Opiates

Opiates are derived from opium or have similar effects; the main one is pain killing. The major problem with opium etc. is that they are addictive. The same applies to Opiates [ that is the odd spelling ]. It has made them into a very profitable industry that made billions for the Sackler Family, a bunch of thieving Jews that achieved a very profitable Opioid Epidemic. But they were not content to kill hundreds of thousands of their customers but indulged in various forms of accounting fraud to get even more money. They have recently, in November 2020 paid an $8 billion bribe to stay out of prison.

The whole thing was written up by Ron Unz, an honest Jew; they do exist even if they are rare. His piece is Our Public Health Problems, dealing with declining life expectancy. The fact that it is declining in America while getting greater in the rest of Western Civilization is significant. That it did not come to public attention for fifteen years is too. The ugly reality that the main victims are White Men & largely Working Class explains that aspect. The main causes are poison, suicide and chronic liver diseases. Drinking is the way to destroy the liver. These qualify as deaths of despair, the title of a book, Deaths of Despair and the Future of Capitalism by Anne Case & Angus Deaton. Dopesick by Beth Macy covers the same issue in Appalachia & Virginia.

The perpetrators of this perfectly genuine Holocaust were Jews, specifically the #Sackler Family; they got richer than millionaires and some billionaires and killed thousands doing it. Do they care? Let's not be naive about it. The fact that they can buy off prosecutors with multigigabuck bungs is a convincing proof of guilt. #Jews Slide Out From Under After Killing 47 Thousand People Using OxyContin but will the victims see a penny piece of the loot? What will happen to all of that money as #Big Pharma Buys Off Prosecutors For $26 BILLION.

More and better details are at Opioids And Jews.  Ron goes on to tell us about the AIDS racketeers.

 

Ron assesses sources in a reasonable manner. His conclusions should be taken seriously. If the losers were Blacks they would not have been ignored.

 

 

https://www.unz.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/MortalityCauseDeaton.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

Drug Dealing Jews Make Off With Ill Gotten Gains  [ 18 September 2019 ]
QUOTE
Drug maker Purdue Pharma, which is being blamed for jump-starting America's opioid crisis with its aggressive marketing of Oxycontin, has filed for bankruptcy. 

Purdue Pharma, owned by the [ allegedly ] British-American Sackler family, filed for bankruptcy protection on Sunday night in a federal bankruptcy court in White Plains, New York, after reaching a tentative settlement deal worth up to $12billion with state and local governments.

The Sacklers expressed sympathy on Sunday night but refused to take responsibility for the nation's opioid epidemic.............

The family agreed to pay at least $3billion in the settlement plus contribute the company itself, which is to be reformed with its future profits going to the company's creditors.............

A court filing by the New York Attorney General's office on Friday contended that Sackler family members used Swiss and other hidden accounts to transfer $1billion to themselves. The discovery of the transfers bolsters several states' claims that family members worked to shield its wealth because of the growing legal threats against them and Purdue.
UNQUOTE
They set this one up; now they are walking away laughing up their sleeves. Down to their last few billion; tough isn't it? The Mail assumes that we don't know that the Sacklers are Jews on the make so it is not censoring this one, just concealing the truth about them. The Guardian does have a small mention, just once in Meet the Sacklers the family feuding over blame for the opioid crisis.

 

Jews Slide Out From Under After Killing 47 Thousand People Using OxyContin  [ 22 October 2020 ]
QUOTE
Purdue Pharma, the company that makes OxyContin, will plead guilty to three federal criminal charges as part of a settlement of more than $8 billion for its alleged role in fueling America's opioid epidemic, Justice Department officials confirmed Wednesday.

United States Deputy Attorney General. Jeffrey A. Rosen announced the deal in a press conference Wednesday morning as he vowed to 'turn the tide on the opioid crisis ravaging the country'. Rosen said the deal is still subject to bankruptcy court approval.

