US officials are starting to treat opioid companies like Big Tobacco — and suing them

US officials are starting to treat opioid companies like Big Tobacco — and suing them

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You can expect more lawsuits against opioid companies in 2017.

It is impossible to talk about the causes of the opioid epidemic without pointing to the manufacturers and distributors that marketed and proliferated these dangerous pills. Yet over the past several years, these multibillion-dollar companies have avoided much in the way of serious accountability.

Until — maybe — now.

This year, multiple lawsuits have been launched against opioid manufacturers and distributors. With the opioid crisis now having resulted in more than 300,000 deadly opioid overdoses since 1999 (greater than the population of Cincinnati), there’s a push to hold accountable the people and companies behind the products that spawned the epidemic.

The latest high-profile lawsuit came from Ohio, which sued five opioid manufacturers and their subsidiaries. The state’s Republican attorney general, Mike DeWine, said that these companies knowingly misled patients and physicians about the drugs’ risks.

“They knew they were wrong, but they did it anyway — and they continue to do it,” DeWine said in a statement. “Despite all evidence to the contrary about the addictive nature of these pain medications, they are doing precious little to take responsibility for their actions and to tell the public the truth.”

DeWine even compared opioid manufacturers to tobacco companies, arguing in the lawsuit that opioid manufacturers are “borrowing a page from Big Tobacco’s playbook.”

Previously, the Cherokee Nation also made headlines when it announced it was suing opioid distributors and pharmacies, including CVS, Walgreens, and Walmart, for their involvement in supplying the pills to the Cherokee population. At the center of their claim: data that shows 845 million milligrams of opioids were distributed in the 14 counties that make up the Cherokee Nation — which, if you assume an average pill size of 20 milligrams, amounts to 360 pills for each prescription opioid user in the Cherokee Nation.

© Provided by Vox.com

These lawsuits get to the two major legal arguments that different jurisdictions are raising against opioid makers and distributors:

1. Starting in the mid-1990s, opioid manufacturers unleashed a misleading marketing push underplaying the risks of prescription opioids and exaggerating the drugs’ proven benefits. This, the lawsuits argue, adds up to false advertising with deadly consequences — by encouraging doctors to overprescribe the pills and getting patients to think the pills were safe and effective.

2. Opioid distributors supplied a ton of these pills, even when they should have known they were going to people who were misusing the drugs. This is backed by data that shows that in some counties and states, there were more prescribed bottles of painkillers than there were people — a sign that something was going very wrong. Federal and some state laws require distributors to keep an eye on the supply chain to ensure their products aren’t falling in the wrong hands. Letting these drugs proliferate, the lawsuits say, violates those laws.

Opioid manufacturers and distributors, of course, ferociously deny these allegations. While some suits have been settled, and some executives have even been criminally convicted for their involvement in the epidemic in the past, opioid companies vigorously reject the argument that they have carelessly fueled the current drug crisis. And so far, what the companies have paid by and large amounts to peanuts compared with the profits they’ve taken in from the drugs.

Still, more lawsuits are likely coming. According to the lawyers I’ve talked to who have worked and advised on these cases, a growing number of jurisdictions are showing interest in such legal challenges. The ultimate hope is this could all lead to some sort of massive settlement — one that would finally quash the practices that helped lead to the deadliest drug overdose crisis in American history.

The case against opioid makers: false advertising

Ohio’s central claim against opioid manufacturers is that these companies knew — or at least should have known — that their products weren’t safe or effective, yet they advertised their products as safe and effective anyway. The state’s lawsuit goes after five opioid manufacturers and their subsidiaries: Purdue Pharma, Endo, Teva Pharmaceutical Industries (and subsidiary Cephalon), Johnson & Johnson (and subsidiary Janssen Pharmaceuticals), and Allergan.

The lawsuit cites several examples of misleading marketing: An Endo-sponsored website, PainKnowledge.com, in 2009 claimed that “[p]eople who take opioids as prescribed usually do not become addicted.” Janssen approved and distributed a patient education guide in 2009 that attempted to counter the “myth” that opioids are addictive, claiming that “[m]any studies show that opioids are rarely addictive when used properly for the management of chronic pain.” Purdue sponsored a publication from the American Pain Foundation, which is heavily funded by opioid companies, claiming that the risk of addiction is less than 1 percent among children prescribed opioids — suggesting pain is undertreated and opioids are necessary.

