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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Walmart, CVS, Walgreens ordered to pay $650 million over opioid sales

The Walgreens store is shown at State and Randolph Streets in Chicago.   (Tribune News Service )
Jay Feeley Bloomberg

Walmart Inc., CVS Health Corp. and Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. were ordered to pay $650 million over their failure to properly monitor opioid prescriptions in two counties in Ohio.

A federal judge in Cleveland ruled Wednesday that the companies had to pay “abatement” fees to help local officials deal with the fallout from the public health crisis created by improper sales of millions of opioid-based painkillers.

The ruling comes after a jury found in November that the three had helped create that crisis – the drug industry’s latest loss in the expanding litigation over the painkillers.

The jury backed claims by northeast Ohio’s Trumbull and Lake counties that the pharmacy chains had failed to create legally mandated monitoring systems to detect illegitimate opioid prescriptions.

The counties sought reimbursement for the costs of dealing with addictions and fatal overdoses.

They had wanted the companies to pay a combined $2.4 billion to replenish depleted budgets for drug treatment, social services and police, with $1.3 billion for Trumbull and $1.1 billion for Lake, according to people familiar with their demands