Raimondo’s Yale Ties Linked to Millions in Sackler Money

GoLocalProv News Team

Raimondo’s Yale Ties Linked to Millions in Sackler Money

Raimondo, Member of the Yale Board
Not only is Gina Raimondo the Governor of Rhode Island, but since 2014, she has been a member of the Yale University Board of Trustees and in both roles she is tied to “toxic gifts” from the billionaire Sackler family — owners of Purdue Pharma, a company being sued by the state of Rhode Island for its role promoting the opioid epidemic.

More than 1,000 Rhode Islanders have died of overdoses since Raimondo entered office — many of those deaths tied to opioid usage.

Raimondo refuses to return donations from the Sacklers — $12,500, despite 71 percent of Rhode Islanders believing she return the donations.

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Equally, the Sacklers' donations are also sparking controversies and the Trustees are holding firm — Yale refuses to return the donations or remove the Sackler names from academic chairs or academic centers. Beyond Raimondo, the Trustees are a who's-who of American influence and wealth. Trustees include Joshua Bekenstein, a managing director of Bain Capital, Charles W. Goodyear IV, the president of Goodyear Capital Corporation, and Douglas A. Warner who served as chair of J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.

The Sacklers have endowed two professorships at the School of Medicine and funded the Raymond and Beverly Sackler Institute for Biological, Physical and Engineering Sciences, among other gifts at Yale, according to the Yale Daily News.

“There’s no doubt that we have an opioid addiction crisis in this country,” said University President Peter Salovey told the Yale paper. “It is also clear that generosity from the Sackler family has funded issues core to Yale’s mission.”

One Yale graduate — writer Matthew Jeffrey Abrams, wrote a first-person essay in The Guardian, “As an Oxycontin 'junkie' at Yale, I saw how my addiction helped fund the university.”

Yale has received millions from the Sacklers and has refused to return the donations.
“And it was then, sitting alone in that musty chapel, when it hit me: to my left stood the Skull and Bones crypt , the secret windowless clubhouse for the country’s most exclusive private society, whose founder’s extended family had become the largest American merchants in the Indo-Chinese opium trade. And beyond the crypt stood Yale’s medical campus, which has received major gifts from the Sackler family, whose wealth comes largely from owning Purdue Pharma, the maker of Oxycontin. Purdue Pharma criminally misbranded that drug to make it appear harmless. The company pleaded guilty in 2007 and agreed to pay around $600m in fines,“ wrote Abrams.

“While Oxycontin had almost killed me, it had also helped build Yale’s vaunted Raymond and Beverly Sackler Institute for Biological, Physical and Engineering Sciences. So had every opioid addict in my little chapel meeting – so had every dope fiend in America,” Abrams added.

And Yale is not the only institution facing the issues tied to accepting donations from the Sacklers.

Protest at Harvard's Sackler Museum
As GoLocal reported in July, a group of approximately 100 staged a protest at Sackler Museum at Harvard -- the group comprised of medical students and community activists are opposed to Harvard accepting donations from the family that owns Purdue Pharma -- the company that created oxycontin and is now being sued by the State of Rhode Island and multiple other states for illegally marketing the highly addictive drugs.   

The "die-in" inside Sackler Museum in protest of its ties to a family the demonstrators say profited off the opioid crisis. "Protest underway at Harvard’s Sackler Museum over the family’s role in the opioid epidemic. Activists join medical students from @harvardmed in chanting “people over profits” and “shame on Sacklers.” Tweeted one of the protestors.


GoLocal Statewide Poll - FULL RESULTS, Conducted by Harvard's Della Volpe Oct. 2018

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