Prosecutor: Man killed doctor after opioid prescription disagreement

Prosecutor: Man killed doctor after opioid prescription disagreement

http://www.wndu.com/content/news/Police-news-conference-on-fatal-shooting-of-local-doctor-437015853.html

Dr. Todd Graham was killed after an opioid disagreement with the husband of one of his patients, according to St. Joseph County Prosecutor Ken Cotter.

Dr. Todd Graham

On Thursday afternoon, the gunman was identified as 48-year-old Michael Jarvis.

Jarvis’s wife was Graham’s patient, according Cotter.

During an appointment Wednesday morning, Graham indicated to her that he was not going to prescribe any opioid medication.

Jarvis became upset and argued with the doctor. Authorities say his wife didn’t have a previous prescription for opioids.

They left, but Jarvis later came back and confronted Graham.

After telling two witnesses to leave, Jarvis shot and killed Graham.

“This was a very targeted attack,” said Commander Tim Corbett of Saint Joseph County Metro Homicide. “I am a firm believer — and I think Ken feels the same way — that if Jarvis would have got inside that building, although there wouldn’t have been any specific target, it’s like trapping an animal in a corner: they’re going to come out fighting. I truly believe this could have escalated into a mass shooting. I do believe that.”

Jarvis then drove to a friend’s home and indicated “that he was no longer going to be around,” according to Cotter. The friend contacted police out of concern for Jarvis’s safety. Before law enforcement arrived, Jarvis took his own life.

“Make no mistake, this was a person who made a choice to kill Dr. Graham. This is not a fallout from any opioid epidemic or any opioid problems. This is a person who made that choice,” Cotter explained. “That probably leads us into an examination of what is happening with the opioid problem in our community, and frankly in our whole nation.”

Cotter says Jarvis’s wife wasn’t aware of her husband’s actions.

“It was clear that she didn’t know what he was doing. She’s suffering as well,” he explained.

Nixon administration invented strict marijuana prohibition as a pretense to harass black people

Lawsuit Argues Federal Marijuana Laws Are Arbitrary and Target Black People

http://www.houstonpress.com/news/federal-marijuana-laws-violate-due-process-and-the-civil-rights-of-african-americans-new-lawsuit-argues-9639253

A groundbreaking new lawsuit aims to force the feds to change their rules on cannabis.

A group of marijuana activists and patients sued the Drug Enforcement Agency and the Department of Justice on Tuesday, alleging that the federal government violates due process, along with the civil rights of African Americans, by continuing to implement what the suit characterizes as arbitrary and ill-intentioned pot laws.

Although almost every state now allows some form of recreational or medical marijuana use, the DEA still classifies cannabis as a Schedule I drug. That’s the highest classification, ostensibly reserved for only the most dangerous substances. The lawsuit, filed in a federal court in New York, argues the government can’t “merely…manufacture a supposedly ‘legitimate government interest’” to criminalize marijuana use. And the government is violating due process by doing so, according to the suit.

More explosively, the lawsuit also argues that the Nixon administration invented strict marijuana prohibition as a pretense to harass black people and that the government remains insincere about its reasons for criminalizing the drug. African Americans are almost four times more likely than white people to be arrested for pot crimes despite using pot at roughly the same rate, according to numerous studies, including a 2013 analysis by the American Civil Liberties Union.

“The Nixon Administration recognized that African Americans could not be arrested on racial grounds, and war protesters could not be prosecuted for opposing America’s involvement in Vietnam,” the five lawyers, who hail from three separate law firms, wrote. “The Nixon Administration ushered the [Controlled Substances Act] through Congress and insisted that cannabis be included on Schedule I so that African Americans and war protesters could be raided, prosecuted and incarcerated without identifying the actual and unconstitutional basis for the government’s actions.

With almost 20 percent of Americans now living in states with legal recreational marijuana, it can be easy to forget the feds retain such strict policies. But the criminalization of marijuana at the federal level still has huge, if subtle, ramifications.

Medical marijuana patients can’t travel out of state with their medicine, even if the other state also allows them to use the plant. They can’t get medicine shipped to them unless it’s weak enough to meet the federal definition of industrial hemp. Researchers have a harder time getting cannabis for studies. And although doctors are allowed to “recommend” marijuana, technically they cannot prescribe it. (This will be a particular problem in Texas, where a new medical marijuana law, set to roll out in September, explicitly requires doctors to “prescribe” cannabis medicine.)