Under the deal the Connecticut-based company, owned by the wealthy Sackler family, will plead guilty to three criminal charges filed in federal court in New Jersey Wednesday. 

The three counts include conspiracy to defraud the United States and violating federal anti-kickback laws............

The deal does not release any of the company's executives or owners - including members of the Sackler family - from criminal liability and a criminal investigation is still ongoing.
UNQUOTE
More Jews, more crime. You will have seen them whining about their problems with naughty little Adolf and their Holocaust® Story. You might wonder just why he didn't like them. They keep very quiet about that then the Sackler mob leave you to wonder if he was right. NB They are upper world criminals so they will not go to prison.

 

Jews Selling Addictive Opiates Pay $8.3 Billion To Stay Out Of Prison [ 25 November 2020 ]
QUOTE
Oxycontin maker Purdue Pharma has pleaded guilty to three federal criminal charges as part of its $8.3 billion plea deal for its role in fueling America's opioid crisis.

The Connecticut-based pharmaceutical giant, owned by the wealthy Sackler family, entered guilty pleas Tuesday to charges including conspiracy to defraud the US and violating federal anti-kickback laws.

The pleas were part of Purdue's settlement with the Department of Justice and see the firm finally formally admitting to its role in an opioid epidemic that has contributed to hundreds of thousands of deaths over the past two decades.   

Since OxyContin was introduced back in 1996, opioid addiction and overdoses have surged across America. 

In 1999 there were less than 4,000 opioid overdose deaths. By 2018, this figure had risen to 47,000, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

In a virtual hearing with a federal judge in Newark, New Jersey, the OxyContin maker admitted to all three federal charges. 

On the conspiracy charge, Purdue admitted that from May 2007 through at least March 2017 it conspired to defraud the US.

This charge relates to Purdue impeding the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) by falsely representing that it had maintained an effective program to avoid drug diversion.

Purdue acknowledged that it had not maintained an effective program to prevent prescription drugs from being diverted to the black market, even though it had told the DEA it did have such a program

Instead the firm was actually continuing to market its opioids to more than 100 healthcare providers, some of which there was reason to believe were diverting the drugs.

Purdue also admitted to providing misleading information to the agency as a way to boost company manufacturing quotas. 

The pharma giant also admitted to two counts of violating federal anti-kickback laws.

This included paying two doctors through a speaking program to write more prescriptions for the company's opioids between June 2009 and March 2017. 

The kickback charge also relates to an illegal kickback from around April 2016 to December 2016, where Purdue made payments to electronic health records software firm Practice Fusion to influence the prescription of pain medication. 

In 2016, Purdue negotiated with Practice Fusion to create a series of alerts in the software to get doctors to increase prescriptions of opioids.  

In pleading guilty, the company also admitted to agreeing to pay nearly $1 million to Practice Fusion in exchange for embedding alerts in its software for one year. 

The guilty pleas were entered by Purdue board chairperson Steve Miller on behalf of the company.   

'Having our plea accepted in federal court, and taking responsibility for past misconduct, is an essential step to preserve billions of dollars of value' for the settlement it is pursuing through bankruptcy court, the company said in a statement.

'We continue to work tirelessly to build additional support for a proposed bankruptcy settlement, which would direct the overwhelming majority of the settlement funds to state, local and tribal governments for the purpose of abating the opioid crisis.'  

The pleas were part of a criminal and civil settlement announced last month between the Stamford, Connecticut-based company and the Justice Department.

United States Deputy Attorney General. Jeffrey A. Rosen announced the deal in a press conference in October where he vowed to 'turn the tide on the opioid crisis ravaging the country'.  

The deal includes $8.3 billion in penalties and forfeitures, but the company is on the hook for a direct payment to the federal government of only a fraction of that, $225 million. 

It would pay the smaller amount as long as it executes a settlement moving through federal bankruptcy court with state and local governments and other entities suing it over the toll of the opioid epidemic.

