Tumgik
#judge drain
Text
The Sacklers woulda gotten away with it if it wasn't for those darned meddling feds
Tumblr media
The saga of the Sacklers, a multigenerational billionaire crime family of mass-murdering dope-peddlers, is an enraging parable about how the wealthy, the courts, and sadistic high-powered lawyers collude to destroy the lives of millions, profit handsomely, and evade justice.
But there's an unexpected twist to this tale. After the Sacklers procured a sham bankruptcy that denied their victims the right to sue while leaving their fortune largely intact, the Supreme Court – yes, this Supreme Court – saw through the scam and froze the process, pending a full hearing:
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/08/10/us/supreme-court-purdue-pharma-opioid-settlement.html
The Sacklers basically invented modern, legal dope peddling. Arthur Sackler, the family's original crime-boss, revived the practice of direct-to-consumer drug marketing, dormant since the death of the medicine show, to peddle Valium. An aggressive and shrewd lobbyist, Arthur built the family fortune and, more importantly, its connections:
https://www.timesofisrael.com/how-the-sackler-family-built-a-pharma-dynasty-and-fueled-an-american-calamity/
A generation later, the family's business company created Oxycontin, and procured misleading and false research about the drug's safety kickstarting the opioid epidemic, whose American body-count is closing in on a million dead. Armed with inflated claims about opioid safety, the Sacklers' pharma reps bribed, cajoled and tricked doctors into writing millions of prescriptions for oxy.
This scam had a natural best-before date. As ODs flooded America's ERs and bodies piled up in America's morgues, it became increasingly clear that something was rotten. The Sacklers pursued a multipronged campaign to keep the truth from coming to light, and to keep the billions flowing.
On the one hand, they hired McKinsey to find novel ways to encourage doctors to keep writing prescriptions and to convince pharmacists to turn a blind eye to abuse. McKinsey had all kinds of great ideas here, including paying pharma distributors cash bonuses for every overdose death in their territory:
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/03/business/mckinsey-opioids-settlement.html
When the issue of these deaths came up in public, the Sacklers blamed "criminal addicts" for their own misery, stigmatizing both people who desperately needed pain relief and the people who'd been deliberately hooked on the Sacklers' products. The legacy of this smear campaign is still with us, both in the contempt for people struggling with addiction and in the cruel barriers placed between people in unbearable agony and medical relief.
But mostly, the Sacklers kept their names out of it. They laundered their reputations by donating a homeopathic fraction of their vast drug fortune to art galleries and museums in a bid to make their names synonymous with good deeds.
The Sacklers didn't invent this trick. Think of the way that history's great monsters – Carnegie, Mellon, Rockefeller, Ford – are remembered today for the foundations and charities that bear their names, not for the untold misery they inflicted on their workers, their crimes against their customers, and the corruption of governments.
But the Sacklers made those Gilded Age barons seem like amateurs. They invented a modern elite philanthropy playbook that Anand Giridharadas documents in his must-read Winners Take All, about the charity-industrial complex that washes away an ocean of blood with a trickle of money:
https://memex.craphound.com/2018/11/10/winners-take-all-modern-philanthropy-means-that-giving-some-away-is-more-important-than-how-you-got-it/
As part of this PR exercise, the individual Sacklers kept their names and images out of the public eye. For years, there were virtually no news-service photos of individual Sacklers. When journalists dared to criticize the family, they used vicious attack-lawyers to intimidate them into retractions and silence (I was threatened by the Sacklers' lawyers).
They also worked their media mogul pals, like Mike Bloomberg, who added their names to the "Friends of Mike" list that Bloomberg reporters were required to consult before writing negative coverage:
https://pluralistic.net/2020/02/29/friends-of-mike-enemies-of-the-people/#sacklerbergs
But Stein's Law says that "anything that can't go on forever will eventually stop." As lawsuits mounted, the Sacklers found themselves increasingly synonymous with death, not charitable works. But like any canny criminal, the Sacklers had a getaway plan.
First, they extracted vast sums from Purdue and shifted it into offshore financial secrecy havens:
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-purduepharma-bankruptcy/sacklers-reaped-up-to-13-billion-from-oxycontin-maker-u-s-states-say-idUSKBN1WJ19V
Even as this money was disappearing into legal black holes, the Sacklers demanded – and received – extraordinary protection from the courts, who aggressively sealed testimony and materials presented through discovery:
https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/usa-courts-secrecy-judges/
When this gambit finally failed, the Sacklers insisted that were down to their last $4 billion, and, with trillions in claims pending against them, they declared bankruptcy.
