Appalachia Receives Annual $10 Million Allocation To Stop Drug Trafficking

The White House Office of National Drug Control Policy announced $9.9 million in funding for the Appalachia High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) Program.

The White House Office of National Drug Control Policy announced $9,996,950 in funding for the Appalachia High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) Program.

The HIDTA program supports federal, state, local, and tribal law enforcement agencies operating in areas determined to be critical drug-trafficking regions of the U.S. There are currently 33 HIDTAs and HIDTA-designated counties located in 50 states, as well as in Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the District of Columbia.

“Our funding provides for drug initiatives in the four states [included in the Appalachia HIDTA],” Chad Napier, West Virginia’s HIDTA coordinator, said. “And so the $10 million is split out amongst those initiatives. They mainly fund overtime for narcotics investigators, full-time narcotics investigators that are co-located within initiatives.”

The Appalachia HIDTA is made up of 51 initiatives throughout four states: Kentucky, West Virginia, Virginia and Tennessee. There are 15 initiatives in West Virginia.

“West Virginia leads the nation and the drug overdose death rate,” Napier said. “And so obviously, we’re always trying to allocate for more funding, just address those issues.”

The funds will support programs across the country to hold drug traffickers accountable, seize illicit drugs like fentanyl, and prevent and reduce gun violence and other violent crimes associated with drug trafficking.

‘Be The One’ Box Equips West Virginia’s Campuses To Respond To Opioid Emergencies

A new overdose prevention initiative encourages students, staff and faculty to “Be The One,” to save a life.

A new overdose prevention initiative encourages students, staff and faculty to “Be The One,” to save a life.

The initiative was launched in early 2022 by West Virginia Drug Intervention Institute, the West Virginia Collegiate Recovery Network and Marshall University. The initiative distributes and installs ONEbox™ at the state’s public and private four-year colleges and universities, and on the state’s community and technical college campuses, totaling twenty-nine schools.

Susan Mullens is the Program Coordinator for the West Virginia Collegiate Recovery Network. She said associating the ONEbox with other life-saving measures like CPR and the Heimlich maneuver helps reduce stigma around opioid overdoses.

“The box makes it very easy, similar to the way an AED works, the audio comes on and walks you through step by step and with the ONEbox, it not only has audio, it has video so you have that visual demonstration,” Mullens said. “With the ONEbox, it has a video screen embedded so when you open the box, it automatically starts a video of Jan Rader walking you through, step by step, what to do to be able to use the naloxone that is in the box to reverse an opioid overdose.”

As of Dec. 7, all West Virginia colleges and universities, either already have the ONEbox on campus, or are committed to the installation of the boxes prior to 2023.

These resources, along with naloxone, have been provided at no cost to the schools through grant funds.

By placing ONEbox devices on West Virginia’s campuses, the “Be The One” initiative is not only able to reach those most vulnerable to overdose, between ages 18 to 45, but also help reduce stigma around opioid overdoses.

“Our campuses are also anchor points and examples for broader communities and so we feel like if the campuses are supporting it, which they are, we have all 29 institutions that are affiliated with the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission and community technical college system on board with this, that really helps reduce stigma in the broader community,” Mullens said.

Cabell County Appeals Opioid Ruling

Officials with the Cabell County Commission are moving to appeal a federal judge's ruling.

The Cabell County Commission voted unanimously to appeal a federal judge’s ruling in favor of drug distributors AmerisourceBergen, Cardinal Health, and McKesson.

Judge David Faber ruled that the state’s public nuisance law did not apply to the three distributors for distributing 81 million addictive pills over the span of eight years.

Huntington Mayor Steve Williams spoke before the commission, indicating that the city is backing the appeal.

“Our constituents need to know we’re not giving up,” he said. “I’m proud to be able to stand by the Cabell County Commission with the City of Huntington, for us to aggressively continue forward on abating this scourge from our community.”

Initially, Huntington and Cabell County asked for more than $2.5 billion to fund opioid response programs.