The lawsuit highlights just how diverse the American cannabis community has become. Among the plaintiffs, there’s Marvin Washington, a former football player who wants to start a medical marijuana business; a military veteran with post traumatic stress disorder; and two parents who use marijuana to manage their severely ill children’s symptoms.

One of the parents is Sebastien Cotte, whose six-year-old son, Jagger, suffers from a rare neurological disease called Leigh syndrome. Born in Georgia, Jagger has been in hospice for almost his entire life. In 2014, the Cottes piled into a car and drove to Colorado so that Jagger could try medical marijuana. At the time, the young boy was so sick that the family couldn’t fly. They had to stop every three or four hours during the drive.

“Jagger was doing much better when we were living in Colorado,” Sebastien Cotte said. The family stopped going to the hospital as much. But, after 13 months away from home, the Cottes had to get back to their lives in Atlanta. Cotte and his wife had jobs and a mortgage. And Jagger, although much healthier overall, struggled with the thin air and high altitude.

Cotte thinks he should be able to give his son medicine without having to move his family across the country. Although he’s allowed to give Jagger medicine with up to 5 percent THC, under Georgia’s medical marijuana program, there isn’t anywhere in the state to buy it. He could get medicine shipped, but only if the medicine qualifies as “industrial hemp” under federal laws. That lowers the THC limit again, to 0.3 percent.

If Jagger never gets the chance to legally use the medicine he needs in Georgia, Cotte hopes he can at least get the laws changed for other kids. Jagger suffered heart and respiratory failure in March. “We didn’t think he was going to make it,” Cotte said. “My wife’s parents drove from Florida in the middle of the night just to be there. He was on every machine to keep him alive.”

In the end, the young boy pulled through. “He’s a fighter,” Cotte said.

Naloxone: Next step in job security for our judicial system ?

Title: The Moral Hazard of Lifesaving Innovations: Naloxone Access, Opioid Abuse, and Crime

Authors: Jennifer Doleac and Anita Mukherjee

http://jenniferdoleac.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Abstract.pdf

Abstract:
States across the country have responded to the opioid epidemic by increasing access to Naloxone,
a drug that can help save lives when administered during an overdose. However, Naloxone access
may unintendedly increase opioid abuse because the catastrophic risk of death might have
previously deterred risk-averse individuals from these substances. Using jurisdiction level panel
data on crime and a difference-in-differences framework exploiting Naloxone access laws, we
estimate that broadening Naloxone access increases opioid-related crimes by 50%. These effects
come mostly from heroin and a category that includes prescription opioids. These crimes are also
more likely to coincide with theft, assault, and robbery offenses, suggesting that drug users are
engaging in other types of crime to fund their addiction or as a byproduct of addiction. We also
show that Naloxone access may encourage substitution from crack and cocaine to opioids, and
investigate changes in offender demographics and crime location. We find no statistically
significant effect of expanded Naloxone access on placebo categories of crime including murder
and marijuana-related offenses.

I have repeatedly stated that Naloxone will seldom prevent OD deaths… just postpones them. I have already seen the number of estimated serious addicts/substance abuser being increased from 1.2 million to 2.1 million.

So that means that at the lower end of “food chain” … more people seeking various substances to abuse.. many of these people increasingly involved in petty crimes to support their habit… giving local law enforcement, jails, prosecuting & defense attorneys, the court systems.. many more “bodies” running thru the system… so that they can demonstrate the need for bigger budgets, more staff , larger jails and all the other ancillary expenses that goes along with this.

New opioid vaccine could be a huge step to prevent addiction

New opioid vaccine could be a huge step to prevent addiction:

AND THEN THERE ARE THE UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES

IF THIS IS SUCCESSFUL…. You give an addict this vaccine and their body now attacks or binds any opiates that they take… preventing it from working…

Presuming that this vaccine is like a lot of other vaccines it WORKS FOR YEARS…

Now this “treated addict” needs surgery, is in a car accident, breaks a bone, or comes down with a disease where PAIN is a major component… here you have a PATIENT in need of pain management but they have been inoculated so that opiates do not work for them.   

