Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. in court against pharma companies bid to certify opioid class-action lawsuit

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Nov, 2023 10:59 AM
  • B.C. in court against pharma companies bid to certify opioid class-action lawsuit

The British Columbia Supreme Court should certify a class-action lawsuit against opioid makers on behalf of all provinces and territories to save time and money on what would otherwise be 13 nearly identical actions, a B.C. government lawyer says. 

Reidar Mogerman, a lawyer for the B.C. government, told Justice Michael Brundrett on Monday the court should approve a class made of governments saddled with health-care costs related to the opioid crisis that has killed or injured thousands of Canadians. 

"This litigation is about what the defendants did, what the defendants knew, when did they know it (and) how did they react to the information that they had," Mogerman said. "Did they, as is alleged, deceive and mislead the relevant players in the health-care system in order to balloon the sales of opioids, which in turn caused the opioid crisis?"

If the judge agrees to certify provinces and territories as part of the class, the case would then move ahead as a civil trial to determine if the health-care and pharmaceutical companies were negligent and unjustly enriched by deceptively marketing opioid products. The lawsuit alleges the defendants fraudulently misrepresented and concealed the dangers of opioids, and the action seeks damages for health-care costs recovery, Competition Act violations and other alleged misconduct. 

Mogerman said the questions at the heart of the lawsuit are common across provinces and territories. 

"It's not different for British Columbia," he said. "Ontario will ask the same question."

He told the judge that having a single trial examining those questions would move "the litigation way down the track in terms of how much is left for each individual plaintiff or class member to engage in," he said. 

Evidence shows that opioid industry players moved in "unison" as sales of their products "ballooned" in conjunction with "damage from the crisis," Mogerman said. 

Moving forward with a single class-action lawsuit would show the “problem-solving aspect of litigation as it grapples with an unimaginably complex and difficult public-health issue," he said. 

"It’s not an unimaginably complex legal issue, we know how we’re going to do it,” he said, adding that provincial legislation provides a framework for how the case should be handled. 

Mogerman told the court that the industry itself has referred to different opioid products as a "class" of drugs, and he detailed the many "dramatic" revisions over the years of warnings on opioid-based medications. 

He told the court the changes — known as product monographs — are evidence of misrepresentation and negligence by pharmaceutical firms where they warned people about the dangers of getting addicted to their products. 

The warnings prove the defendants were negligent in marketing the drugs early-on.   

B.C. Attorney General Niki Sharma said Monday that the hearing represents a "new step" in the battle against opioid makers and marketers.

Sharma said the action to obtain costs associated with the opioid crisis is a first of its kind in Canada, and one defendant, Purdue Pharma, has already settled with the province for $150 million. 

Speaking outside court in Vancouver ahead of the certification hearing, she said the action was started back in 2018 when Premier David Eby was still the attorney general, putting B.C. up against dozens of health-care and pharmaceutical companies.

It comes even after the Supreme Court of Canada agreed this month to hear a constitutional challenge by four of the companies who say a law allowing B.C. to recover costs on behalf of other governments is an overreach.

Sharma said the lawsuit marks a "novel approach" to speed up the process as governments try to hold companies accountable for making, selling and marketing opioids. 

She and Jennifer Whiteside, minister of mental health and addictions, issued a joint statement on Monday, calling the agreement with Purdue "the largest-ever government health settlement in Canadian history."

"One part of our work to address the toxic drug poisoning crisis is holding the bad actors who are fuelling this crisis — including opioid manufacturers and distributors, and their consultants — accountable," they say.

Sharma said outside court the province has been up against "numerous challenges" from the defendants, who tried to delay the certification hearing as matters remain unresolved before Canada's high court, but a B.C. judge said an adjournment wasn't in the interests of justice.

B.C. declared a public-health emergency in 2016 over the crisis, and since then nearly 13,000 people have died of overdoses in the province.

"We are holding multinational pharmaceutical companies accountable for their role in today's public-health emergency," Sharma said. "While no amount of money will ever bring back the people who have lost their lives due to toxic, unregulated drugs, our battle against the wrongful conduct of businesses and their marketing consultants is another meaningful step to address the toxic-drug crisis," she said. 

The certification hearing is expected to last about four weeks. 

 

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. energy minister's dropped memo ends up in hands of Opposition BC United

B.C. energy minister's dropped memo ends up in hands of Opposition BC United
Energy Minister Josie Osborne admitted she is the author of the memo which the BC United party says shows the New Democrat government "panicking" about growing opposition to the provincial carbon tax. Osborne says the memo is a copy of notes she made Wednesday about possible ideas for the government's February budget following discussions she had with an adviser who she refuses to name.  

B.C. energy minister's dropped memo ends up in hands of Opposition BC United

B.C. Director of Civil Forfeiture claims 10 properties owned by alleged drug dealer

B.C. Director of Civil Forfeiture claims 10 properties owned by alleged drug dealer
The B.C. government wants 10 properties in Prince George forfeited for their alleged use in a years-long drug trafficking operation. The province's Director of Civil Forfeiture claims in a lawsuit filed in B.C. Supreme Court that properties owned by Daniel Prediger should be handed over to the government because of their use in "unlawful activity." 

B.C. Director of Civil Forfeiture claims 10 properties owned by alleged drug dealer

Surrey business targeted in shooting

Surrey business targeted in shooting
Mounties in Surrey say a store was hit by gunfire on Thursday, the second time this week within the same business complex on 81st Ave and 128 Street. Police say officers found evidence of a shooting, but no one was injured and the business was closed at that time.

Surrey business targeted in shooting

Mayor says release of child sex offender Brian Abrosimo in Surrey is 'outrageous'

Mayor says release of child sex offender Brian Abrosimo in Surrey is 'outrageous'
Surrey’s mayor says it’s "outrageous" that a sex offender who abducted and assaulted an 11-year-old girl in 2004 has been released in the city, which she says has more children per capita than anywhere in British Columbia. Surrey RCMP issued a public warning about Brian Abrosimo, 61, who they say is at high risk to reoffend after his release from prison on Thursday.

Mayor says release of child sex offender Brian Abrosimo in Surrey is 'outrageous'

Here's what the federal government's tight fiscal outlook could mean for pharmacare

Here's what the federal government's tight fiscal outlook could mean for pharmacare
Liberals and New Democrats appear to be inching closer to an agreement on proposed pharmacare legislation, but a national drug plan may be farther out of reach than ever after this week's federal fiscal update. The Liberals promised to table and pass the legislation by the end of the year as part of a supply-and-confidence deal, in which the NDP is supporting the minority government on key votes in exchange for progress on shared priorities. 

Here's what the federal government's tight fiscal outlook could mean for pharmacare

Metro Vancouver mayors say they need billions of dollars from feds to grow transit

Metro Vancouver mayors say they need billions of dollars from feds to grow transit
Metro Vancouver mayors say they need billions of dollars over the next few years and a more reliable funding model from the federal government in order to improve transit. Port Coquitlam Mayor Brad West, chair of the Mayors’ Council, says they have agreed on a plan to expand transit services to accommodate for population growth and put affordable housing within reach of transit. 

Metro Vancouver mayors say they need billions of dollars from feds to grow transit