Members of the Sackler family have also agreed to pay $225 million to the federal government to settle civil claims. 

No criminal charges have been filed against family members, although the deal does not release any of the company's executives or owners - including the family members - from criminal liability and a criminal investigation is still ongoing.

However, the Sackler family will lose any stake in the pharma giant and the company will be dissolved as it currently stands, with its assets re-purposed into a public company instead. 

A judge authorized the bankruptcy settlement in a court hearing in New York last Tuesday.    

Purdue's plea to federal crimes provides only minor comfort for advocates who want to see harsher penalties for the OxyContin maker and its owners. 

The ongoing drug overdose crisis, which appears to be growing worse during the coronavirus pandemic, has contributed to the deaths of more than 470,000 Americans over the past two decades, most of those from legal and illicit opioids.

The attorneys general for about half the states opposed the federal settlement, as well as the company's proposed settlement in bankruptcy court.  

The attorneys general and some activists are upset that despite the Sacklers giving up control of the company, the family remains wealthy and its members will not face prison or other individual penalties.

The activists say there's no difference between the actions of the company and its owners, who also controlled Purdue's board until the past few years.  

Cynthia Munger, whose son is in recovery from opioid addiction after being prescribed OxyContin more than a decade ago as a high school baseball player with a shoulder injury, is among the activists pushing for the Sacklers and other company officials to be charged with crimes.

'Until we do that and we stop accusing brick and mortar and not individuals, nothing will change,' she said Munger. 

OxyContin was developed by Purdue and hit the shelves back in 2006.

The powerful prescription painkiller promised 12 hours of 'smooth and sustained pain control', diminished presence of 'common opioid-related side effects', and 'improved patients' quality of life, mood, and sleep', according to a press release at the time.

It was marketed as being less addictive and safer than morphine, leading it to be widely subscribed.

Opioid addiction soon swept the nation with people crushing the tablets and snorting or injecting them after becoming hooked on the highly addictive drug.

Users often turn to cheaper options such as street heroin once hooked.

In 2007, an affiliate of Purdue - Purdue (Frederick) - and three of Purdue's executives pleaded guilty to 'misbranding' Oxycontin - by saying it wasn't addictive.

Purdue's top lawyer Howard Udell, former medical director Paul Goldenheim, and then-president Michael Friedman were sentenced to probation agreed to pay fines in addition to the $600 million in fines and other payments made by Purdue Frederick for their actions.

At the time this was one of the largest pharmaceutical settlements in American history.

Purdue introduced an abuse-deterrent form of the drug in 2010 but it continued to be pushed aggressively to doctors, with the drug reaching peak sales of $3 billion that year.

In 2018, more than 200 states, cities, and counties filed lawsuits against the company for the impact OxyContin has had on their communities.

A 2019 court filing said they had made up to $13 billion over the years from the blockbuster drug, though a lawyer said they brought in far less after taxes and reinvestment in the company. 

Purdue applied for bankruptcy status in September after approaching a settlement worth $12billion with local governments across the US.

The company is facing around 2,600 separate lawsuits over drug users' deaths. 

Until recently, the family's name was on museum galleries and educational programs around the world because of gifts from family members. 

But under pressure from activists, institutions from the Louvre in Paris to Tufts University in Massachusetts have dissociated themselves from the family in the last few years.   

As the maker of the best-known prescription opioid, Purdue is the highest-profile player in the opioid crisis, but it's far from the only one. 

Trials against other drugmakers and distributors that were scheduled for this year have been pushed back due to the coronavirus. 
UNQUOTE
More Jews, more thieves and murderers. The mail is hing the truth about them being God's Chosen People.