Often good intentions … have bad outcomes

 

Federal lawsuit filed against AG Jeff Sessions seeks to have Controlled Substances Act declared unconstitutional

Federal lawsuit filed against AG Jeff Sessions seeks to have Controlled Substances Act declared unconstitutional

http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/football/jets/ex-jets-lineman-files-federal-lawsuit-ag-jeff-sessions-article-1.3359320

If the Founding Fathers of this country were cool with cultivating and using pot, then the current attorney general, Jeff Sessions, and the Department of Justice need to get on board and recognize that a decades-old federal policy is unconstitutional as it pertains to cannabis, an explosive federal civil lawsuit claims.

Former Jets defensive lineman Marvin Washington and several other cannabis advocates filed the lawsuit in Manhattan federal court Monday. According to the suit, the Controlled Substances Act — which went into effect in 1971 and which is responsible for marijuana being classified as a Schedule I drug — “has wrongfully and unconstitutionally criminalized the cultivation, distribution, sale, and possession of cannabis, which, historically, has been harvested to produce, among other things, medicine, industrial hemp, and a substance known as tetrahydrocannabinol (“THC”).”

Washington has been a leading voice in the cannabis movement and he is the founder of Isodiol Performance products, which are THC-free, meaning they do not contain the component of cannabis that gets you high. Washington advocates cannabis use as a safe and less addictive means to treat the pain from debilitating injuries football players sustain during their careers, including trauma to the head and brain. The other plaintiffs in the suit include a military veteran, Jose Belen, who suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and two sets of parents of children who have serious medical conditions. The plaintiffs argue that cannabis use is an effective means of treatment in each of the individual cases, but that the CSA prevents the plaintiffs from accessing cannabis.

“Jose’s treatment providers at the Veterans Administration informed Jose that they are unable to prescribe medical cannabis because it is illegal under the CSA,” reads the suit, referring to Belen, the military veteran.

Currently 29 states and three U.S. territories have legalized marijuana for medical use.

The suit cites former presidents George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson and James Madison — several of the nation’s Founding Fathers — as cannabis advocates, and the suit also lists more recent Leaders of the Free World, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, as “accomplished statesmen” who are supportive of the cannabis movement.

NYC PAPERS OUT. Social media use restricted to low res file max 184 x 128 pixels and 72 dpi

Former Jets defensive lineman Marvin Washington has been a prominent cannabis advocate when it comes to treating injuries.

(Howard Simmons/New York Daily News)

“Despite the relatively recent stigmatization of cannabis in the United States as a supposed ‘gateway drug’ used primarily by ‘hippies’ and minorities, there is a long and rich history of people from virtually every part of the world using cannabis for medical, industrial, spiritual, and recreational purposes,” the suit reads. “Indeed, those who have cultivated, encouraged the cultivation of, and/or used cannabis include, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, James Madison, James Monroe, Abraham Lincoln, John F. Kennedy, Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, and Barack Obama — an assortment of the most intelligent and accomplished statesmen in American history.”

 Sessions, the embattled current AG who Pres. Trump has blasted on social media over the past few days and whose job security appears to be tenuous, is a defendant in the suit (as are the acting administrator of the DEA, Chuck Rosenberg, the DEA and the U.S.) and the plaintiffs detail in the suit Sessions’ efforts earlier this year to request federal funding for the Justice Department “to resume criminal prosecutions of State-legal medical marijuana patients, State-legal businesses that provide medical Cannabis to patients, and physicians who recommend such treatment.”

Lauren Rudick, one of the plaintiffs’ attorneys who works at Manhattan law firm, Hiller PC, and who is the co-founder of Hiller’s cannabis business practice, said that if the plaintiffs are successful in their pursuit to have the CSA declared unconstitutional — as it pertains to cannabis — the substance will be de-scheduled. If that happens and the federal government decides to re-schedule cannabis, Rudick said the government would have to review current medical evidence that demonstrates cannabis doesn’t meet the criteria to be classified as a Schedule I drug.