This is only a small sampling. In total, DeWine claims opioid companies spent “millions of dollars on promotional activities and materials that falsely deny or trivialize the risks of opioids while overstating the benefits of using them for chronic pain.”

Contrary to opioid companies’ claims, there has been evidence for literally centuries that opioids are highly addictive. Some of their marketing, in fact, explicitly tried to debunk this well-known fact: They characterized the understanding that opioids are addictive and potentially deadly as “opiophobia.” They latched onto a five-sentence letter to a medical journal that, with nearly no proof, claimed addiction among opioid patients is rare. (One author of the letter later said he was “mortified” at what drugmakers had done.) And they directly communicated with doctors — through videos, pamphlets, and other marketing — to foster the idea that new opioids on the market were safe and effective.

The current epidemic is proof of what we already knew: As opioid companies saw their profits increase, so too did drug overdose deaths and treatment admissions.

As opioid painkiller sales increased, more people got addicted — and died.© Provided by Vox.com As opioid painkiller sales increased, more people got addicted — and died.
Annual Review of Public Health

It’s not just the addiction claims, though. Opioid companies also misled doctors and the public about the effectiveness of their drugs.

As an extensive Los Angeles Times investigation found, Purdue’s opioid OxyContin was marketed for its supposed ability to provide 12 hours of pain relief. But as Harriet Ryan, Lisa Girion, and Scott Glover reported, “Even before OxyContin went on the market, clinical trials showed many patients weren’t getting 12 hours of relief. Since the drug’s debut in 1996, the company has been confronted with additional evidence, including complaints from doctors, reports from its own sales reps and independent research.”

This was critical to Purdue’s competitive advantage: If it really didn’t provide 12-hour relief, then it wasn’t more effective than other similar painkillers on the market. In the face of the evidence, though, Purdue stood by its claim for years. And it told doctors that if patients weren’t seeing the promised results, then the problem was that doses were too low.

These efforts, it seems, were in the name of profit. One sales memo uncovered by the Times was literally titled “$$$$$$$$$$$$$ It’s Bonus Time in the Neighborhood!”

This is alarming for public health: As the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned, higher doses significantly increase the risk of overdose and addiction.

The Los Angeles Times investigation found, “More than half of long-term OxyContin users are on doses that public health officials consider dangerously high, according to an analysis of nationwide prescription data conducted for The Times.”

Opioid makers’ claims that their drugs are an effective treatment for chronic pain are similarly faulty. There’s simply no good scientific evidence that opioid painkillers can actually treat long-term chronic pain as patients grow tolerant of opioids’ effects — but there’s plenty of evidence that prolonged use can result in very bad complications, including a higher risk of addiction, overdose, and death. (Again, this has all been known for at least decades. Opium, morphine, and heroin have been around for a long time.)

Yet opioid makers were highly influential in perpetuating the claim that their drugs can treat chronic pain. Several public health experts explained the recent history of opioid marketing in the Annual Review of Public Health, detailing Purdue Pharma’s involvement after it put OxyContin on the market in the mid-1990s:

Between 1996 and 2002, Purdue Pharma funded more than 20,000 pain-related educational programs through direct sponsorship or financial grants and launched a multifaceted campaign to encourage long-term use of [opioid painkillers] for chronic non-cancer pain. As part of this campaign, Purdue provided financial support to the American Pain Society, the American Academy of Pain Medicine, the Federation of State Medical Boards, the Joint Commission, pain patient groups, and other organizations. In turn, these groups all advocated for more aggressive identification and treatment of pain, especially use of [opioid painkillers].

By encouraging long-term prescriptions for chronic pain, opioid companies fueled the epidemic. As a CDC study found, the risk of dependency, which can turn into addiction, dramatically increases the longer one uses opioids.

This is the kind of marketing that led Ohio to file a lawsuit. A similar challenge from Mississippi is going through the courts right now. Local jurisdictions in California, Illinois, and New York state have filed similar challenges. Kentucky previously settled with Purdue (for $24 million) and Janssen (for nearly $16 million) in cases alleging misleading marketing.

In 2007, Purdue Pharma and three of its top executives paid more than $630 million in federal fines for their misleading marketing. The three executives were also criminally convicted, each sentenced to three years of probation and 400 hours of community service.

As the opioid epidemic has continued, however, more and more lawsuits are expected to come.