When a normal person declares bankruptcy, they are required to divest themselves of nearly everything of value they possess, and then still find themselves hounded by cruel arm-breakers who deluge them with threatening calls and letters:
https://pluralistic.net/2021/05/19/zombie-debt/#damnation
But for the richest people in America, bankruptcy is merely a way to cleanse one's balance sheet of liabilities for any atrocity you may have committed on the way, without giving up your fortune.
The Sacklers are a case-study in how a corrupt bankruptcy can be conducted.
Purdue Pharma presents a maddening case-study in the corrupt benefits of bankruptcy. When it was announced in March, many were outraged to learn that the Sacklers were going to walk away with billions, while their victims got stiffed.
First, they converted their victims' right to compensation into "property" that the Sacklers themselves owned. This transferred jurisdiction over these claims from the regular court system to the bankruptcy court. A bankruptcy judge – not a jury – would decide how much each of these claims was worth, and then what how much of that worth these victims (now recast as creditors) would be entitled to through the bankruptcy.
Thus tens of thousands of claims were nonconsensually settled without a trial, by an administrative judge with no criminal jurisdiction, not a federal judge who'd undergone Senate confirmation:
https://pluralistic.net/2021/03/31/vaccine-for-the-global-south/#claims-extinguished
These "coercive restructuring techniques" are not available to everyday people who are drowning in student debt or credit-card bills – these are the exclusive purview of the wealthiest Americans, who enjoy a completely different bankruptcy system that is rigged in their favor.
Three judges – David Jones and Marvin Isgur of Houston and Bob Drain of New York – hear 96% of the country's large corporate bankruptcies:
https://www.creditslips.org/creditslips/2021/05/judge-shopping-in-bankruptcy.html
These judges are unbelievably horny for corporations, embracing a legal theory "that casts the invention of the limited liability corporation alongside that of the steam engine as a paradigmatic development in the pursuit of prosperity":
https://prospect.org/justice/how-do-you-solve-a-problem-like-the-sacklers-purdue-pharma-bankruptcy/
Now there are more than three bankruptcy judges in America, so how do the nation's biggest companies get their cases heard by these three enthusiastic Renfields for corporate vampirism?
They cheat.
For example: when GM was facing bankruptcy, it argued that it was a New York company on the basis that it owned a single Chevy dealership in Harlem, and got in front of Judge Drain.
The Sacklers were – characteristically – even more brazen. They really wanted to get their case in front of Judge Drain, the nation's most enthusiastic supporter of "third party releases," through which bankrupt billionaires can wipe the slate clean, securing dismissals of all claims by the people they wronged.
Drain is also uniquely hostile to independent examiners, "an independent third-party appointed by the court to investigate 'fraud, dishonesty, incompetence, misconduct, mismanagement, or irregularity…by current or former management of the debtor."
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3851339
If you're the Sacklers, hoping to keep two thirds of your billions and extinguish all claims by your victims, there is no better helpmeet than Judge Robert Drain of the Southern District of New York.
So, 192 days before filing for bankruptcy, the Sacklers opened an office in White Plains, New York (a company may claim jurisdiction in a specific court once they've operated a business there for 180 days).
Then they filed a bankruptcy in which they altered the metadata on their casefile, inserting the code for a Westchester county hearing into the machine-readable, human-invisible parts of the documents they uploaded to the federal Case Management/Electronic Case Files (CM/ECF) system (they also captioned the case with "RDD, for "Robert D Drain").
They chose their judge, and the judge obliged. UCLA Law's Lynn LoPucki is one of the leading scholars of these bankruptcy "megacases," and has written extensively on why these three judges are so deferential to corporate criminals seeking to flense themselves of culpability. She sees judges like Drain motivated by "personal aggrandizement and celebrity and ability to indirectly channel to the local bankruptcy bar. The judge is the star and the ringmaster of a megacase – very appealing to certain personalities."
Thus, these judges are "willing and eager to cater to debtors to attract business…[an] assurance to debtors that…these judges will not transfer out cases with improper venue or rule against the debtor…"
https://www.fulcrum.org/concern/monographs/02870w66d
This kind of judge-shopping goes beyond the Sacklers; the cases that Drain and co preside over make a mockery of the idea of America as a land of equal justice. "Prepack" and "drive-through" bankruptcies are reliable get-out-of-jail-free cards for capitalism's worst monsters: private equity firms.