“We are seeking a ‘declaration’ to that effect, and also a permanent injunction restraining enforcement of the CSA as written, as it pertains to cannabis,” said Rudick. “The classification of cannabis as a Schedule I drug deprives individuals of basic constitutional rights, including Due Process and the fundamental right to travel. Some of these individuals, such as Alexis Bortell and Jagger Cotte (both plaintiffs in the action) are patients who seek cannabis as a means of life-saving medication. The government has a federal patent on cannabis, and has recognized the medical efficacy of cannabis in a variety of ways, yet Sessions is trying to reverse policy on cannabis use and contend that it has no medical use. It’s hypocritical.”

 

Our “little traveling man” left on his final journey

I’m a Doctor With Chronic Illness. Here Are 12 Things I Wish People Knew.

I’m a Doctor With Chronic Illness. Here Are 12 Things I Wish People Knew.

www.themighty.com/2017/02/doctor-with-chronic-illness-things-to-know/

I’ve written this article to help educate those who want to learn about chronic illness. It is written from my perspective, that of a doctor who treated patients with chronic illness for many years, and who spent five years of my life homebound due to chronic illness.

I want to spread awareness so that friends, family, employers, coworkers, and health care professionals can better understand chronic illness. My hope is that an increase in awareness will help strengthen relationships, reduce misunderstandings, and improve support systems for those with chronic illness. 

About Chronic Illness

Chronic illness is a disease, condition, or injury that can last years or a lifetime and is typically not curable, though in some cases it may go into remission. It can vary in its severity, with some people able to work and live active or seemingly “normal” lives; while others are very sick and may even be homebound.

Many people with chronic illness have an invisible chronic illness. The severity of their symptoms is not clearly

1. Nobody wants to feel sick.

In all my years as a doctor treating patients with chronic illness, I never saw a patient who enjoyed feeling ill. I saw the opposite, patients who were once very active, desperately trying to find answers and treatment for their overwhelming symptoms.

2. Many doctors don’t understand chronic illness.

For years, doctors were under the misperception that some chronic illnesses were caused by depression or anxiety and the only treatment available for these patients was psychiatric care.

Despite medical evidence disproving this perception, some doctors are “set in their ways” and do not truly understand chronic illness or how to appropriately address it. Therefore, patients often have to spend precious time searching for a doctor who understands their illness and provides appropriate treatment options while their symptoms potentially worsen.

3. Being unable to work is not a vacation.

Those who are not able to work due to chronic illness are not “on vacation.” They are instead, struggling every day to do simple tasks: getting out of bed, getting dressed, making a meal, bathing, etc. They are often homebound, too sick to leave their homes except for doctor appointments.

4. Chronic illness can trigger many emotions.

Chronic illness itself can change the biochemical makeup of the mood control center in the brain. In addition, frustrations such as the following can affect a person’s mood and lead to depression and/or anxiety:

  • the wait/search for a diagnosis
  • inability to work and feel productive
  • change in family dynamics
  • loss of social interactions and isolation
  • financial stress
  • the struggle to deal with symptoms and perform simple daily tasks

Those with chronic illness often feel a great loss. It is not unusual to experience some or all of the stages of grief (i.e. denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance). They grieve for the life they once lived. They grieve for the life they must endure now. They grieve for the life they dreamed of having.

Many people with chronic illness also feel very isolated. Even though they crave social interactions, their symptoms may make it very difficult and at times impossible to talk on the phone or type an email or Facebook post.

5. The symptoms of chronic illness are very complex.

The symptoms experienced by those with chronic illness vary depending on the illness; however, many people experience some or all of the following symptoms: extreme fatigue, pain, headaches, brain fog, nausea, and/or dizziness.

It is not unusual for the symptoms of chronic illness to wax and wane over time (sometimes even from hour to hour), so planning activities ahead of time can be very difficult. A “good day” for those with chronic illness would likely be considered a sick day for most others.

6. Chronic illness fatigue is much more than being tired.

Fatigue is a common symptom in chronic illness and in many cases it is severe, often debilitating. It can be easily triggered by simple daily activities or by more elaborate events such as holidays. Those with chronic illness will often have to “pay the price” for engaging in an activity and then require days, weeks, or even months of recovery.

