By LaVonna Varnado-Brown
In 1952 Arthur, Mortimer, and Raymond Sackler purchased Purdue Frederick, which would become Purdue Pharma later in the 1950s. Purdue Pharma is largely responsible for the opioid crisis, as it’s so lovingly called. Despite arguing that they were passive board members who only approved routine management requests and had no involvement in the production or marketing of opiods, the Sacklers are criminals and should be treated as such.
In the 1980s, it was a war on drugs declared by Ronald and Nancy Reagan. A War On Drugs: a machine, a fan to disperse the funk of the loads of dope they were pumping into black communities. Back then the drug addicts were portrayed as criminals and crack heads. These days we see the media give a more sympathetic gaze to addicts, fueled by billion dollar pushers in luxury suits.
The behemoth pharmaceutical company have been forced to pay fines to over 2,000 plaintiffs, including almost two dozen US states who believe that drugs like OxyContin were deliberately pushed, knowing full well how addictive they are. The fines, however, represent a tiny fraction of what the Sacklers make off their drug-dealing empire. They have been found guilty in civil court, but where are the criminal charges? They should face jail time.
Men like Alton Sterling have lost their lives for selling single cigarettes and DVDs. Every day in America Black men are viewed as criminal for being inside their homes or on the way to their jobs. The Sacklers are responsible for the deaths of hundreds of thousands. Where are the criminal charges? The military with its pollution, the banks robbing us eyes wide shut… where are the criminal charges? Demonstrations have been held in protest.
New York State Attorney General Letitia James said that she has requested records from 33 financial institutions. However, $1 billion in wire transfers to Swiss bank accounts were revealed in records from just one institution. Reports have been made that the U.S. Justice Department is involved in separate talks with Purdue Pharma. Negotiations involve possible civil penalties tied to federal probes of OxyContin sales, but could also include criminal charges using statutes normally used to prosecute drug dealers. This is a call to not only hold these criminals accountable for the mass homicide they commit, but a call to release the millions suffering in US prisons for being poor. Criminalize the billionaires!