 

Opiate ex Wiki 
Opiate is a term classically used in pharmacology to mean a substance derived from  opiumOpioid, a more modern term, is used to designate all substances, both natural and synthetic, that bind to opioid receptors in the brain (including antagonists).  Opiates are alkaloid compounds naturally found in the opium poppy plant  Papaver somniferum. The psychoactive compounds found in the opium plant include  morphinecodeine, and thebaine. Opiates have long been used for a variety of medical conditions with evidence of opiate trade and use for pain relief as early as the eighth century AD. Opiates are considered drugs with moderate to high abuse potential and are listed on various "Substance-Control Schedules" under the Uniform Controlled Substances Act of the United States of America.

In 2014, between 13 and 20 million people used opiates recreationally (0.3% to 0.4% of the global population between the ages of 15 and 65).  According to the CDC, from this population, there has been a recorded 47,000 deaths with a total of a half a million deaths from 2000–2014. In 2016, the  World Health Organization reported that 27 million people suffer from opioid abuse disorder. They also reported that in 2015, 450,000 people died as a result of drug use, with between a third and a half of that number being attributed to opioids.

 

Sackler Family ex Wiki
The Sackler family is an American family, many of whom are known for founding and owning the pharmaceutical company Purdue Pharma. Purdue Pharma, and by extension some members of the family, have faced criticism and lawsuits regarding overprescription of addictive pharmaceutical drugs, including Oxycontin, and Purdue Pharma's role in the North American opioid crisis.[1][2][3] According to the New Yorker, Purdue Pharma played a "special role" in the opioid crisis because the company "was the first to set out, in the nineteen-nineties, to persuade the American medical establishment that strong opioids should be much more widely prescribed—and that physicians’ longstanding fears about the addictive nature of such drugs were overblown."[4]

History
The Sackler family are descendants of Isaac Sackler and his wife Sophie (née Greenberg), Jewish immigrants to the United States from Galicia (now Ukraine) and Poland,[5] who established a grocery business in Brooklyn. The couple had three sons, Arthur, Mortimer, and Raymond Sackler who all went to medical school and became psychiatrists. They were often cited as early pioneers in medication techniques which ended the common practice of lobotomies, and were also regarded as the first to fight for the racial integration of blood banks.[6] In 1952, the brothers bought a small pharmaceutical company, Purdue-Frederick.[7] Raymond and Mortimer ran Purdue, while Arthur, the oldest brother, became a pioneer in medical advertising and one of the foremost art collectors of his generation. He also gifted the majority of his collections to museums around the world. After his death in 1987, his option on one third of that company was sold by his estate to his two brothers who turned it into Purdue Pharma.[8]

In 1996 Purdue Pharma introduced OxyContin, a version of oxycodone reformulated in a slow-release form. Heavily promoted,[9][10] oxycodine is seen as a key drug in the emergence of the opioid epidemic.[11][12] Elizabeth Sackler, daughter of Arthur Sackler, claimed that her branch of the family did not participate in or benefit from the sales of narcotics. While some have criticized Arthur Sackler for pioneering marketing techniques to promote non-opioids decades earlier, Professor Evan Gertsman said in Forbes magazine, "It is an absurd inversion of logic to say that because Arthur Sackler pioneered direct marketing to physicians, he is responsible for the fraudulent misuse of that technique, which occurred many years after his death and from which he procured no financial gain."[13][14][15] In 2018, multiple members of the Raymond and Mortimer Sackler families, Richard Sackler, Theresa Sackler, Kathe Sackler, Jonathan Sackler, Mortimer Sackler, Beverly Sackler, David Sackler, and Ilene Sackler, were all named as defendants in suits filed by numerous states over their involvement in the opioid crisis.[16][17]

The family was first listed in Forbes list of America's Richest Families in 2015.[5]

 

There is more at:-
https:///en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortimer_Sackler

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raymond_Sackler

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purdue_Pharma

 

Opioid Epidemic ex Wiki 
An opioid epidemic is the overuse or misuse of addictive opioid drugs with significant medical, social and economic consequences, including overdose deaths.