I reached out to the companies named in Ohio’s lawsuit. Only Purdue gave a comment on the record: “We share the attorney general’s concerns about the opioid crisis and we are committed to working collaboratively to find solutions. OxyContin accounts for less than 2% of the opioid analgesic prescription market nationally, but we are an industry leader in the development of abuse-deterrent technology, advocating for the use of prescription drug monitoring programs and supporting access to Naloxone — all important components for combating the opioid crisis.”

The case against opioid distributors: allowing diversion

Beyond the false advertising charges, there’s a separate legal argument, dubbed the “diversion theory” by some of its proponents. This argument has so far been leveled against companies that distribute opioids, particularly in a recent lawsuit by the Cherokee Nation against big names like the McKesson Corporation, Cardinal Health, AmerisourceBergen, CVS, Walgreens, and Walmart.

Under federal and some state laws, opioid distributors have a legal obligation to stop controlled substances from going to illicit purposes and misuse. The diversion theory argues that these distributors clearly did not do that: As the opioid epidemic spiraled out of control, and as some counties and states had more prescriptions than people, it should have become perfectly clear that something was going wrong — yet, the claim goes, distributors continued to let the drugs proliferate.

Mike Canty, an attorney at the New York–based firm Labaton Sucharow who’s advising states and other jurisdictions on opioid-related legal challenges, drew a comparison between opioid distributors and credit card companies.

“[Credit card companies say], ‘Someone tried to make a very large purchase on your account in another state and we flagged it as suspicious and stopped it from going through.’ That’s what distributors should be doing,” Canty said. “For example, there’s a small town with 500 residents, and the local pharmacies order a million pills from the distributors. That should set off an alarm bell from a compliance standpoint or a quality control standpoint, where the distributors say, ‘Wait a minute, what’s going on here? We need to investigate this order. And until it passes muster, we won’t ship.’”

The Cherokee Nation has some fairly alarming numbers behind its claim, suggesting there were literally hundreds of pills on average for each opioid user in the Cherokee Nation.

This is a national problem. The CDC, for example, put out 2012 data that found there were more painkiller prescriptions than people in several states.

Some states have more painkiller prescriptions than people.© Provided by Vox.com Some states have more painkiller prescriptions than people.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

West Virginia’s case is particularly striking. It is the state hardest hit by the epidemic, suffering the highest rate of opioid overdose deaths in 2015. A previous investigation by the Charleston Gazette-Mail in West Virginia found that from 2007 to 2012, drug firms poured a total of 780 million painkillers into the state — which has a total population of about 1.8 million. Some of the numbers were even more absurd at the local level: The small town of Kermit has a population of 392, but a single pharmacy there received 9 million hydrocodone pills over two years from out-of-state drug companies.

“When you have 140 prescriptions being written for every 100 people, you know that people have failed to meet their obligations,” Serena Hallowell, who’s also with Labaton Sucharow, said. “And they’re not just ethical obligations, which I would say they have too. They’re obligations under state and federal law and their own industry guidelines as well.”

The Cherokee Nation’s lawsuit is the first to really push against all of these opioid distributors at once. But other jurisdictions have pursued legal challenges as well; West Virginia, for one, settled with Cardinal Health and AmerisourceBergen for $36 million in payouts (although the companies denied wrongdoing), and several counties in the state are pursuing new legal challenges.

Meanwhile, some distributors have already been dealt penalties for their negligence. Just this year, for example, McKesson agreed to pay a $150 million settlement to the Department of Justice for failing to report suspicious orders of pharmaceutical drugs, particularly opioids, and stopped sales of at least some distribution centers in multiple states. And that came after McKesson paid a more than $13 million fine for similar violations in 2008.

CVS, Walgreens, and Cardinal Health paid fines, sometimes multiple times, for similar violations in the past several years.

Similar challenges could, in theory, be tried against opioid manufacturers as well. The Drug Enforcement Administration, for one, previously pursued one of the nation’s largest opioid makers, Mallinckrodt Pharmaceuticals, for the proliferation of its pills in Florida since 1999. But as the Washington Post found, the investigations went nowhere. In the end, the company agreed to pay, without admitting wrongdoing, just $35 million to settle the case with the federal government — far from the billions in dollars the DEA reportedly hoped for, and a tiny fraction of the $3.4 billion in revenue the company reported in fiscal year 2016.

