DAN AARON POLSTER, District Judge.
Before the Court is Mallinckrodt's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (
Against Mallinckrodt, Plaintiffs assert claims based on two factual theories: (1) fraudulent marketing; and (2) the failure to maintain effective controls against diversion. As to the fraudulent marketing claims, Mallinckrodt seeks partial summary judgment on the claims involving the promotion of its generic opioid products.
The Court hereby incorporates the legal standards set forth in the Court's Opinion and Order regarding Plaintiffs' Summary Judgment Motions Addressing the Controlled Substances Act, see Doc. #: 2483.
Mallinckrodt asserts that, as to its sales of generic opioid products, Plaintiffs have no evidence to support their fraudulent marketing claims. Specifically, Mallinckrodt asserts it does not promote its generic drugs to physicians, but, instead, merely sells these generic medications in competition with other generic manufacturers in the marketplace, based primarily on price, quality, and service. See Mlkt. Mem. at 3-4 (Doc. #: 1907-2). While Mallinckrodt admits it engaged in promotional activities with respect to its "very few branded opioid products," it asserts that more than 99.7 percent of its opioid sales were generic medications that it did not promote to physicians. Id. at 3. Mallinckrodt asserts that, as to these generic opioid sales, Plaintiffs cannot prevail on their fraudulent marketing claims, because Plaintiffs cannot show Mallinckrodt promoted these products to physicians or, even if it did, that Mallinckrodt did so in a manner that was false or misleading. See id. at 1, 4.
Plaintiffs respond with evidence that indicates Mallinckrodt sponsored and distributed misleading "unbranded" promotional materials to encourage the overall prescribing of opioids. See Pls. Opp. at 5-10 (Doc. #: 2293). For instance, Plaintiffs point to materials promoted by Mallinckrodt's C.A.R.E.S. Alliance to provide "educational programs and resources to support responsible prescribing and safe use of opioid analgesics." Pls. Ex. 28 at 3 (Doc. #: 2295-4) (C.A.R.E.S. Alliance catalog).
Pls. Opp. at 9 (Doc. #: 2293).
By contrast, Plaintiffs' expert has opined that the rates of opioid misuse following medical use range from 21 to 29 percent, with opioid addiction risk ranging from eight to 12 percent, with even higher rates for individuals who are on high doses of opioids for long periods of time. See Keyes Rpt. at 11-16 (Doc. #: 1868-4) (expert report of epidemiologist, Katherine Keyes).
Mallinckrodt seeks summary judgment on Plaintiffs' claims that it failed to maintain effective controls after 2012.
Mallinckrodt contends Plaintiffs cannot show that, after 2012, it shipped a single suspicious order to any customer in the Track One Counties. See Mlkt. Mem. at 5-6 (Doc. #: 1907-2). In denying Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment on Causation (Doc. #: 2561), the Court rejected this same argument. More specifically, the Court found that, to prevail on these claims, Plaintiffs need not identify specific orders that Defendants should not have shipped. See id. at 8. Rather, in light of the massive supply of prescription opioids into the Track One Counties, combined with evidence of an alleged virtually complete failure by Defendants to maintain effective controls against diversion, a factfinder could reasonably infer such failures were a substantial factor in producing the alleged harm suffered by Plaintiffs. See id. The same analysis applies here. Thus, to overcome summary judgment, Plaintiffs need only show evidence sufficient to create a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Mallinckrodt failed to maintain effective controls against diversion. See id.
Mallinckrodt asserts Plaintiffs cannot show that, after 2012, it failed to maintain effective controls against diversion. See Mlkt. Mem. at 6-8 (Doc. #: 1907-2). Specifically, Mallinckrodt asserts that, since 2010, it has employed a robust anti-diversion program, and Plaintiffs have no expert opinion that, after 2012, its program was deficient. See id.
In response, Plaintiffs point to their data mining expert, Lacey Keller, who found the Manufacturer Defendants had both the data and standard data-analytic tools to allow them to determine suspicious prescribing and purchasing patterns that they did not report.
In addition, Plaintiffs point to Mallinckrodt's internal emails which suggest that, after 2012, Mallinckrodt failed to conduct due diligence before releasing suspicious orders. See, e.g., Pls. Ex. 83 (Doc. #: 2300-34) (2013 email, indicating the release of an order that brought the customer's December monthly volume alone to 29 percent of its total year-to-date orders); Pls. Ex. 86 (Doc. #: 2301-1) (2014 emails, indicating the release of an order that exceeded the total quantity for any customer within that segment for the past 18 months, without inquiry as to whether the increased demand was for one customer or spread across multiple customers); Pls. Ex. 90 (Doc. #: 2301-5) (2016 emails, indicating the release of multiple orders simply based on the distributor's explanation that there was a "spike [in demand] in the last couple of weeks"); Pls. Ex. 91 (Doc. #: 2301-6) (2016 emails, indicating the release of an order before obtaining the required "documentation" for the suspicious order monitoring files).
Based on this evidence, a jury could reasonably conclude that, after 2012, Mallinckrodt failed to maintain effective controls against diversion, and these failures were a substantial factor in producing the alleged harm suffered by Plaintiffs. See Order at 8 (Doc. #: 2561). Accordingly, Mallinckrodt is not entitled to summary judgment on this ground.
For the reasons stated above, the Court