Those with chronic illness may need to rest often and may have to cancel events last minute. This does not mean they are lazy or trying to avoid activities. Once fatigue kicks in, there is no other option other than to rest. It’s as if the body “hits a wall” and can’t go further, no matter what. To better understand the fatigue and limited energy of a person with chronic illness, read this helpful article about the spoon theory.

Have you ever been stuck in bed for a few days from a really bad infection, surgery, or hospitalization? Think back to how that felt. You could barely get out of bed and simple tasks were exhausting. Now consider feeling that way every day, all day, for months or years?

7. Pain is a common symptom in those with chronic illness.

Those with chronic illness often experience severe pain, including headaches, joint pain, muscle pain, nerve pain, back pain, and/or neck pain. 

8. Brain fog is extremely frustrating.

Brain fog is frustrating because it is a difficult symptom to describe so that others understand its impact. Brain fog is a cognitive dysfunction common in chronic illness, which can include issues with word finding, concentration, and recall. Those with brain fog often know what they want to say, but can’t find the thoughts or words to communicate effectively. 

9. There is a greater risk of dangerous infections. 

The immune system in those with chronic illness may be overactive and instead of attacking infections the chronic illness immune system wastes time and energy fighting the body’s own organs, joints, nerves, and/or muscles. Many people with chronic illness are on medicines to suppress their overactive immune systems and consequently, need to avoid being around sick people. A minor cold in a healthy person could progress to a dangerous infection in someone with chronic illness.

10. Certain foods can aggravate symptoms.

Certain foods may aggravate the symptoms of those with chronic illness. Common culprits are gluten, dairy, sugar, soy, yeast, alcohol, and processed foods. These trigger foods increase inflammation which can cause a significant increase in symptoms which may last for hours or days (sometimes weeks). Yeast infection is common in pregnant women and it is crucial to opt safe treatment for yeast infection while pregnant.

Because so many of these trigger foods are in our diet, it is often difficult to pinpoint which foods aggravate symptoms and staying away from favorite foods can be a challenge.

11. Sensitivity to smells is common.

Certain smells including perfumes, colognes, cleaning agents, and smoke can trigger headaches, brain fog, nausea, and other symptoms in those with chronic illness. Also, some of the medicines used to treat chronic illnesses are low-dose versions of chemotherapy drugs. The sensitivity is similar to that seen in those who are pregnant or on chemotherapy and have a sensitivity to smells.

12. It takes a lot of effort to manage chronic illness.

Those with chronic illness have to be very regimented to make sure they get adequate rest, avoid trigger foods, take medications at the correct times, and avoid flares. It is understandable that sometimes they just want to feel “normal” and eat some pizza or stay up late, even if they know they will “pay for it later.”

***

Despite struggling with grief, isolation, and often debilitating symptoms, those with chronic illness (and their caregivers) warrior on. They fight daily to be able to understand their bodies and to do things others take for granted. They are often surrounded by a society that does not understand their challenges, and therefore, is unable to provide adequate support.

You can make a big difference in the lives of those with chronic illness by learning more about their symptoms and approaching them with compassion and support. Gaining an understanding of chronic illness will help make these conditions less “invisible.” This is why it is so important you are taking the time to read this article. Thank you!

National Health System and Judicial System – “pulls the plug” on baby .. follow the money ?

http://stmedia.startribune.com/images/BRITAIN_SICK_BABY_45724890.JPGCharlie Gard parents drop legal fight, agree to let him die

http://www.startribune.com/parents-prepare-to-return-to-court-in-charlie-gard-case/436245193/

The parents of critically ill baby Charlie Gard, mother Connie Yates, left, and father Chris Gard arrive at the High Court in London, Monday, July 24, 2017. The parents of the 11-month old, Charlie Gard who has a rare genetic condition and brain damage, are returning to court Monday for the latest stage in their effort to seek permission to take the child to the United States for medical treatment. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

LONDON — The parents of Charlie Gard, whose battle to get their critically ill baby experimental treatment stirred international sympathy and controversy, dropped their legal effort Monday, saying tearfully that it was time to let their son die.

At an emotional court hearing, a lawyer for the baby’s parents, Chris Gard and Connie Yates, said the couple was withdrawing a bid to have Charlie sent to the United States, where a doctor had offered to try to treat his rare genetic condition. The decision came after new medical tests showed the 11-month-old, who has brain damage and cannot breathe unaided, had irreversible muscular damage.