Huntington Mayor Reacts To Opioid Verdict

A federal judge ruled in favor of three drug distributors that were accused of fueling the opioid epidemic in Huntington and Cabell County. Local leaders are considering their next step.

Judge David Faber ruled that opioid distributors AmerisourceBergen, Cardinal Health, and McKesson did not create a public nuisance by distributing 81 million pills over the span of eight years in Huntington and Cabell County.

“The distribution of medicine to support the legitimate medical needs of patients as determined by doctors exercising their medical judgment in good faith cannot be deemed an unreasonable interference with a right common to the general public,” Faber wrote.

The judge stated that the plaintiffs failed to demonstrate that the wave of addictive painkillers were because of unreasonable conduct, and that the defendants were acting in a legitimate response to keep up with the demand set by doctor prescriptions.

“I don’t know what more that we needed to prove,” Huntington Mayor Steve Williams said. “It was a collaborative effort of the manufacturers, the distributors, and the pharmaceutical companies.“

Huntington and Cabell County asked for more than $2.5 billion in order to fund opioid response programs as part of a 15-year abatement plan.

According to Williams, the defendants denied responsibility to assist in the community’s recovery.

“One thing that frankly aggravated me in the trial is when the defendants were indicating that the City of Huntington should be paying for all these recovery programs,” he said.

Williams indicated that the plaintiffs plan on meeting with legal counsel to discuss their next steps.

U.S. Judge Finds For 3 Drug Distributors In W.Va. Opioid Lawsuit

A federal judge has ruled in favor of three major U.S. drug distributors in a landmark lawsuit filed in West Virginia.

A federal judge on Monday ruled in favor of three major U.S. drug distributors in a landmark lawsuit that accused them of causing a health crisis by distributing 81 million pills over eight years in one West Virginia county ravaged by opioid addiction.

The verdict came nearly a year after closing arguments in a bench trial in the lawsuit filed by Cabell County and the city of Huntington against AmerisourceBergen Drug Co., Cardinal Health Inc. and McKesson Corp.

“The opioid crisis has taken a considerable toll on the citizens of Cabell County and the City of Huntington. And while there is a natural tendency to assign blame in such cases, they must be decided not based on sympathy, but on the facts and the law,” U.S. District Judge David Faber wrote in the 184-page ruling. “In view of the court’s findings and conclusions, the court finds that judgment should be entered in defendants’ favor.”

Cabell County attorney Paul Farrell had argued the distributors should be held responsible for sending a “tsunami” of prescription pain pills into the community and that the defendants’ conduct was unreasonable, reckless and disregarded the public’s health and safety in an area ravaged by opioid addiction.

The companies blamed an increase in prescriptions written by doctors along with poor communication and pill quotas set by federal agents.

While the lawsuit alleged the distributors created a public nuisance, Faber said West Virginia’s Supreme Court has only applied public nuisance law in the context of conduct that interferes with public property or resources. He said to extend the law to cover the marketing and sale of opioids “is inconsistent with the history and traditional notions of nuisance.”

Faber noted that the plaintiffs offered no evidence that the defendants distributed controlled substances to any entity that didn’t hold a proper registration from the Drug Enforcement Agency or the state Board of Pharmacy. The defendants also had suspicious monitoring systems in place as required by the Controlled Substances Act, he said.

“Plaintiffs failed to show that the volume of prescription opioids distributed in Cabell/Huntington was because of unreasonable conduct on the part of defendants,” Faber wrote.

In a statement, Cardinal Health said the judge’s ruling “recognizes what we demonstrated in court, which is that we do not manufacture, market, or prescribe prescription medications but instead only provide a secure channel to deliver medications of all kinds from manufacturers to our thousands of hospital and pharmacy customers that dispense them to their patients based on doctor-ordered prescriptions.

“As we continue to fulfill our limited role in the pharmaceutical supply chain, we operate a constantly adaptive and rigorous system to combat controlled substance diversion and remain committed to being part of the solution to the opioid crisis.”

Attorneys for the plaintiffs said they were “deeply disappointed” in the ruling.