I contacted the opioid distributors named in the Cherokee Nation’s suit for comment. AmerisourceBergen, Cardinal Health, and CVS said they are committed to stopping the misuse of their products, and that they will work closely with federal regulators to do so. Cardinal Health went further, arguing that it “is confident that the facts and the law are on our side, and we intend to vigorously defend ourselves against the plaintiff’s mischaracterization of those facts and misunderstanding of the law.”

One goal of the lawsuits: a tobacco-style settlement agreement

Although opioid manufacturers and distributors have already paid out some fairly high penalties and damages for their actions, the reality is that the total costs for the legal challenges so far don’t amount to much for these massive opioid companies. Hundreds of millions of dollars is obviously a lot of money for most people. But for companies that make billions of dollars a year, it’s not much.

Take Purdue Pharma. In 2007, it paid a penalty more than $630 million. But thanks to OxyContin, the company has reaped $31 billion in revenue since the mid-1990s. That fine adds up to just 2 percent of what the company has made in revenue, which isn’t much of a deterrent for Purdue. Indeed, Ohio’s lawsuit alleges that Purdue continued its misleading marketing after 2007 — citing, as one example, a 2011 pamphlet in which Purdue argued that signs of addiction are actually a form of “pseudoaddiction” that suggests someone needs more, not fewer, opioid painkillers to treat pain.

The crisis also likely demands far higher damages than a few hundred million dollars. A 2016 study, for instance, estimated the total economic burden of prescription opioid overdose, misuse, and addiction at $78.5 billion a year, about a third of which is due to higher health care and drug treatment costs. Many jurisdictions can’t afford to pay for these new expenses — and may need a big lawsuit settlement or legal damages to pay.

Richard Fields, an attorney with the Cherokee Nation case, put the cost for his clients in the hundreds of millions of dollars. “That’s an extraordinary sum for a sovereign nation of 350,000 people,” he said. “The suit is [in part] an effort to recover for what we think is a very direct harm caused by these companies.”

“But,” he added, “the hope is too that if enough attorneys general around the country bring these suits, they can do what the [federal government] hasn’t been able to do on its own.”

In the long term, one hope of the different lawsuits is that they’ll eventually snowball, leading to an outcome similar to what happened with tobacco companies in the ’90s.

A cigarette.© Provided by Vox.com A cigarette.

In 1998, big tobacco companies agreed to the Master Settlement Agreement with 46 states. This massive agreement forced tobacco companies to pay tens of billions in upfront and then annual payments, and it put major restrictions on the sale and marketing of tobacco products.

The parallels between the tobacco and opioid companies are clear: Both knew they were selling a dangerous product, yet they misled the public about it — leading people to get addicted and die. (And now that opioid companies are facing pressure at home, they are borrowing a page from big tobacco companies and taking their product internationally with the exact same kind of messaging, with claims that opioids are good for chronic pain and not very addictive.)

But there are some big differences that could make it much harder to get a tobacco-style settlement for opioids. The big one is that, unlike cigarettes at the time of the Master Settlement Agreement, opioids are already regulated by the Food and Drug Administration. This could effectively let opioid manufacturers and distributors punt responsibility to the FDA, since it, after all, approved these drugs for medical use. Jodi Avergun, a former chief of staff at the DEA and now a defense lawyer, told Reuters that this is a “fundamental weakness” of the current lawsuits.

There are other issues, like the involvement of the rest of the health care system in the opioid crisis, from medical boards to doctors to patients themselves. That all of this involved so many different actors could insulate opioid companies from carrying too much of the legal consequences. That’s especially true since some of these other actors have copped to serious negligence — the West Virginia Board of Pharmacy, for one, admitted that it didn’t enforce a law for reporting suspicious orders of narcotics for years.

“With tobacco, it really is an interaction between an industry and the consumer,” Keith Humphreys, a drug policy expert at Stanford University, told me. “In this case, there was supposed to be this intervening body that also failed. That doesn’t mean the pharmaceutical companies should get off, but … plenty of other people enabled it.”

Still, this is something that many levels of government are taking seriously. While they couldn’t offer details, the lawyers involved in some of these cases said they have been approached by several states. Fields in particular said to expect dozens more lawsuits just this year.

“Both Democrat and Republican attorneys general have expressed an interest in this,” Canty said. “They are serious about the epidemic. They are educated on the epidemic. They understand the magnitude of the problem and want be proactive in addressing it.”

