Purdue Pharma Criminal Sentence Triggers Final Phase Of Opioid Settlement
Purdue Pharma is set to be sentenced in a criminal case, a step that clears the way for its multibillion-dollar opioid settlement to move forward. A federal judge is expected to order Purdue to forfeit $225 million to the Justice Department on Tuesday under the 2020 plea deal. If the judge signs off, the government will not collect $5.3 billion in additional criminal forfeitures and fines or $2.8 billion in civil liabilities, and those sums would fold into the broader settlement.
Another judge has already approved the wider settlement, which could take effect on May 1 and requires Sackler family members to pay up to $7 billion over 15 years. Purdue pleaded guilty in 2020 to three federal criminal charges for failing to prevent drug diversion and for paying doctors and a medical records company to boost opioid prescribing. The company has already spent more than $1 billion on professional fees related to its bankruptcy reorganization, highlighting the case's complexity and cost.
Coverage has shifted from early focus on a contested bankruptcy and legal protections for the Sacklers to newer reporting that a criminal sentence could unlock settlement funds for victims. Recent reporting, led by outlets such as PBS, added concrete details about the judge's expected $225 million forfeiture order and how billions more would be folded into the approved settlement.
📌 Key Facts
- A recent criminal sentence for OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma clears the way for finalizing its multibillion-dollar opioid settlement.
- A judge is expected to order Purdue to forfeit $225 million to the Justice Department on Tuesday under the company’s 2020 plea deal.
- If the judge signs off, the government will forgo collecting $5.3 billion in additional criminal forfeitures/fines and $2.8 billion in civil liabilities, folding those amounts into the broader settlement structure.
- The broader settlement, already approved by another judge, could take effect May 1 and would require Sackler family members to pay up to $7 billion over 15 years.
- Purdue pleaded guilty in 2020 to three federal criminal charges, including failures to prevent diversion and paying doctors and an electronic medical records company to drive opioid prescribing.
- As of late last year, Purdue had spent over $1 billion on professional fees related to the bankruptcy reorganization, underscoring the case’s complexity and cost.
📰 Source Timeline (2)
Follow how coverage of this story developed over time
- Confirms the judge is expected to order Purdue to forfeit $225 million to the Justice Department on Tuesday under the 2020 plea deal.
- Details that, if the judge signs off, the government will not collect $5.3 billion in additional criminal forfeitures/fines and $2.8 billion in civil liabilities, folding those amounts into the broader settlement structure.
- Clarifies that the broader settlement, already approved by another judge, could take effect May 1 and will require Sackler family members to pay up to $7 billion over 15 years.
- Reiterates and contextualizes Purdue’s 2020 guilty plea to three federal criminal charges, including failures to prevent diversion and paying doctors and an electronic medical records company to drive opioid prescribing.
- Notes that Purdue has already spent over $1 billion on professional fees related to the reorganization as of late last year, underscoring the complexity and cost of the case.