Reviews for American cartel : inside the battle to bring down the opioid industry

Publishers Weekly
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In this brilliant account, Pulitzer Prize–winning Washington Post reporters Higham and Horwitz (Finding Chandra: A True Washington Murder Mystery) convey how America’s largest drug distribution companies facilitated the opioid epidemic. To frame their complex narrative, the authors focus on two individuals: Joseph Rannazzisi, who led the DEA unit responsible for policing the pharmaceutical industry, and Paul T. Farrell Jr., a West Virginia small-town lawyer. The efforts of Rannazzisi, who was outraged that companies required to question suspicious orders of opioids didn’t, and his team to pursue criminal inquiries were often stymied by higher-ups at the Department of Justice, who settled cases with fines that the defendants could well afford. The industry’s lobbying culminated in legislation that weakened the DEA’s enforcement abilities easily passing Congress without dissent. Farrell, aware of the toll opioids took on his impoverished community and the corporations’ culpability, spearheaded lawsuits across the country that sought a measure of justice. Higham and Horwitz paint a highly disturbing picture that makes clear that companies ostensibly in the business of supplying needed pain medications acted instead like a cartel that wrought more pain and death than the syndicates smuggling cocaine and heroin into the country. This is a must-read for voters and political leaders alike. Agent: Gail Ross, Ross Yoon Agency. (May)
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From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.
Pulitzer Prize–winning journalists Higham and Horwitz take readers to the front lines of the battle to hold drug companies, distribution centers, and pharmacies accountable for their role in the opioid epidemic. In the early 2000s, opioid prescriptions skyrocketed, and pill mills sprouted up like weeds across the country. The inundation of the powerful drugs that were peddled led to staggering addiction rates and an onslaught of overdose deaths. A small group of DEA agents and lawyers stepped up to confront those at the helm of the tragedy; some would even sacrifice their careers for the cause. The unprecedented wave of litigation from their efforts uncovered the shocking callousness of the high-powered drug-industry executives who valued profits over human lives. This is a fast-paced and searing account of the astonishing corporate greed behind the opioid epidemic and the heroic efforts of those who fought against it. Expertly researched and a worthy addition to the growing canon of opioid literature, this title will resonate with fans of Eric Eyre’s Death in Mud Lick (2020).