Whether PE murdered your grandmother by buying her care-home and putting each worker in charge of 30 seniors:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/portopiccolo-nursing-homes-maryland/2020/12/21/a1ffb2a6-292b-11eb-9b14-ad872157ebc9_story.html
or poisoned your kids by filling your neighborhood with carcinogens:
https://www.webmd.com/special-reports/ethylene-oxide/20190719/residents-unaware-of-cancer-causing-toxin-in-air
limited liability wipes the slate clean.
30% of America's bankruptcies are private equity companies using the bankruptcy system to wipe away claims for their misdeeds, while keeping a fortune, thanks to the shield of limited liability.
Take Millennium Health, JamesS lattery's fake drug-testing company, which promised to help nursing homes figure out whether seniors were abusing (or selling) their meds by testing their piss for angel dust and other drugs. Slattery defrauded Medicare and Medicaid for millions, borrowed $1.8 billion (Slattery got $1.3 billion of that). He eventually walked away from this fraud after paying a mere $256m to settle all claims, and kept a fortune in assets, including the 40 vintage planes his private company ("Pissed Away LLC" – I am not making this up) owned:
https://prospect.org/justice/how-do-you-solve-a-problem-like-the-sacklers-purdue-pharma-bankruptcy/
For the wealthy, bankruptcy is the sport of kings, a way to skip out on consequences. For the poor, bankruptcy is an anchor – or a noose. This is by design: judges who preside over elite bankruptcies speak of their protagonists as heroic "risk takers" and tiptoe around any consequences, lest these titans be chained to a mortal's fate, costing us all the benefits of their entrepreneurial genius.
PE companies helped the Sacklers design their own bankruptcy strategy, and it was a standout, even by the standards of Bob Drain and his kangaroo bankruptcy court. But now, the Supreme Court has pumped the brakes on the whole enterprise.
The judges ruled that the exceptions the Sacklers took advantage of were intended for bankrupts in "financial distress" – not billionaires with vast fortunes hidden overseas. In so doing, the court threatens all manner of corrupt arrangements, from "the Boy Scouts, wildfires and allegations of sexual abuse in the church diocese — where third parties get a benefit from a bankruptcy they themselves aren’t going through.”
The case was brought by the DoJ's US Trustee Program, which lost in the Second Circuit when it tried to halt the Purdue bankruptcy and argued that the Sacklers themselves had to declare bankruptcy to discharge the claims against them.
Now the Supremes have hit pause on the bankruptcy the Second Circuit approved, and will hear the case themselves. It's only one step on a long road, but it's an unprecedented one. Some of the country's filthiest fortunes are riding on the outcome.
Tumblr media
Going to Defcon this weekend? I’m giving a keynote, “An Audacious Plan to Halt the Internet’s Enshittification and Throw it Into Reverse,” tomorrow (Aug 12) at 12:30pm, followed by a book signing at the No Starch Press booth at 2:30pm!
https://info.defcon.org/event/?id=50826
Tumblr media Tumblr media
I’m kickstarting the audiobook for “The Internet Con: How To Seize the Means of Computation,” a Big Tech disassembly manual to disenshittify the web and bring back the old, good internet. It’s a DRM-free book, which means Audible won’t carry it, so this crowdfunder is essential. Back now to get the audio, Verso hardcover and ebook:
http://seizethemeansofcomputation.org
Tumblr media
If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this thread to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/08/11/justice-delayed/#justice-redeemed
Tumblr media
Image: Edwardx (modified) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Serpentine_Sackler_Gallery,_June_2016_05.jpg
CC BY-SA 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/deed.en
169 notes · View notes
flowerflowerflo · 1 month
Text
ex-best friend ditched me for girls with the worst influence on her in the world. i genuinely don't care anymore, im sick of being pushed around, get lost and stay lost when you come back after they stab you in the back 🩷
20 notes · View notes
boxwinebaddie · 5 months
Text
an uncle nina update...i mean UPHATE!
okay there's a couple lines at the bottom i didn't fill in...i don't want to talk about it...that's a problem for future me idc idc! it's done, okay?
BUT AT LONG....LONG LAST....I AM FINALLY....FINISHED fuCkiNG WRITING RM6 AND AM EDITING AND FORMATING IT ON AO3!
when i tell you there are tears in my tears...oh my god...please, clap.
i am going to start deletion progress of probably 1k worth of spaces between lines ( whoever decided that when you paste a google doc it double spaces everything...please meet me in the pit, motherfucker! ) running a fine tooth comb through everything, figuring out where certain italics/blockquote goes, writing the sh*t i put off at the end & crying to taylor swift loudly over the sound of my cracking fingers.
but first...i am taking...a nap....or i'm gonna try. #freeunclenina
because i pulled a writer girl all-nighter.
