By Logan Andrew, FreeWire Magazine

While the legacy news cycle moves on from the latest “historic” legal settlement, the people of Bucyrus are left staring at the same cracked pavement and the same empty seats at the dinner table. We are told that justice has been served. We are told that Purdue Pharma is dead and that a new, “public benefit” company called Knoa Pharma has risen from its proverbial ashes to save us. Don’t believe it. This isn’t justice; it’s a corporate witness protection program.
For years, we’ve been told who to be angry at. We’re told to look at the neighbors on the north end scavenging copper just to make it through the night. We’re told to look at the immigrants in the next town over, or the small business owner who can’t pay a living wage because they’re drowning in the same rising tide as the rest of us. But those people didn’t build a machine designed to monetize human misery.
The Sackler family did.


Their 2020 plea deal—and the six-year legal circus that followed—was never about making the victims whole. It was about the corporate strategy of deny, defend, and depose. While insurance CEOs use those tactics to kill your claims, the Sacklers used the American bankruptcy system to shield their personal billions. They drained Purdue Pharma like a tick, moving over $10 billion into offshore accounts while the death toll in Ohio skyrocketed. Then, they handed the empty shell of the company to the courts and asked for global immunity. They used the company’s corpse as a shield so they would never have to file for personal bankruptcy themselves.
The big number you see in the headlines—$7 billion—is a sedative for the public. Spread over 18 years, that money is effectively being paid out of the interest their offshore billions are earning. By the time they finish paying us back, the Sacklers will likely be wealthier than they were when they started.
And then there’s the birth of Knoa Pharma. We are told this new company will use its profits to develop addiction treatments and overdose-reversal drugs. Think about the logic of that. The same infrastructure that spent decades coercing doctors to over-prescribe OxyContin—even paying for software alerts to nudge physicians toward higher doses—is now being rebranded to sell us the cure.
It is a sickening irony: we are letting the people who started the fire profit from selling the water to put it out. They profited from the addiction, and now they will profit from the recovery.
In this late-stage capitalist hellscape, the easiest thing to do is punch down. It’s easy to blame the person on the street corner because you can see them. It’s harder to see the billionaires in their Connecticut mansions or their offshore trusts. But as Purdue Pharma officially ceases operations this month, we need to be clear-eyed about what actually happened. The Sackler family didn’t lose their homes. They didn’t lose their freedom. They didn’t even lose their status. They simply traded a pill mill for a recovery clinic and kept the change.
The next time you walk through Bucyrus and see the devastation this crisis has left behind, don’t look at your neighbor with contempt. Look toward the boardrooms. The real thieves didn’t steal your copper; they stole a generation of our people, and they used the law to make sure they got paid for it. Justice wasn’t served in 2020, and it hasn’t been served in 2026. All we got was a change of clothes.
