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Optum Rx Invokes Open Meetings Law To Fight Kentucky Counties on Opioid Suits
Payback: Tracking Opioid Cash

Optum Rx Invokes Open Meetings Law To Fight Kentucky Counties on Opioid Suits

UnitedHealth Group鈥檚 pharmacy benefit manager, Optum Rx, has filed lawsuits in five counties to stop them from including the company in national opioid litigation. (Mike Bradley/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

UnitedHealth Group鈥檚 multibillion-dollar pharmacy benefit manager, Optum Rx, is suing five Kentucky counties in an attempt to force them out of national opioid litigation against the company.

Pharmacy benefit managers, often called PBMs, that negotiate prescription drug prices between drug companies, insurance plans, and pharmacies. Some lawyers and advocates say PBMs helped fuel the overdose crisis by of opioid prescriptions.

As governments begin exploring potential lawsuits against PBMs 鈥 a step that could represent the next wave in opioid-related litigation 鈥 Optum Rx is attempting to shut down those efforts, in some cases before they even fully take shape.

In June, Optum Rx sued Anderson, Boyd, Christian, Nicholas, and Oldham counties in Kentucky for allegedly making decisions about participating in the new wave of national opioid lawsuits behind closed doors, violating Kentucky鈥檚 open meetings law. Optum Rx is asking courts to effectively force those counties to make their decisions again, this time in open meetings, potentially with the hope that some won鈥檛 bother because of the administrative burden. The result could be fewer claims against the company and possibly less money for it to pay in a future settlement.

But legal experts call Optum鈥檚 case 鈥渉ypertechnical鈥 and 鈥渇rivolous,鈥 and addiction recovery advocates say it could set a dangerous precedent for companies to evade accountability for their role in fueling the overdose crisis.

, an attorney, a national expert on opioid litigation, and founder of , said Optum鈥檚 suit reminded her of an adage among lawyers: 鈥淚f the facts are on your side, pound the facts. If the law is on your side, pound the law. If neither is on your side, pound the table.鈥

鈥淩ight now, what we鈥檙e seeing is it pounding the table,鈥 Minhee said of Optum Rx. The company is 鈥渄esperately鈥 trying 鈥渢o find some kind of foothold鈥 to get cases against it thrown out.

Minhee said these suits fit a pattern of Optum Rx using thin arguments to try to delay or evade opioid litigation nationwide.

A photo of a young woman indoors.
Attorney and opioid litigation expert Christine Minhee says Optum鈥檚 suit reminds her of an adage among lawyers: 鈥淚f the facts are on your side, pound the facts. If the law is on your side, pound the law. If neither is on your side, pound the table.鈥(Christine Minhee)

Last year, Optum Rx, along with another PBM, to throw out an opioid lawsuit filed by Los Angeles County, claiming during a December hearing that the county hadn鈥檛 shown harm. The judge and ultimately rejected the companies鈥 request.

In April, the same companies a federal judge overseeing national opioid litigation, claiming he was biased. was based partly on a Florida lawyer鈥檚 having said the judge was 鈥減laintiff-oriented.鈥 Their attempt failed.

Now, Optum Rx is working to keep five Kentucky counties out of that same sweeping opioid litigation.

That national legal undertaking began more than seven years ago, as jurisdictions saw overdose deaths climb. Many people who had become addicted to prescription painkillers were cut off by their doctors, and some transitioned to using deadlier heroin or fentanyl. Health care and public safety costs skyrocketed. Thousands of cities, counties, and states began suing health care companies for allegedly creating a public nuisance by aggressively marketing prescription painkillers and negligently distributing them.

Those cases were lassoed together , which has resulted in . The first few waves of settlements involved opioid manufacturers, distributors, and retail pharmacies, with companies such as Johnson & Johnson, CVS, and Walgreens agreeing to pay state and local governments billions of dollars. The money is meant to be used for addiction treatment and prevention services 鈥 though its rollout has been controversial.