Both parents wept in the packed courtroom at the High Court in London as lawyer Grant Armstrong made the announcement, his voice breaking.

“This case is now about time,” Armstrong said. “Sadly, time has run out.”

Outside court, Chris Gard said that Charlie “won’t make his first birthday in just under two weeks’ time.”

“We are about to do the hardest thing that we will ever have to do, which is to let our beautiful little Charlie go,” he said.

Gard and Yates, who are in their 30s and from London, have fought ferociously for their son, who was born in August 2016 with mitochondrial depletion syndrome, a rare genetic disease.

The baby has been treated at Great Ormond Street Hospital in London, one of the world’s leading children’s hospitals. Doctors there say Charlie is in pain and further treatment would only increase his suffering. They have sought permission from the courts to switch off his life support and allow him to die peacefully. His parents have resisted, arguing that an experimental treatment could extend and improve Charlie’s life.

The case gained international attention after Charlie’s parents received support from Pope Francis, U.S. President Donald Trump and some members of the U.S. Congress.

On Monday, the Vatican said Pope Francis was praying for Charlie and his parents, and urged the faithful to join him in prayer so that the baby’s parents “may find God’s consolation and love.

As the legal battle dragged on, U.S.-based pro-life activists had flown to London to support Charlie’s parents, and the case became a flashpoint for opposing views on health-care funding, medical intervention, the role of the state and the rights of the child.

Passions have often run high, with activists demanding “justice for Charlie” rallying outside the High Court and Great Ormond Street Hospital. Over the weekend, the hospital said it had contacted police after staff received abuse and threats.

Charlie’s parents condemned the abuse, and on Monday thanked the hospital for the care it had given their child.

Some commentators portrayed the case as a clash between family and the state, and U.S. conservatives used it to criticize Britain’s government-funded health care system — even though the case was never about money.

Judge Nicholas Francis criticized those “who know almost nothing about this case but who feel entitled to express opinions.”

At its heart, the case pitted the right of parents to decide what’s best for their children against the authorities’ responsibility to uphold the rights of people who can’t speak for themselves.

Under British law, children have rights independent of their parents, and it is usual for courts to intervene when parents and doctors disagree on the treatment of a child — such as cases where a parent’s religious beliefs prohibit blood transfusions.

British courts and the European Court of Human Rights all ruled against Charlie’s parents and in favor of Great Ormond Street. The case returned to court this month when the hospital asked the judge to reassess the possible benefits of a treatment pioneered by Dr. Michio Hirano, a neurology expert from Columbia Medical Center in New York.

At a hearing earlier this month, Hirano said there was a 10 percent chance of a significant improvement in Charlie’s muscle use with the treatment, known as nucleoside therapy. But he conceded it had never been tried on a human with Charlie’s exact condition and no tests had ever been done on mice to see whether it would work on a patient like Charlie.

Hirano came to London last week to examine Charlie along with other experts. After seeing the results of new tests, the baby’s parents agreed to drop their case, meaning Charlie’s life support can now be removed.

But they still believe Charlie could have been saved had months not been spent in legal wrangling about whether he should get treatment.

“Had Charlie been given the treatment sooner he would have had the potential to be a normal, healthy little boy,” Yates told the court.

“Our son has an extremely rare disease for which there is no accepted cure, but that does not mean that this treatment would not have worked, and it certainly does not mean that this shouldn’t have been tried.”

The hospital disagreed. Its lawyer, Katie Gollop, said Charlie had suffered “irreversible neurological damage” and the treatment would have been “futile.” She said the hospital stood by its belief that Charlie was in pain.

“At the first hearing in Charlie’s case in March, (Great Ormond Street Hospital’s) position was that every day that passed was a day that was not in his best interests,” Gollop said in a written statement. “That remains its view of his welfare.”

The hospital also criticized Hirano, saying that he had given evidence to court without having read previous judgments or Charlie’s medical records. And it noted that Hirano had told the court that he “retains a financial interest in some of the … compounds he proposed prescribing for Charlie.”

Ending a case he called tragic for all involved, the judge paid tribute to Charlie’s parents, saying it was impossible to comprehend the agony they faced.

“No parent could have done more for their child,” he said.

