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Opioid Crisis Driven by Shady Drug Company Tactics

Investigators are closing in on Big Pharma, claiming that shady tactics fueled the opioid crisis.
Senator Claire McCaskill, a Democrat from Missouri, questions witnesses during a Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations hearing in Washington, D.C., on July 30, 2015. The subcommittee held its first hearing under new leadership on today with a dive into the U.S. corporate tax code. Congress has been considering an overhaul of the code, prompted in part by U.S. companies shifting their legal addresses abroad to take advantage of lower corporate tax rates.
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Many say the opioid crisis that has killed more than 183,000 Americans since 1999 is driven by crooked pharmaceutical executives who have done just about everything, legal or otherwise, to convince the public that opioid painkillers are safe. Even President Donald Trump, who recently declared the epidemic a public health emergency, said companies that make the potent and highly addictive painkillers are responsible for the surge in deaths.

Fentanyl is one of the most dangerous opioids on the market, 50 times more potent than heroin. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that overdoses on this synthetic opioid have increased 540 percent in the past three years, and many say the drug is responsible for the current epidemic. Insys Therapeutics, one of the companies that produce a form of fentanyl, is now mired in an ugly legal battle after multiple executives—including its founder, John Kapoor—were arrested on conspiracy charges in late October. Attorneys general in New Jersey, Arizona, Oregon, Illinois and Massachusetts have filed lawsuits claiming the company plotted to illegally boost sales of its drugs. In all of the lawsuits, Insys is charged with lying to insurance companies, fabricating information about patients and providing

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