W.Va. Suit Says Asphalt Companies' Have Monopoly

West Virginia’s attorney general is suing 11 companies, saying they have monopolized the asphalt paving business and driven up the state’s costs for years.

Attorney General Patrick Morrisey’s suit filed Wednesday follows another filed by the state Division of Highways in October. Morrisey says that lawsuit was withdrawn because his office actually has the authority.

The complaint in Kanawha Circuit Court alleges violations of the state’s antitrust law and seeks damages.

Morrisey says overcharges would be determined in court discovery.

His office is requesting competitive bids from law firms to take the case for between 17 and 25 percent of the recovery.

The complaint says three companies acquired smaller competitors and used no-compete agreements to lock up the market in the southern, southwestern and west central regions of the state.

State Sues 3rd Pharmacy Over Painkillers

West Virginia’s attorney general has sued a third pharmacy alleging it dispensed too many prescription painkillers and violated state consumer protection laws.

Attorney General Patrick Morrisey says Crab Orchard Pharmacy Inc. dispensed 4.6 million doses of hydrocodone and oxycodone over seven years in Raleigh County, despite the presence of 32 competing pharmacies and eight medical facilities. The Raleigh County town has less than 3,000 residents.

The lawsuit filed Wednesday in Raleigh County Circuit Court suit seeks unspecified penalties, punitive damages and an injunction.

Kathlyn Sallaz says she and her husband, Richard, have owned the pharmacy since 2012 and have worked to reduce the number of narcotics dispensed. She says that number has gone down every year.

Morrisey filed similar lawsuits last month against pharmacies in Boone and Grant counties.

State Reaches $3.5 Settlement with Drug Wholesaler

West Virginia officials have reached a $3.5 million settlement with a wholesaler accused of flooding the state with millions of prescription pain pills.

Attorney General Patrick Morrisey announced the settlement Tuesday with H.D. Smith Wholesale Drug Co.

The settlement resolved allegations that H.D. Smith failed to detect, report and stop the flood of suspicious prescription drug orders into the state, contributing to widespread drug abuse.

Morrisey says in a news release the settlement is the largest so far in a broader case.

Settlements involving lesser amounts were previously reached against Miami-Luken, Anda Inc., the Harvard Drug Group, Associated Pharmacies, J.M. Smith Corp., KeySource Medical Inc., Quest Pharmaceuticals, Top Rx and Masters Pharmaceutical LLC.

Litigation involving two remaining defendants is subject to a confidentiality order in Boone County Circuit Court.

West Virginia Gets $253,500 Share of Drug Case Settlement

Attorney General Patrick Morrisey says West Virginia will receive a $253,500 share of a settlement with Bristol-Myers Squibb involving allegations that it promoted the anti-psychotic drug Abilify for unapproved uses.

Morrisey announced the state’s share of the $19.5 million settlement in a news release. Forty-two other states were involved in the legal action.

Abilify is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to treat schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder and Tourette’s disorder in adults and children. California alleged that Bristol-Myers Squibb promoted the schizophrenia drug for unapproved uses on children and for elderly patients with dementia.

Drug Wholesalers Shipped 780 Million Pain Pills to West Virginia

A newspaper investigation found that drug wholesalers shipped 780 million prescription painkillers to West Virginia over a six-year period.

The Charleston Gazette-Mail reports that between 2007 and 2012, 1,728 West Virginians died from overdoses of hydrocodone and oxycodone.

The newspaper obtained shipping sales record sent by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration to West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey’s office. The companies had tried to keep the sales numbers secret.

In a state of 1.84 million residents, the shipments amount to 433 pain pills for every man, woman and child in West Virginia.

Retired pharmacist and former state Delegate Don Perdue, D-Wayne, said the figures “will shake even the most cynical observer. Distributors have fed their greed on human frailties and to criminal effect. There is no excuse and should be no forgiveness.”

Several wholesalers agreed to settle lawsuits filed by the attorney general’s office alleging that they shipped an excessive number of prescription opioids to West Virginia.

More than half of all pain pills shipped statewide from 2007 to 2012 were by the nation’s three largest prescription drug wholesalers, McKesson Corp., Cardinal Health and AmerisourceBergen Drug Co.

Records show that a disproportionate number of pain pill shipments and fatal overdoses occurred in southern West Virginia counties. Many of the pharmacies that received the largest shipments were small, independent drug stores or locally owned pharmacies.

Six counties, Wyoming, McDowell, Boone, Mingo, Mercer and Raleigh, ranked in the top 10 in the nation for fatal pain pill overdoses, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The newspaper reported that from 2007 to 2012, drug wholesalers shipped a declining number of oxycodone pills in small doses and more in stronger formulations.

Recovering addict Chelsea Carter now works as a therapist at a Logan County drug treatment center. She recalled crushing, snorting and injecting OxyContin. One time she consumed up to 10 doses of oxycodone, passed out and awakened with the needle still stuck in her arm.

“When they handcuff you, and you walk through the doors, and you’re in an orange jumpsuit and they slam the doors behind you, that’s when you wonder, ‘is two to 20 years worth it for one OxyContin?'” Carter said. “That’s when I hit my knees and prayed, ‘Lord, if you ever bring me out of this, I’ll never touch another drug again.'”

She said she’s buried a lot of friends from drug addiction.

“I don’t want to bury another one,” she said.

W.Va. AG Sues Pharmacy for Pill Volume

West Virginia's attorney general has sued a pharmacy in Boone County, alleging it provided too many highly addictive painkillers over more than a…

West Virginia’s attorney general has sued a pharmacy in Boone County, alleging it provided too many highly addictive painkillers over more than a decade.

Attorney General Patrick Morrisey says Larry’s Drive-In Pharmacy helped fuel the state’s opioid prescription crisis by providing nearly 10 million doses of painkillers in 11 years in a county with fewer than 25,000 residents.

According to the lawsuit filed Wednesday in Boone Circuit Court, Larry’s failed to identify suspicious prescriptions that it filled, dispensing far more doses than Boone County’s 11 other retail pharmacies.

Morrisey says the extraordinary volume “should raise a red flag” and that every part of the prescription drug supply chain has to help identify potential abuse.

A pharmacy manager says she hasn’t seen the lawsuit and declined to comment.

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