Major U.S. pharmacy chain Rite Aid said Sunday that it has filed for bankruptcy and obtained $3.45 billion in fresh financing as it carries out a restructuring plan while coping with falling sales and opioid-related lawsuits.
In 2022, Rite Aid settled for up to $30 million to resolve lawsuits alleging pharmacies contributed to an oversupply of prescription opioids. It said it had reached an agreement with its creditors on a financial restructuring plan to cut its debt and position itself for future growth and that the bankruptcy filing was part of that process.
The plan will “significantly reduce the company’s debt” while helping to “resolve litigation claims in an equitable manner,” Rite Aid said.
Rite Aid got caught knowingly filling illegal and suspicious opioid prescriptions, got slapped with a lawsuit, and now is restructuring.
They fueled the opioid crisis for profit, got caught, and now the courts are bailing them out of their debts
Were they forcing pharmacists to fill suspicious scripts? I’m not putting my license on the line for that shit
“We allege that Rite Aid filled hundreds of thousands of prescriptions that did not meet legal requirements,” said Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta. “According to our complaint, Rite Aid’s pharmacists repeatedly filled prescriptions for controlled substances with obvious red flags, and Rite Aid intentionally deleted internal notes about suspicious prescribers. These practices opened the floodgates for millions of opioid pills and other controlled substances to flow illegally out of Rite Aid’s stores.”
I won’t pretend to know a ton about finance, but I don’t like that so many large companies can get away with going bankrupt and then just “restructuring” instead of going out of business. Maybe it’s actually a good thing, I’m not sure, it definitely seems kinda scummy to me though.
Chapter 11 is basically a debt consolidation plan overseen by the courts. It doesn’t wipe out debt, in fact it requires creditors to agree to the plan. It is not just for large companies, small companies use it too.
There is even a version for individuals called Chapter 13. But it’s more useful to companies than individuals, since debt consolidation usually involves selling part ownership of the company and that’s obviously not an option for individuals.
Individuals can do this, too. You don’t even have to be rich. It’s called Chapter 11, and it isn’t just for companies. That said, it’s just a pause while you restructure your finances and requires an approved get-well plan. Individuals would have a hard time coming up with a get-well plan that doesn’t include “get a better job” or “don’t pay off this huge debt.”
If you ran a corporation, you too could benefit from this, but obviously the minority of people are in that situation, and corporations have lobbied for us to spend immense funds supporting that “kind” of socialism. They should just go bankrupt, and instead fund the people who will have lost their job, and directly invest there to get them back onto the market.
3500 million dollars to go “figure it out”. It’s meant for the company to make good by its clients, but we know that’s not what’s going to happen
I’m not sure what you mean by “that kind of socialism”, but rest assured that the $3.5b didn’t come from the government. Rite Aid got the money all by itself, mostly by selling off parts of its own business.
The courts are simply there to make sure Rite Aid doesn’t do anything sneaky with the money before paying off its creditors.
I was talking a out bailouts specifically yeah, so not in this case.
Chapter 11 is to protect against creditors and force them to cooperate, prevent lawsuits and seizing assets. IN EXCHANGE the court promises to make sure the creditors get their share in the end.
Guess how it always ends…
TIL Rite Aid still exists
Walgreens attempted to buy Rite Aid for about $9.4 billion in a deal announced in 2015. But the larger drugstore chain scaled back its ambition a couple years later and bought only a chunk of Rite Aid, around 1,900 stores, to get the deal past antitrust regulators.