I have been saying for WEEKS that the bureaucrats were viewing the end of the annual tobacco settlement payments money and that they had become FISCALLY ADDICTED to that money and had to start looking for another industry to go after to SUE and hopefully find a NEW SOURCE of revenue to feed that ADDICTION.

To a certain extent, bureaucrats cannot control their GREED… just think about it… there is a “sin tax” on Alcohol and Tobacco taxes, plus there is a sales tax on these products when they are sold.  Everyone in the retail/legal manufacturing/distribution of these products end up paying taxes on the profits they made on these products. Along with the property tax, employment taxes etc..etc.. that the bureaucracy extracts out of each business and individuals.

The bureaucrats make a product legal and tax the crap out of all those involved with the product and now they want to extract more monies out of the very entities involved in a particular industry… they did it with Tobacco … now they seem to be going after opiate manufacturers. Since hundred of millions of people have a medical necessity for many/most/all of these products… guess who is going to end up paying for any settlement out of this “GREED LAWSUIT ” ?

6 Responses

  1. maryw id so so so damn right-why dont anyone see?Where can CPP go to start our lawsuits against the D[eath]E[nforcement]A[assholes]?

  2. R&D is of crucial major importance! As I am surviving stage 3 Cancer, Genetic Auto-Immune; PSA & Osteo Arthropathy, Migranes, Osteo Myelitis w/Nerve damage, Cubital Ulna Intrapment/ damage, Patella Femoral Syndrome & Tracking Disorder, just to start. A lifetime of pain, suffering.
    Wow, non suffering individuals…wake up, if not for any other reason but yourselves, because you could be next. Suing Pharma…. say bye bye to much of the R&D…. step right up, come on in….if you’d like to take the grand tour…..or perhaps you feel lucky, today…. Trust me when I say, you are not impervious and I wouldn’t want anyone to go thru what we CPP are trying to endure.

  3. There are a few items that will be difficult for the states/counties/cities to overcome with these suits:

    1) These were all approved by the FDA and come with dosing instructions. If taken as directed, these drugs do not cause the multitude of deaths we have experienced. Sadly the person who did not take the drugs as prescribed, also hold some blame. This is VERY different from the tobacco companies where you can purchase and use as many as you want.

    2) There are doctors between the drug companies and the patients so the pharmaceutical companies did not sell directly to patients like the tobacco companies did.

    3) Opioid prescriptions have been falling since 2012. This year will be the 5th year in a row where prescriptions of opioids are less than they were the previous year. In fact, the DEA mandated a 25% reduction of opioids this year. However, deaths continue to mount so restricting the supply had essentially pushed a large group of people to illegal markets. Each year we keep on hearing about more restrictions and how it will help – we are 5 years into restrictions and how have they helped reduce deaths?

    I believe that the states/counties/cities have a steep mountain to climb and this time it will be much more difficult and expensive than it was against the tobacco companies who had cartoons selling their product.

  4. I didn’t write the FDA about Heavy Metals in ADHD meds because they probably approved it. Because the Gov made a back-door deal giving pharmacists immunity from lawsuits resulting in injury or death for Certain medications, “ADHD”, and “OPIATE” [pharmacists don’t know what’s in it], I’m faxing my Senator ASAP. Going up the chain of command, whose the boss of the CDC, FDA, DEA,, NIH…..???? It was the Former Administrator Of The Hell TH Care Reform who allowed all of this to take place. Remember, he called upon The Cosmetic Industry, Big Pharma,….Is anyone aware that in our HIPPA material, a Prospective employer can summon both the psychiatric And physical Health records on all of us ! That makes it impossible to prove discrimination; not to mention that many psychiatric diagnoses were given just to have certain medication covered. Anyone who has a psychiatric diagnoses need check-it, as “someone” has added to mine w/o knowledge, consent, or any relationship at all. I accidentally received this while trying to obtain a blank form.

