing tsunami of civil lawsuits.

In 2019, under the crushing weight of opioid claims, Purdue Pharma filed for bankruptcy. Last year, the company — still wholly owned by members of the Sackler family — pleaded guilty a second time to federal criminal charges.

The Sacklers paid $225 million in damages as part of the Justice Department deal but again faced no charges and admitted no wrongdoing.

In a statement sent to NPR on Thursday, Daniel Connolly, an attorney representing the Raymond Sackler branch of the family, slammed Empire of Pain. He accused Keefe of "refusing to meet with representatives for the Sackler family during the reporting of his book."

Connolly also said documents released as part of Purdue Pharma's bankruptcy show the Sackler family members who served on the company's board acted "ethically and lawfully."

The Mortimer Sackler branch of the family also sent NPR a statement. "Our focus is on concluding a resolution that will provide help to people and communities in need, rather than on this book," a spokesperson said.

(In his book, Keefe describes repeated efforts to interview the Sacklers and said he asked a Sackler attorney to share any documents that might be "exculpatory." Keefe said the request was denied.)

A growing number of institutions say they will no longer accept donations from the Sacklers. Some even began scraping the family's name from their walls.

After that kind of fall from grace, what's left to be learned from Empire of Pain? A lot, as it happens. For one thing, Keefe deepens the narrative by tracing the family's ambitions and ruthless methods back to the founding patriarch.

Arthur Sackler, who died in 1987 before OxyContin was introduced, was a remarkable innovator and "polymath" by Keefe's account. He got his start in New York City during the Great Depression, overcoming poverty and anti-Semitism to emerge as a respected psychiatrist and entrepreneur.

His life might be a model for the American dream, if it hadn't arguably laid the foundations for a still-unfolding national tragedy.

It turns out part of his genius was seeing the fortune to be made by blurring the ethical lines between medicine, pharmaceuticals and marketing. He pushed drug companies to hire armies of sales reps.

Arthur Sackler refined the art of wooing physicians with direct appeals, enticing them with lucrative speaker fees, dinners and trips. In exchange, doctors used the medications sold by companies for which he worked. His efforts helped turn the tranquilizer Valium into a bestseller.

According to Keefe, it was a "template" followed and expanded by his heirs after the Sacklers transformed Purdue Pharma into an opioid juggernaut.

Internal documents show how the Sacklers' company worked relentlessly to "turbocharge" OxyContin sales, often with deceptive marketing practices.

This continued long after evidence of the drug's devastating harm was established.

But as Keefe notes, it wasn't only some of Arthur Sackler's heirs who adopted his bare-knuckle approach to medicine and capitalism.

As the opioid boom grew, many of the biggest companies in American health care scrambled to get their own slice of the business. They too earned billions making, distributing and selling highly addictive pills even as the death toll mounted.

Name brand corporations from CVS and Johnson & Johnson to McKesson and Walmart now face their own opioid investigations, their own wave of lawsuits. Some compare Wall Street's opioid reckoning now to the Big Tobacco settlement of the 1990s.

Which brings us to thorny questions of justice and accountability raised by Keefe's book.

Yes, members of the Sackler family involved in the opioid business have seen their reputations crumble. Empire of Pain will likely further cement them as the public face of a man-made overdose crisis that killed a record number of people (more than 81,000) again last year.

But as Keefe documents, the Sacklers seem to have been preparing for this moment for years. They enlisted a small army of attorneys, accountants, bankers and lobbyists to shelter them and as much of their OxyContin profits as possible.

The Sacklers say this was all done legally and ethically — and it appears likely their effort will pay off.

A bankruptcy settlement now being finalized in federal court would require the family to forfeit ownership of the company and cough up some $4.2 billion. But they are expected again to admit no wrongdoing. The deal would allow them to keep substantial business holdings overseas while shielding their remaining billions from future lawsuits.

The Sacklers' opioid empire has collapsed. Their once-burnished image as American Medicis appears tarnished beyond repair.

But while thousands of other families scramble just to survive the opioid epidemic, scraping up money for addiction treatment or housing, the Sacklers are likely to remain one of the richest families in the world.

In The Rise And Fall Of The Sacklers' Opioid Empire, An American Dream Turns Toxic (2024)

FAQs

What role did the Sacklers play in the opioid epidemic? ›

WHAT ROLE DID THE SACKLER FAMILY PLAY IN THE OPIOID CRISIS? Lawsuits against Purdue and Sackler family members accuse them of fueling the opioid epidemic through deceptive marketing of its pain medication.

