City and County of San Francisco et al v. Purdue Pharma L.P. et al

  1. May 19, 2022

    SF Fire Dept. Treats 7 Opioid Overdoses Daily, Judge Told

    A San Francisco Fire Department official testified in a bellwether opioid bench trial Thursday that opioid abuse has become so prevalent in the city that emergency responders now treat an average of seven overdoses daily, whereas public overdoses were a rare occurrence in the early 2000s.

  2. May 18, 2022

    Many SF Walgreens Opioid Scripts Had Red Flags, Judge Told

    An economist hired by the city and county of San Francisco testified in a bellwether opioid bench trial Wednesday that he identified "red flags" raising suspicions about the legitimacy of more than half of the opioid prescriptions Walgreens distributed between 2006 and 2020 in San Francisco.

  3. May 17, 2022

    Teva Unit Marketed Opioid For Off-Label Uses, Judge Hears

    Teva unit Cephalon saw sales of its opioid lollipop Actiq soar after it began marketing the product for non-FDA approved off-label uses, a judge heard Tuesday in recorded testimony from ex-Cephalon employees in a bellwether trial over claims the drugmaker and others illegally fueled San Francisco's opioid epidemic.

  4. May 16, 2022

    Doctors' Opioid Data Kept From Walgreens Stores, Judge Told

    Walgreens tracked the prescription habits of doctors but didn't make the database available to stores because it might "cloud" the judgment of a pharmacist filling a prescription, a judge heard in recorded testimony Monday in a bellwether trial over claims that Walgreens and others illegally fueled San Francisco's opioid epidemic.

  5. May 12, 2022

    Walgreens' Priority Was Filling Drug Orders Fast, Judge Told

    A former Walgreens pharmacist felt pressured to "fill, fill, fill" prescriptions while working at a pace that made her fear making fatal errors, a California federal judge heard in recorded testimony Thursday in a multibillion-dollar bellwether trial over claims Walgreens and others illegally fueled San Francisco's opioid epidemic.

  6. May 11, 2022

    Walgreens' Opioid Orders Like A 'Time Bomb,' Judge Told

    The increasing numbers of opioids ordered by Walgreens pharmacies after 2010 felt like an uncontrollable "ticking time bomb," a former warehouse manager for the company said in recorded testimony screened Wednesday at a bellwether trial over claims the drugstore giant and others illegally fueled San Francisco's opioid epidemic.

  7. May 10, 2022

    'Catastrophic' SF Opioid Death Toll Like AIDS Era, Judge Told

    The medical director overseeing San Francisco's health programs for the city's homeless population compared their "catastrophic" number of opioid deaths to the 1990s AIDS epidemic during testimony Tuesday in a bellwether federal trial over claims Walgreens, Allergan, Teva and Anda illegally fueled the public health crisis.

  8. May 09, 2022

    Massive Opioid Campaign Duped Docs, Bellwether Judge Told

    A Stanford addiction expert who's testified in numerous trials brought by governments blaming drugmakers and others for the opioid epidemic testified Monday in San Francisco that doctors, pharmacists and patients were exposed to a "massive misinformation campaign that downplayed the risks and overstated the benefits" of the addictive painkillers.

  9. April 28, 2022

    ER Chief Says Opioid Crisis Feels 'Hopeless' At SF Bellwether

    Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital's emergency medicine chief took the stand Thursday in a multibillion-dollar bellwether bench trial accusing Walgreens, Allergan, Teva and Anda of illegally fueling the city's opioid epidemic, testifying that "it sometimes feels very hopeless" dealing with the flood of patient suffering stemming from the powerful painkillers.

  10. April 27, 2022

    COVID-19 Cases Won't Stop SF's Opioid Bellwether Trial

    The California federal judge presiding over a multibillion-dollar bellwether bench trial on San Francisco's claim that Walgreens, Teva, Allergan and Anda illegally fueled its opioid crisis said Wednesday the trial will proceed despite individuals from both sides testing positive for COVID-19, calling it "an important case for everybody."