...and brain hurty so, so bad.
-uncle nina, making miracles happen on the last day of nanowrimo
p.s. if you see me on here answering ask memes and being a circus clown, please close your eyes...i miss her ( my not-stressful inbox )
9 notes · View notes
Text
"I hate you, I hate you, I hate you. but I was just kidding myself" - Lewis Capaldi, 'Before You Go'
is it just me or is this line absolutely what kit is thinking?
75 notes · View notes
moregraceful · 11 months
Text
friendship...good
12 notes · View notes
neet-wifey · 1 month
Text
Ay, sometimes i feel like my friendships are just falling apart and i'm genuinely ending up all alone again. :( I feel so fucking awkward even texting them and i get the feeling that everything i say is taken wrong/heavily judged. I fucking hate myself so much for this. i miss when i didin't even care. It makes me feel like so much more of a weirdo/outcast. 😭
3 notes · View notes
il-predestinato · 9 months
Note
I'm not your mutual but I would like to hear your thoughts 😬
Just don't put on his tag so people won't see it.
I'm disappointed in his performance on the sprint shoot out as well, but in the sprint was there much more to do?
Tumblr media
11 notes · View notes
depressedraisin · 10 months
Text
one of these days im gonna finish watching the devil judge and then ill make a bunch of tdj x arctic monkeys collages and dump them on y'all's feed ill be so invincible you'll see
7 notes · View notes
faeymouse · 10 months
Text
So I’ve finally gotten to play Tron 2.0 (thanks, Steam Sale!) and, thoughts so far:
-Kernel is DEFINITELY as hot as previously assumed. You know his armor doesn’t cover his belly? Granted, it’s just empty space nothing there, but in my heart it screams armor crop top
-Mercury ily im drawing you ilysm
-That opening theme slaps so hard
-Byte is the best character, hands down
-I really like how they flesh out the Encom Grid in this. I’m still a staunch Legacy girlie, but they did good with a sequel Grid here
-I like the idea of Jet so much, but he sounds so early 2000s “Whoa gnarly, dude!” straight to DVD Disney movie esque that I’m… kinda hoping for his downfall? It’s still early though, so maybe he’ll grow on me. I like his design. His triforce disk is sick. I really wish he didn’t have glass knees that shatter from any height taller than two inches.
-Tron games having a habit of having a Virus with a really hot voice is a trope I hope they never lose. Thorne, welcome to the spot in my heart next to Abraxas
7 notes · View notes
buttertrait · 3 months
Text
i think the supervisor of one of the stores has told the manager they don’t want me to work there anymore (my first day working there they said they’re not afraid to tell the managers if they don’t want certain people working there and i haven’t been scheduled there for 2 weeks now) and i’m pretty pissed about it because 1. its way closer to me it’s like 10 mins vs the other store which is like 30 mins away, and 2. i’ve worked there 3 times how can you tell you don’t want me to work there after three shifts and also like i was literally brand new i had 0 idea of what i’m doing so i feel like it’s really unfair to judge me because of that.
6 notes · View notes
bonestrouslingbones · 5 months
Text
very funny reading how Super Busy With Unspecified Job i wrote karma as at the beginning considering my recent changes to him and fluff's dynamic. those changes being making fluff a lot more justified in his abandonment issues since karma now only has 1 job and genuinely is just avoiding going home as much as he can
3 notes · View notes
Text
Is it just me or does it feel like there’s more negative polls/posts asking negative posts in general in our little corner of tumblr lately? Maybe I keep logging in at bad times -totally plausible- but I wont lie I end up just keeping quiet when half the posts I see are ‘so who is the characters you really hate’ or ‘worst character vote time’
13 notes · View notes
felifeltfrog · 6 months
Text
Honestly I'd rather be full day at the grocery store over working in the staircases
The anxiety has caught up with me :)
2 notes · View notes
prinprime · 1 year
Text
There is room here for you
Furtive deer and haunted child
We are not only beautiful things.
There is room for your sharp ears and your bristling fear
There is room for your cavernous woe and your thundering desire
There is room for your screaming loneliness.
You haven't got to be unwanted anymore.
Not here.
Never again here.
Whole is so much more than beautiful.
9 notes · View notes
labiosrojos27 · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
WE KNEW THE PRICE IF WE GON LIVE THIS LIFE BUT WE LIKE SO WHAT?
23 notes · View notes
Text
truly I Truly want to talk to ppl in 14 who purchase homes, let them sit for a month and then it gets demolished. I just wanna talk
5 notes · View notes