“We felt the evidence that emerged from witness statements, company documents, and extensive datasets showed these defendants were responsible for creating and overseeing the infrastructure that flooded West Virginia with opioids. Outcome aside, our appreciation goes out to the first responders, public officials, treatment professionals, researchers, and many others who gave their testimony to bring the truth to light.”

Huntington Mayor Steve Williams said the ruling was “a blow to our city and community, but we remain resilient even in the face of adversity.

“The citizens of our city and county should not have to bear the principal responsibility of ensuring that an epidemic of this magnitude never occurs again.”

The plaintiffs had sought more than $2.5 billion that would have gone toward abatement efforts. The goal of the 15-year abatement plan would have been to reduce overdoses, overdose deaths and the number of people with opioid use disorder.

Last year in Cabell County, an Ohio River county of 93,000 residents, there were 1,067 emergency responses to suspected overdoses — significantly higher than each of the previous three years — with at least 158 deaths. So far this year, suspected overdoses have prompted at least 358 responses and 465 emergency room visits, according to preliminary data from the state Department of Health and Human Resources’ Office of Drug Control Policy.

The U.S. addiction crisis was inflamed by the COVID-19 pandemic with drug overdose deaths surpassing 100,000 in the 12-month period ending in April 2021, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That’s the highest number of overdose deaths ever recorded in a year.

The Cabell-Huntington lawsuit was the first time allegations involving opioid distribution ended up at federal trial. The result could have huge effects on similar lawsuits. Some have resulted in multimillion-dollar settlements, including a tentative $161.5 million settlement reached in May by the state of West Virginia with Teva Pharmaceuticals Inc., AbbVie’s Allergan and their family of companies.

In all, more than 3,000 lawsuits have been filed by state and local governments, Native American tribes, unions, hospitals and other entities in state and federal courts over the toll of opioids. Most allege that either drug makers, distribution companies or pharmacies created a public nuisance in a crisis that’s been linked to the deaths of 500,000 Americans over the past two decades.

In separate, similar lawsuits, the state of West Virginia reached a $37 million settlement with McKesson in 2019, and $20 million with Cardinal Health and $16 million with AmerisourceBergen in 2017.

WVU Students Want To Educate Classmates About Fentanyl

The new group, called Mountaineer Fentanyl Education Task Force, hopes to educate their peers about fentanyl.

A new student group at West Virginia University hopes to educate their peers about fentanyl.

The new group, called Mountaineer Fentanyl Education Task Force, was announced on Woodburn Circle at WVU’s Morgantown campus Wednesday afternoon.

The group’s mission is to inform classmates about the unique dangers of synthetic opioids like fentanyl, as well as existing resources for students on campus.

Task force chair, junior Azeem Khan, said as a West Virginian, he knows all too well the impacts of the opioid crisis.

“I didn’t want to wait 10 years to start doing my part to help,” Khan said. “I wanted to try and do something right now, as small as it is. If we can save one life, I think that’s worth it.”

Undergraduate leaders were joined by U.S. Attorney for the Northern District William Ihlenfeld.

Khan said it was a focus group on fentanyl facilitated by the U.S. Attorney’s office that opened his eyes to the serious issue of synthetic opioids.

“It motivated us to take that education that we receive, and try to find a way to share that with every single student on our campus,” he said.

WV GameChangers Executive Director Joe Boczek was also on-hand to lend his support to the task force.

“This will not be an overnight fix,” Boczek said. “This will be a time consuming fix, but it will be a fix because we will educate a generation of our kids just how bad these drugs are.”

WV GameChangers, and the larger national GameChangers network, work with the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation to build school environments which prevent student opioid and other drug use before it starts.

Although the Mountaineer Fentanyl Education Task Force is not directly affiliated with the GameChangers program, Boczek said he is happy to support a student-led initiative, and hopes to see many more like it across the state.

“This is going to take tons of people from all walks of life, all professions, corporations, education, business, everything,” Boczek said. “This is a fight this country better take because if not, our communities are going to be decimated.”

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