Opioids are a diverse class of moderately strong painkillers, including oxycodone (commonly sold under the trade names OxyContin and Percocet), hydrocodone (Vicodin, Norco) and a very strong painkiller, fentanyl, which is synthesized to resemble other opiates such as opium-derived morphine and heroin.[1] The potency and availability of these substances, despite their high risk of addiction and overdose, have made them popular both as medical treatments and as recreational drugs. Due to their sedative effects on the part of the brain which regulates breathing, the respiratory center of the medulla oblongata, opioids in high doses present the potential for respiratory depression and may cause respiratory failure and death.[2]

Opioids are effective for treating acute pain,[3] but are less useful for treating chronic (long term) pain,[4] as the risks often outweigh the benefits.[4]

From 1999 to 2016 it is estimated 453,300 Americans have died from opiods.[5] What the U.S. Surgeon General dubbed "The Opioid Crisis" likely began with over-prescription of opioids in the 1990s, which led to them becoming the most prescribed class of medications in the United States. Opioids initiated for post surgery or pain management are one of the leading causes of opioid misuse, where approximately 6% of people continued opioid use after trauma or surgery.[6]

 

As US Turned To Opioids, OxyContin's Founder Tapped Swiss Bank [ Says ] ICIJ 
ICIJ is a bunch of self righteous bores who like poking their noses into other people's affairs, especially if they are Capitalist Swine. But here they have little or nothing to add.
QUOTE
By August 2005, it had been more than five decades since New York-born psychiatrist and philanthropist Mortimer Sackler helped launch Purdue Pharma. That month, the high-rolling Sackler tapped the private Swiss branch of one of the world’s largest banks, HSBC, to open a handful of new accounts. Sackler appeared to be on a winning streak, propelled in part by the fortune his family had amassed as the developer of the drug OxyContin.

Britain’s Sunday Times had recently included Sackler on a list of the United Kingdom’s 250 wealthiest residents (Sackler renounced his U.S. citizenship in 1974 and spent time living in the United Kingdom and Switzerland). A prominent English nursery recommended a smooth-stemmed, pink rose in his honor.

Sackler and his brothers’ company, Purdue Pharma, had introduced OxyContin just a decade before to huge success. The opiate was filling bathroom cabinets across the United States and was already bringing in close to $2 billion in sales each year.

But the tide was turning. Just a month after the accounts were opened, U.S. federal prosecutors filed a lawsuit against the company that had made him rich.

The 2005 lawsuit, joined by a dozen states and the District of Columbia, alleged that Purdue Pharma had lied about Oxycontin’s risks of addiction. The claim was dismissed. Two years later, Purdue Pharma and three executives pleaded guilty to separate criminal charges of misbranding the drug as less addictive than other painkillers, resulting in fines totaling more than $634 million. No member of the Sackler family was named in the charging documents or the plea deal.

OxyContin has remained on the market.
UNQUOTE
Their bribe is big enough to keep them out of prison. That is the theory at all events. Using the right synagogue matters at a time like this.

 

Ernst & Young ex Wiki   
Ernst & Young
(doing business as EY) is a multinational professional services firm headquartered in London, England, United Kingdom. EY is one of the largest professional services firms in the world and is one of the "Big Four" accounting firms.

EY operates as a network of member firms which are separate legal entities in individual countries. It has 250,000 employees in over 700 offices around 150 countries in the world. It provides assurance (including financial audit), tax, consulting and advisory services to companies.[4]

The firm dates back to 1849 with the founding of Harding & Pullein in England. The current firm was formed by a merger of Ernst & Whinney and Arthur Young & Co. in 1989.[5] It was known as Ernst & Young until 2013 when it underwent a rebranding to EY. The acronym "EY" was already an informal name for the firm prior to its official adoption.[6]

In 2017, Fortune magazine ranked EY 29th on the 100 Best Companies to Work For list.[7] In 2017, EY was the 9th largest privately owned organization in the United States.[8]

Accounting scandals
Ernst & Young has been in accounting scandals - Bank of Credit and Commerce International (1991), Informix Corporation (1996), Sybase (1997), Cendant (1998), One.Tel (2001), AOL (2002), HealthSouth Corporation (2003), Chiquita Brands International (2004), Lehman Brothers (2010), Sino-Forest Corporation (2011) and Olympus Corporation (2011). There are others.

