American Cartel: Inside the Battle to Bring Down the Opioid Industry, Scott Higham and Sari Horwitz, 2022, 400 pages, ISBN 9781538737200, Dewey 338.476153.
Federal law requires narcotics distributors to refuse to fill suspiciously-large orders. They shipped billions of pills, knowing the quantities far exceeded legitimate use. Hundreds of thousands of people died of overdoses.
The first 26 chapters are a depressing litany of failure, a slow-motion train wreck: we see the drug-law-enforcement agents trying to protect the public, while the drug industry controls politicians to enfeeble the DEA, 2005-2016. pp. 1-132.
The rest of the book is more hopeful. It's about civil litigation 2016-2022, including 4,000 lawsuits filed against the opioid industry, rolled into one case, settled for $26 billion--none of which will go to victims or their families. It will go to opioid-addiction treatment and prevention. No company admitted wrongdoing; all are shielded from future lawsuits. No executive was charged with anything. The companies' stock prices rose 3% the day the settlement was announced. pp. 318-319.
The drug industry buys the support of congressional committee members for tens of thousands of dollars. (Cheaper than dirt.) Congress enacts laws to tie the hands of the Drug Enforcement Agency. (Obama signed a law hamstringing the DEA in 2016. p. 146.) The drug industry reaps hundreds of billions of dollars yearly. Countless lives are destroyed. 93,000 Americans died of drug overdoses in 2020. pp. 98, 192, 232, 259, 260.
For drug czar, President Trump in 2017 nominated Tom Marino, darling of the opioid industry. p. 173.
Many Drug Enforcement Agency agents leave the DEA for high-paying jobs with the companies they once regulated. pp. 28, 61. They know how to write laws to tie the DEA's hands. p. 98.
Obama's attorney general, Eric Holder, had represented the opioid industry as a lawyer at Covington & Burling, to which he returned in 2015. pp. 101, 123. A former Obama associate attorney general defended drug companies from 2018 to 2022. pp. 251, 319.
Oxycodone was selling on the street for $900 per thirty 30-milligram pills ($1 million a kilo), as of 2008. The manufacturing cost is tiny. p. 35.