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Purdue urges Supreme Court to allow opioid settlement amid US appeal.

Breaking⁤ News: Oxycontin Maker Purdue Pharma Urges Supreme Court⁣ to Reject⁢ Delay in Bankruptcy Settlement

By Dietrich Knauth

NEW YORK (Reuters) –‌ Oxycontin maker Purdue Pharma on Friday asked the‌ U.S.‍ Supreme Court to reject the ​U.S. Department of Justice’s request to delay ‍its multi-billion-dollar bankruptcy settlement resolving thousands⁣ of lawsuits against it over the opioid epidemic.

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The Department of Justice (DOJ) asked the high court to put the ⁣deal on hold after a⁤ federal ⁤appeals court rejected a‍ proposed delay.

Purdue on Friday argued a delay would be destructive, imperiling a settlement that has the support ​of all ​major stakeholders, including state attorneys general and people‌ affected by the⁣ opioid crisis.

The DOJ’s position would “take billions of dollars out of​ opioid abatement programs that are sorely needed” and potentially “deprive victims of‌ any meaningful recovery” if‍ the deal ‌falls apart, Purdue’s lawyers wrote.

That position was echoed by a group representing 60,000 people who have filed ⁤personal injury​ opioid claims in Purdue’s bankruptcy.

Purdue’s plan would pay up to $750 million to individuals affected by the opioid crisis, and‌ any delay‍ of ⁣those funds ​would have “real consequences” for the many opioid claimants who “live on ⁢the edge of poverty”​ and face risk of eviction⁤ or repossession of their cars,‍ according to ‌the personal injury claimants’ filing.

The Justice ‌Department‌ has argued the settlement abuses ​legal protections meant for debtors in “financial⁤ distress,” not for wealthy corporate owners like the Sacklers, who did not file for bankruptcy themselves.

Purdue has sought to use ​bankruptcy to⁣ resolve ⁢thousands‌ of lawsuits, many ⁣filed⁢ by state and local governments, that said OxyContin​ helped⁢ kickstart an opioid epidemic that caused more than 500,000 U.S. overdose deaths over two decades.

Similar lawsuits related to the ​U.S. opioid crisis have resulted in more than $50 billion in settlements with manufacturers, drug distributors ​and pharmacy chains.

(Reporting ​by Dietrich Knauth; editing by Grant‌ McCool)

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