To add a new round of companies as defendants, jurisdictions must undertake a multistep process, said , a Florida-based attorney who represents many local governments in the massive national litigation. The five Kentucky counties in question were in the early stages of that process, only having asked the judge to amend their complaint, he said. They hadn鈥檛 added Optum Rx yet.

If Optum Rx鈥檚 suits are successful, those counties would have the option of redoing the initial steps of the process in a public meeting, then continuing to add Optum Rx as a defendant, Mougey explained. The company may hope that some counties won鈥檛 undertake the extra administrative effort.

Optum Rx鈥檚 鈥済oal is clearly just to wear down and tire out these small counties,鈥 Mougey said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e trying to have a chilling effect on the litigation.鈥

It鈥檚 not clear why Optum Rx targeted those five counties out of the many localities undertaking the process to add the company as a defendant. The Kentucky counties range from having (Nicholas) to (Christian). One is among (Oldham), while others are poorer. Boyd County, , is one of the hardest hit, with a recent overdose rate .

Optum Rx, in its , which was similar to claims against the other counties, said local authorities had taken official legal action by asking the judge to make a change in its case. The suit said such action must be done in a public meeting and that the county did not hold one.

Optum spokesperson Isaac Sorensen told 黑料吃瓜网 News that the company’s argument is not about 鈥渁 technicality.鈥

It is 鈥渁n important legal requirement designed to ensure accountability and transparency before a county takes legal action,鈥 said the statement Sorensen provided. 鈥淲e have found many counties ignored this requirement, alongside their duty to preserve relevant evidence, and Optum Rx will defend against these improper legal actions.鈥

The five Kentucky counties disagree with these assertions, according to court records. As of late July, all five had filed motions to dismiss Optum Rx鈥檚 claim.

Boyd County, like the others, argued in that asking a judge to amend its complaint was a routine, procedural step that did not require a public meeting. Optum Rx jumped the gun, the county argued, filing a case before any final action had been taken.

鈥淣o amended complaint has been filed. No new defendant, OptumRx included, has been added. No new lawsuit has been initiated,鈥 Boyd County鈥檚 response said.

The county also pointed out that it held an open meeting in 2017 that kicked off its involvement in the national litigation and authorized future amendments to that litigation.

Hearings on the counties鈥 motions to dismiss Optum Rx鈥檚 suits are set for late August and early September, according to court records.

These cases are shaping up to be a Goliath-versus-David legal action. Although Oldham County is the wealthiest of the Kentucky counties that Optum Rx sued, is less than 0.1% of Optum Rx鈥檚 annual revenue, which the company reported as in 2024.

Oldham County Attorney told 黑料吃瓜网 News he鈥檇 seen the impact of the opioid epidemic as a prosecutor working on a growing number of drug-related cases over the years. Now, as settlement money is arriving from other companies, it has funded increased addiction treatment in local jails. More settlement money from additional companies could expand such services, Baxter said.

If Optum Rx succeeds in kicking Kentucky counties out of the national litigation, it would set 鈥渁 really horrific precedent鈥 for other PBMs and health care companies to do something similar, said , CEO of the statewide nonprofit People Advocating Recovery.

Hyde said she鈥檚 been in recovery for more than a decade from an addiction that began with prescription painkillers for a broken leg. She wants to see PBMs and other companies held accountable and made to change their processes to prevent future crises.

A photo of a woman speaking at a podium. A sign that reads "Team Kentucky" is behind her, as are the American and Kentucky flags.
Tara Hyde, CEO of the Kentucky-based nonprofit People Advocating Recovery, says she has been in recovery for more than a decade from an addiction that began with prescription painkillers. Today she helps others enter recovery and works to reduce stigma around addiction. She wants to see pharmacy benefit managers and other companies held accountable for their role in the overdose crisis.(Sam Foree)

Despite a recent , Hyde said people in her state, their families, and the economy are still hurting.

鈥淩ecovery doesn鈥檛 just happen overnight,鈥 she said. 鈥淲ithout these dollars that have been a direct result of people being misled, mistreated, and taken advantage of, we will still be detrimentally impacted.鈥