 

Jews Selling Addictive Opiates Pay $8.3 Billion To Stay Out Of Prison  [ 25 November 2020 ]
QUOTE
Oxycontin maker Purdue Pharma has pleaded guilty to three federal criminal charges as part of its $8.3 billion plea deal for its role in fueling America's opioid crisis. The Connecticut-based pharmaceutical giant, owned by the wealthy Sackler family, entered guilty pleas Tuesday to charges including conspiracy to defraud the US and violating federal anti-kickback laws.

The pleas were part of Purdue's settlement with the Department of Justice and see the firm finally formally admitting to its role in an opioid epidemic that has contributed to hundreds of thousands of deaths over the past two decades. Since OxyContin was introduced back in 1996, opioid addiction and overdoses have surged across America. 

In 1999 there were less than 4,000 opioid overdose deaths. By 2018, this figure had risen to 47,000, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In a virtual hearing with a federal judge in Newark, New Jersey, the OxyContin maker admitted to all three federal charges. 

On the conspiracy charge, Purdue admitted that from May 2007 through at least March 2017 it conspired to defraud the US. This charge relates to Purdue impeding the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) by falsely representing that it had maintained an effective program to avoid drug diversion. 
UNQUOTE
The Daily Mail is pretending they are not thieving Jews.

 

Big Pharma Buys Off Prosecutors For $26 BILLION  [ 22 July 2021 ]
QUOTE
States unveiled a historic $26 billion settlement with drug companies to resolve thousands of Opioid-crisis lawsuits, paving the way for communities across the country to secure a jolt of funding to address an epidemic in painkiller addiction that hasn’t abated.

The nation’s three largest drug distributors— McKesson Corp. , AmerisourceBergen Corp. , and Cardinal Health Inc.—and drug maker Johnson & Johnson have been negotiating the deal for more than two years, but Wednesday’s announcement signifies an important milestone that could clear the way for money to be received by states as soon as early next year.

An opioid crisis that has claimed half a million lives in the U.S. has triggered more than 3,000 lawsuits filed by states, local governments, Native American tribes, hospital groups and others against players in the pharmaceutical industry. The lawsuits allege drug makers pushed their painkillers for uses far beyond what was medically necessary and that distributors and pharmacies didn’t do enough to halt masses of pills from flowing into communities.

The companies pushed back, saying they made and distributed a medically necessary and federally regulated product. But at the same time, the burdens of litigation—like turning over millions of internal documents, making employees available for depositions, and preparing for complex trials that could air embarrassing details—has sent many of the companies to the negotiating table..........

The settlements, if completed, would resolve the opioid lawsuits for these four companies, but several other targets remain. Trials are under way in California and New York against drug makers Teva Pharmaceutical Ltd. , AbbVie Inc.’s Allergan, and Endo International PLC. National pharmacy chains have also been named in hundreds of suits and are scheduled to go to trial in October. Two other companies that were targets of the suits, including OxyContin-maker Purdue Pharma LP, filed for bankruptcy to handle the liability and are negotiating their own settlements with states.
UNQUOTE
A billion is a lot of money. 26 of them is huge, a Bribe that will keep the management out of prison and a lot of embarrassing paper out of the public domain. But they killed 500,000 people so it is cheap at the price, $52,000 each There are still more greed driven chancers out there wondering how to lie their way out of it.

The Sackler Family, the Jews running Purdue Pharma who brought us the Opiate Crisis will pay the government rather less. See Jews Selling Addictive Opiates Pay $8.3 Billion To Stay Out Of Prison but then they only got fingered for 47,000 dead; that is some $175,000 each.