Here are the voices the giant drug distributors don't want you to hear [View all]
The nations largest opioid distributors are pushing to block testimony from West Virginians who want to speak out about how the addiction crisis has ravaged their communities.
The companies lawyers say personal stories of addiction have no place at an upcoming trial that seeks to hold the drug wholesalers accountable for the opioid epidemic. They argue that such testimony would be nothing more than hearsay and inadmissible in court.
They also have asked a judge to muzzle potential witnesses who believe prescription painkillers acted as a gateway to street drugs like heroin and fentanyl. And theyre trying to put a lid on information about the recent conviction of one of their executives.
The Cabell County Commission and the City of Huntington, which are suing the distributors in federal court, have railed against the companies effort to exclude testimony from people who have suffered from the crisis. The two governments accuse McKesson, Cardinal Health and AmerisourceBergen of unleashing the opioid epidemic by saturating the region with prescription pain pills. The witnesses stories are relevant and deserve to be heard, attorneys for the city and county say.
Read more: https://mountainstatespotlight.org/2020/12/23/here-are-the-voices-the-giant-drug-distributors-dont-want-you-to-hear/