Yates cried as she told the court she and Charlie’s father had only wanted the best for their son.

“We are so sorry that we couldn’t save you,” she said.

Some of the lawyers working on the suits were previously involved in lawsuits claiming tobacco companies

Lawyer who targeted tobacco companies encourages state suits against drug makers for opioid crisis

http://www.abajournal.com/news/article/lawyer_who_targeted_tobacco_companies_encourages_state_suits_against_drug_m

Four states and more than a dozen cities and counties have filed lawsuits contending drug makers misrepresented the risks and benefits of opioid use, spurring an addiction crisis.

Some of the lawyers working on the suits were previously involved in lawsuits claiming tobacco companies misrepresented the health risks of smoking, the Wall Street Journal reports.

Among the lawyers is Michael Moore, who filed the first state lawsuit against tobacco companies in 1994 when he was attorney general of Mississippi. Soon after he left office in 2004, Moore got involved in lawsuits filed against OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma by patients who said they became addicted, despite taking the drug as prescribed. The suits settled for $74 million in 2007.

Now Moore’s law firm, based in Flowood, Mississippi, is helping represent the states of Mississippi and Ohio in their suits against drug makers. Missouri and Oklahoma also have also sued. Moore is also meeting with other lawyers representing government to coordinate arguments.

Another lawyer involved in the suits is Joe Rice of Mount Pleasant, South Carolina-based Motley Rice, who was outside counsel to two dozen states in the tobacco litigation. Rice notes that lawyers in the tobacco suits stayed in touch, and he expects communication among lawyers in the opioid suits.

Moore’s use of outside counsel while attorney general helped make the practice more popular, though some critics say the practice improperly gives law enforcement powers to law firms with an interest in profiting from the suits, the article points out.

In the Ohio case, the Journal reports that Moore’s law firm and five other firms have a fee agreement that gives them 25 percent of any recovery up to $10 million, and a smaller percentage for additional recoveries with a maximum fee of $50 million.

See also:

ABAJournal.com: “Drug firms knew opiates were being abused on Cherokee reservations but did nothing, lawsuit alleges”

Jeff Sessions named in federal lawsuit challenging marijuana’s Schedule I status

Attorney General Jeff Sessions and the acting head of the Drug Enforcement Agency Charles Rosenberg have both been named in a new federal lawsuit challenging marijuana’s Schedule I status as unconstitutional.

The 89-page lawsuit was filed Monday in the Southern District of New York by attorney Michael Hiller on behalf of a former NFL player, two children who regularly use medical marijuana, an Iraq War veteran with post-traumatic stress disorder, and a nonprofit called the Cannabis Cultural Association.

 

The lawsuit challenges the constitutionality of the Controlled Substance Act, which designates marijuana as a Schedule 1 substance. Other drugs included in that classification include heroin and LSD, and Hiller argues on behalf of the plaintiffs the classifcation is so “irrational” it violates the U.S. Constitution.

“The record makes clear that the CSA doesn’t make any rational sense, and the federal government knows it,” Hiller said in a statement, adding, “if the federal government doesn’t believe in the rationality of its own statute, it’s unconstitutional to enforce it.”

Hiller doubts that the government has actually believed marijuana has ever met the three requirements for Schedule 1: (i) must have a high potential for abuse; (ii) must have absolutely no medical use in treatment; and (iii) cannot be used or tested safely, even under strict medical supervision.

“[T]he federal government has admitted repeatedly in writing and implemented national policy reflecting that cannabis does in fact, have medical uses and can be used and tested safely under medical supervision,” the complaint reads. “On that basis, the federal government has exploited cannabis economically for more than a decade by securing a medical cannabis patent and entering into license agreements with medical licensees.”

The Justice Department and DEA as a whole are also listed as defendants in the case.

Sessions has multiple times criticized marijuana, once calling it “only slightly less awful” than heroin.

Marijuana activists have been waiting for the attorney general to act on a Justice Department policy — the Cole memo — that allows states to set their own rules and regulations for the drug.

Currently, eight states and the District of Columbia allow recreational sales of marijuana, as well as medical. An additional 24 allow only medical marijuana use.

The Washington Examiner has reached out to the Justice Department for comment on the lawsuit.