What is the controversy with the Sacklers? ›

The complaint alleged that the "statewide catastrophe" of the opioid epidemic happened because Purdue Pharma, the Sacklers, and other drug manufacturers and distributors acted fraudulently and illegally "in order to profiteer from the plague they knew would be unleashed."

What led to the opioid crisis in America? ›

As noted in SHADAC's most recent brief, the opioid crisis is widely considered to have its roots in the mid-to late-1990s, when a confluence of factors—including the beginning of the “Pain as the 5th Vital Sign” campaign and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's approval of Purdue Pharma's blockbuster OxyContin—led ...

What was the downfall of Purdue Pharma? ›

The issue came to a head when Purdue Pharma L.P.—a closely held company owned and formerly managed by members of the Sackler family—sought to use the bankruptcy process to shield the family from opioid-related liabilities in exchange for payments of billions of dollars to the Purdue estate.

Did the Sacklers go to jail? ›

Yet despite the unspeakable death toll fuelled by Purdue's reckless false marketing of the drug, as well as the mountain of evidence linking them to the overdose epidemic, the Sacklers involved have escaped any and all criminal accountability.

Is the Sackler family still rich? ›

How much is the Sackler family still worth? Even after Purdue Pharma's bankruptcy, the family still has billions. In December 2020, taking into account the fines that the Sacklers have already paid out as settlements, Forbes estimates that the family (around 40 members) is worth about $10.8 billion.

Are the Sacklers still respected? ›

In response to criticism in recent years, several institutions have distanced themselves from the family. Tufts University, the University of Oxford, and Leiden University have all removed the Sackler name from libraries, programs, and galleries.

What did the Sackler family do illegally? ›

The Sacklers, who owned and operated the Oxycontin-maker for decades, had agreed to pay $6bn (£4.7bn) towards a wider settlement in exchange for sweeping protections against civil claims related to the addictive opioid.

What ended up happening to the Sacklers? ›

As the nation continues to grapple with the opioid epidemic, the Sackler family had agreed to pay $6 billion to families and states as part of an agreement to wind down Purdue Pharma, the maker of OxyContin. In exchange, the Sackler family would be immunized from future civil liability claims.

Is OxyContin still legal? ›

OxyContin, a trade name for the narcotic oxycodone hydrochloride, is a painkiller available in the United States only by prescription. OxyContin is legitimately prescribed for relief of moderate to severe pain resulting from injuries, bursitis, neuralgia, arthritis, and cancer.

Is OxyContin still available? ›

Oxycodone is only available on prescription. It comes as slow-release tablets, standard tablets and capsules, and a liquid that you swallow. It can also be given by injection, but this is usually done in hospital.

Who is responsible for the opioid epidemic in the US? ›

Although it is difficult to establish the major drivers of this crisis, experts point toward the influence by pharmaceutical companies, inadequate regulation, overprescribing by the medical profession, and increased use of illegal heroin and synthetic opioids.

What crime did Purdue Pharma commit? ›

Opioid Manufacturer Purdue Pharma Pleads Guilty to Fraud and Kickback Conspiracies. Opioid manufacturer Purdue Pharma LP (Purdue) pleaded guilty today in federal court in Newark, New Jersey, to conspiracies to defraud the United States and violate the anti-kickback statute.

What did Purdue Pharma lie about? ›

Purdue Pharma created false advertising documents to provide doctors and patients illustrating that time-released OxyContin was less addictive than other immediate release alternatives.

Who got the money from the Purdue Pharma settlement? ›

Most of the settlement money from the Sacklers and the company is earmarked for the opioid-recovery and prevention programs. Victims and their families would get payouts that range from about $3,500 to $48,000 per claim, minus legal fees.

What role did Purdue play in the opioid crisis? ›

OxyContin first hit the market in 1996, and Purdue Pharma's aggressive marketing of it is often cited as a catalyst of the nationwide opioid epidemic, with doctors persuaded to prescribe painkillers with less regard for addiction dangers.

What happened to the Sacklers OxyContin? ›

After deliberating more than six months, the justices in a 5-4 vote blocked an agreement hammered out with state and local governments and victims. The Sacklers would have contributed up to $6 billion and given up ownership of the company but retained billions more.

What family is responsible for the OxyContin epidemic? ›

THE ROLE OF PURDUE PHARMA AND THE SACKLER FAMILY IN THE OPIOID EPIDEMIC | Congress.gov | Library of Congress.

Did Sacklers and Purdue reach settlement as opioids crisis continues? ›

Supreme Court blocks Purdue Pharma opioid settlement, threatening billions of dollars for victims. In a loss for the Sackler family, the justices ruled that a bankruptcy judge did not have the authority to let its members evade facing future lawsuits.

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