Teva settles opioid suits in Israel

Teva's R&D labs in Netanya  credit: Teva PR
Teva's R&D labs in Netanya credit: Teva PR

Under the settlement, Teva's insurance company, which as far as is known is not Israeli, will pay the pharmaceutical company $40 million to fully close all potential claims.

The opioid affair in which Israeli drugmaker Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. (NYSE: TEVA; TASE: TEVA) has been embroiled has now been settled in Israel. The economic court in Tel Aviv has approved suits filed against Teva Israel on the matter and among other rulings has decided that insurance companies will pay Teva $40 million - the highest amount ever achieved in a derivative action in Israel.

This follows settlements in the US last year with all 50 states in the US in which Teva will pay $4.3 billion to end the opioid lawsuits against it without admitting any wrongdoing.

At the heart of the matter were allegations that pharmaceutical companies in the US, headed by Purdue pharma, controlled by the Sackler family, had aggressively marketed narcotic painkilling drugs, while concealing that they contained addictive and dangerous ingredients. An estimated hundreds of thousands of victims died of drug overdoses in the affair, which was declared a national emergency in the US.

Two procedures since 2019

Israel was also affected by the drug scandal. In 2019 two cases were opened in the Tel Aviv economic court ahead of a derivatives suit claiming that senior executives at Teva worked, "To massively promote opioid use, while deviating from the prescribed medical indication for these drugs," and that the company's directors and CEO failed to supervise what was happening in the company. The lawsuits also claimed that Teva's directors did not act to sue senior employees of the company and managers of its subsidiaries for their alleged involvement in the affair.

The lawsuits were postponed until completion of the proceedings abroad. With the consolidation of the settlement in the US, the plaintiffs in Israel conducted a mediation process with Teva, which took place before retired Supreme Court judge, Zvi Zylbertal. The settlement reached has been approved by the Teva board of directors, and was given the force of a court decision by Judge Sigal Yakobi.

Under the settlement, Teva's insurance company, which as far as is known is not Israeli, will pay the pharmaceutical company $40 million to fully close all potential claims and claims that Teva might have against its officers, executives and employees, and the companies associated with it regarding their responsibility, for the alleged damages caused to the company in the opioid affair.

The plaintiffs that filed the derivative lawsuits - shareholders in Teva, Judith de Lange, Avraham Barak and the Litecom company, will be compensated to the amount of $532,000, and the lawyers who represented them will receive fees totaling $4,258,000. The Israel Securities Authority and the Ministry of Justice, whose opinion is required for approving settlements in derivative and representative actions, told the court that they do not oppose the settlement.

Published by Globes, Israel business news - en.globes.co.il - on September 26, 2024.

© Copyright of Globes Publisher Itonut (1983) Ltd., 2024.

Teva's R&D labs in Netanya  credit: Teva PR
Teva's R&D labs in Netanya credit: Teva PR
Inflation  credit: Tali Bogdanovsky March CPI higher than expected, housing prices rise

The March reading brings annual inflation in Israel down to 3.3% from 3.4% at the end of February.

Ben Gurion airport credit: Tali Bogdanovsky Abundance of affordable last minute Passover flight deals

The return of foreign airlines to Israel has brought down fares dramatically even for last minute vacations.

Karish rig  credit: Eyal Izhar Kesem Energy signs gas deals worth $2.8b

The power plant, scheduled to begin operating in 2029, will buy gas worth $2 billion from Energean and a further $700-800 million from the Tamar partners.

Kosher for Passover Coca Cola bottles credit: social media Why are yellow cap Coca Cola bottles different from all others?

Nostalgic Coca Cola aficionados claim that the kosher for Passover version, made from sugar cane instead of high fructose corn syrup, is the genuine taste of the soft drink.

Avigdor Willenz credit: Intel Exclusive: Avigdor Willenz's Element Labs raises $50m

The Israeli startup is developing AI processors for inference, the stage in which AI models are activated after they have already been trained.

Ilya Sutskever credit: Cadya Levy SSI hiring dozens in Israel

AI company Safe Superintelligence is hiring many dozens of people in Tel Aviv, "Globes" has learned.

Johny Srouji credit: Amos Ben Gershom GPO Apple SVP leads senior delegation of execs to Israel

Jony Srouji: I am always filled with renewed energy and optimism about our shared achievements when I visit our R&D centers here.

Israeli apartments Credit: Shutterstock Apartments sold and rented

A selection of recent real estate deals in Israel in Tel Aviv, Ramat Gan, Petah Tikva, Givat Shmuel, Tiberias and Dimona.

Infinity Tower Tel Aviv credit: Courtesy Hagag Group French investors buy 2 Tel Aviv apartments for NIS 27.5m

The two apartments are in Hagag Group's Infinity Tower in the Summeil district.

El Al plane credit: Shutterstock El Al receives state approval to distribute dividend

The Israeli airline has now announced that it will be able to distribute up to 30% of net profit in 2025 and up to 40% in 2026-2028.

groundcover founders credit: Yossi Yarom Israeli observability co groundcover raises $35m

groundcover has developed a “Bring Your Own Cloud” (BYOC) observability solution, redefining the architecture of a modern observability platform.

Tel Aviv Stock Exchange credit: Shutterstock MagioreStock Foreign investment in TASE hits five-year high

Foreign investors have been flocking to the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange in recent weeks, the TASE research department tells "Globes."

Elbit Systems tank turret systems credit: Elbit Systems Elbit Systems wins $100m tank turret systems deal

The Israel defense electronics company will supply its advanced UT30 MK2 unmanned turret systems to General Dynamics European Land Systems (GDELS) to be supplied to a NATO European country.

Tomer Weingarten Photo: PR Trump targets SentinelOne exec in act of revenge

The US administration has suspended the security clearance of the company's chef intelligence and public policy officer Chris Krebs and everyone associated with him.

Tel Aviv Stock Exchange share prices rising credit: Tali Bogdanovsky TASE opens sharply higher after Trump U-turn on tariffs

The pause is being interpreted as a climb down after US President Donald Trump admitted he had made the move to calm the markets.

Ashot Ashkelon credit: Ministry of Defense Up 250%, Ashot Ashkelon wins another Defense Ministry order

The Israeli defense company's share price has risen 250% in the past three years since FIMI Opportunity Funds acquired control.

Twitter Facebook Linkedin RSS Newsletters גלובס Israel Business Conference 2018