    • How many doctors to justifying,,dropping,,” the chronic physical pain person wrote ,”addict,” on their records ,or some nurse as in my case outright lied on mine to get me deemed a addict or no medical purpose,,etc,,,All those discharge from their doctors,,,check your records,,as mentioned in thee above article Klondyn plans on using your forced ,,”drop,” or forced institutionalization in a rehab,,KLONDYN PLANS ON USEING YOUR FALSIFIED RECORDS AS COUNTING YOU AS A ADDICT,,THUS,,CHANGEING THE NUMBER OF HOW MANY GET ADDICTED TO THE MEDICINE OF OPIATES,,,,maryw,

  5. This is just a way to SHIFT THE BLAME OFF OF THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT FOR WILLFULL GENOCIDE AND TORTURE,,,,the fact is,,,before DR.GOVERNMENT INVOLVEMENT,,,and actual doctors were allowed to prescribe what a human being needed,,,suicides dropped by 5,000 a year,,After Dr,,Government,,dea,,started arresting lawful doctors and Dr.Government started,,practicing medicine w/out a liscence,,,is when the death rate among the medically ill started raising,,KEEP PUTTING THE TRUTHFUL TRUTH OUT IN THE MEDIA;S,,,,IT IS THE GOVERNMENT WILLFULLY KILLING US,,,NOT PURDUE,,,,OR CARDINAL,, or any other pharmaceutical company,,,ever,,,,no-one shoved that medicine down anyones throat,,,we take/took our medicine because it worked to lessen our physical pain,,,and again,,their combining thier numbers w/12 year old and heroin addicts,,,
    THEY WANT OUR MEDICINE GONE,, ie,,long term MEDICINE takers are now addicts??????THIS WAS THEIR GOAL ALL ALONG,,, klondyn is preaching this SHIT,, to Washington,,We are upstanding,respectful,honest human being NOT ADDICTS,, we know this IS a bold face lie,,he is purposely defaming our good name,,to make sure they don’t listen to us,,our suffering ,our forced physical pain,soo lets charge him for falsifying documents,liable etc???WE HAVE BEEN CENSORRED OUT OF EVERY MEETING IN Washington,,,why??because ,”they do not want our side even documented on legal paper!!!so they can claim,”i didn’t know bullshit,,,thus not willfull harm,,,
    Like I mentioned in another post,,in 2010,,”they,”changed the definition of a controlled substance for this very purpose,,They use to actually name the drugs/medicine that were lawful controlled substances,,,NOW,,, since the definition change,,it is ,”chemically similier,”’,,that is defined as a controlled substance,There was a fight over this,,but the dea push it and won,,,Then after doing some digging recently,,on the laws of torture,,back at the same time peroid,,The United States refused to honor the universal definition of torture with a words called,,”’lawful sanctioned,”’,they truly believe,and it IS working,,,that if theY make these new laws/regulation against our medicine,,,,it will be conscider’d a lawful sanction,,,Furthermore the United States argued w/the U.N,,,that if it could get other countries to allow the wording lawful sanction,,that ,’their” definition should stand,,ie,,,,why the U.S.. is getting Canada, England to PLAY BALL!!!!!
    IF WE DON’T COME TOGETHER,,PATIENTS,DOCTORS,OUR DEAD,,,to stop this prohibition,,WE TOOO WILL BE DEAD,,,AND THEN WHO WILL THERE BE TO ARGUE,,,,”THAT DENIAL OF EFFECTIVE TIMELY MEDICAL CARE IS TORTURE,,,AND DEATH TO A GROUP OF PEOPLE,,BASED UPON THEIR MEDICAL DISABILITY IS INDEED GENOCIDE,,,IF WE DON’T GET OUR SHIT TOGETHER,,THE LAW OF THE WORLD WILL BE,,,”THEIR OUR LAWFUL SANCTIONS TO TORTUREING US,,,THEIR GETTING AWAY W/IT SOO FAR!!THEY ARE WILLFULY CENSORING US IN EVERY MEETING IN WASHINGT FOR THEY DO=NOT WANT OUR TRUTH ON THE LEGAL BOOKS,,,,,WE NEED TO FIGHT BACK,,,,,NOW,,YESTERDAY,,FOR,,,” WHEN ,ANY FORM OF GOVERNMENT,ENVINCES BY DESIGN,TO REDUCE ITS CITIZENS TO ABSOLUTE DESPOTISM,,IT OUR DUTY,,OUR RIGHT,TO ALTER OR ABLOISH IT,”!!!!maryw
    PSS,The U.S.International Law and Struggle Against Terrorism,,ie,,Thomas,McDonnel,,,]type in the word,severe pain organ failure,…if u interested in checken this ,”lawful sanction b,s

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