February 24, 2008
McGraw defends spending of settlement cash
State $2 billion richer, attorney general says
Page 2 of 2
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So far, $7.5 million of the $10 million settlement has been spent. One-third of the total went to lawyers hired by McGraw to pursue the lawsuit.

In accordance with the settlement, McGraw's office distributed most of its funds to local and county programs to help substance abusers. Another $500,000 went to the University of Charleston's new pharmacy school.

Steve Cohen, executive director of Citizens Against Lawsuit Abuse, recently told the Record that the $10 million settlement is a "slush fund," specifically citing the donation to the University of Charleston.

Cohen and CALA want McGraw to turn over all the settlement money to the Legislature, including the $7.5 million already spent. The remaining $2.5 million will be spent this year.

But Purdue's settlement specifically stipulates the "funds shall be placed in trust and used by the attorney general in support of the general welfare of the people of West Virginia" for the three purposes cited by Hughes.

According to a list maintained by McGraw, settlement funds have already gone to county commissions and local health-care centers throughout the state, including $46,669 to Health Right Inc. in Charleston.

McGraw and others estimate day-report centers, which are set up to monitor individuals convicted on drug abuse charges, cost county and local officials about $7 a day, less than the $50 a day cost of keeping those same individuals behind bars.

When Barry McCaffrey, a retired U.S. Army general who led the Office of National Drug Control Policy under President Clinton, spoke in Charleston earlier this month to the West Virginia Association of Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Counselors, he praised such local efforts in West Virginia to counter drug addiction.

Calling OxyContin "the new heroin," McCaffrey said, "We want to get people back to their workplaces, back to their families and out of jail."

McGraw's $2 billion in settlements range from a huge settlement with tobacco companies for failing to reveal the harmful impacts of smoking to scores of smaller settlements, often for less than $30,000, to individual consumers defrauded by air-conditioning contractors, used-car dealers, dentists, roofing businesses, driveway pavers, cable television providers among other companies.

Discussing the $2 billion in settlements, McGraw said his office has provided more than $250 million to the governor's Rainy Day Fund, $250,000 to the Department of Health and Human Services, $30 million to the Workers' Compensation Division's "Old Fund" and a $24 million loan to the Physicians Mutual Insurance Co.

The largest amount of all was $807 million that went to help reduce the long-term debt of the West Virginia Teachers Retirement Fund, he said.

To contact staff writer Paul J. Nyden, use e-mail or call 348-5164.

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