Wednesday, December 1, 2021

After Watching Rosario Dawson And Michael Keaton In An Excellent Hulu Series -- I've Found A Renewed Interest In the Sackler Family's Probable Misuse Of The Bankruptcy Statute. So Too Has A USDC Judge In Manhattan.


We may decide to follow this subsequent briefing closely now -- on these challenges to the Sacklers' final, non-personal bankruptcy-inducing settlement of all their liability for the US opioid crisis, while simultaneously avoiding any reduction in their life-styles -- due to off-shoring over $10 billion, from 2008 to at least 2018. The family got all the protection of a "fresh-start" bankruptcy, but without the surrender of the bulk of their assets -- as would any normal human debtor in bankruptcy (i.e., you and me -- the "little people"). No, us little people, in most states (except Texas) would have only $6,000 to our name after a "fresh start".

And so, as if on cue, an able USDC Judge in Manhattan is suddenly ready to look at whether this amounted to an abuse -- by the Sacklers, personally -- of the company called Purdue, and its trip through the bankruptcy courts. Here's that order -- from this very morning:

. . .SCHEDULE FOR FURTHER BRIEFING:

At the close of argument yesterday I invited the parties to weigh in in writing on a question I raised at the end of the day. Because it had been a long day, and because we had discussed so much, the question was inelegantly phrased.

The issue is this: In Metromedia, the Second Circuit cautioned against the approval of a release of third-party claims against a non-debtor because the granting of such releases is subject to abuse. And in Manville III, the Circuit indicated that the possibility of abuse was heightened in situations where the non-debtors condition their financial contribution to the debtor's estate on such releases. In re Johns-Manville Corp., 517 F.3d 52, 66 (2d Cir. 2008). From 1995-2007, Purdue only "upstreamed" enough money to the Sacklers to allow them to pay taxes and retain a relatively modest dividend for themselves. According to information provided by the Debtor, the Sacklers used 90% of Purdue's upstreamed earnings were used to pay taxes; just 10% of those distributions were retained by the family. Purdue kept the rest of its earnings in treasury.

From 2008-2018, this changed. During that period only 44% of the money that Purdue upstreamed to the Sacklers was needed to pay taxes on Purdue's earnings. 56% of those distributions were retained by the family. This change -- regardless of what occasioned it -- resulted in Purdue's having far less in its treasury when it declared bankruptcy than would have been the case had the family adhered to the prior distribution pattern.

I am struggling with whether this is something that a court can/should take into account in deciding whether the releases on which the Sacklers conditioned their financial contribution to the Debtors' estate are "abusive" in the Metromedia/Manville III sense -- especially in light of evidence in the record that the Sacklers were concerned about litigation risk during those later years and were being advised to adopt an "aggressive" plan of cash distribution during that period. I can't find any guidance in prior cases because, as far as I can tell, nothing remotely similar happened in any prior case. And as I told you yesterday, I don't think this has anything to do with whether the distributions to the Sacklers qualify as fraudulent conveyances.

I would very much appreciate your weighing in on this issue, both on its merits and on what it might mean in terms of the need for a remand to Judge Drain. As to the latter question, would your answer be different if there were a Stern v. Marshall problem (which is different from whether there is a subject matter jurisdiction problem -- I think the Debtor has pretty much resolved that issue to my satisfaction)? Finally, while I doubt that there is much of anything that anyone has to say on the statutory authorization issue that has not already been said, if, after yesterday's argument, you have thought of some new argument, feel free to bring it to my attention. I don't need (or want) additional briefing on any other issue. I would appreciate having your thoughts by next Monday morning at 9 AM at the latest. I would like to promise you an opinion next week, but I simply cannot, although I will try.

Please bring me up to date on the various deadlines that are presently in force. (Signed by Judge Colleen McMahon on 12/1/2021). . . .


Well -- this could be a real barn burner. [And, I am going to withhold any "shoot from the hip" analysis of today's Supremes' arguments. Let's wait to see what a five-four majority opinion actually looks like.]

Onward -- but sort of discouraging, to be sure. . . .

नमस्ते

4 comments:

condor said...

Again one week later, at 7:24 am… after lots of pings, all over the site in wee hours? Grin…

condor said...

Hey… now four pings at 12:04 am? Just say “hi!” No harm there… smile.

condor said...

Twice again, at 7:32 am… smiling!

condor said...

Nice solid article on Sackler at the Supremes:

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/03/health/sacklers-supreme-court.html

I see you just now — twice, smiling….