In BATON ROUGE, Louisiana, the state’s Attorney General, Liz Murrill, announced an investigation into allegations against CVS. The probe aims to determine if the pharmaceutical company misused customers’ personal information to send text messages advocating against a proposed state law.
Murrill also said she plans to issue a cease-and-desist letter to the company to stop the messages.
While legislators discussed a bill, which ultimately did not pass, CVS sent out text messages featuring statements opposing the legislation. Legislators presented screenshots of these messages during the debate.
One of the messages intercepted by The Associated Press said, “There is a last-minute bill in Louisiana that could lead to the closure of your CVS Pharmacy. As a result, your medication costs may increase, and your pharmacist could lose their job.”
Attached was a link to a draft letter urging lawmakers to oppose the legislation that someone could sign with their email address and send to legislators.
“The proposed legislation would take away my and other Louisiana patients’ ability to get our medications shipped right to our homes,” the letter read. “They would also ban the pharmacies that serve patients suffering from complex diseases requiring specialty pharmacy care to manage their life-threatening conditions like organ transplants or cancer. These vulnerable patients cannot afford any disruption to their care – the consequences would be dire.”
In fiery testimony, Rep. Dixon McMakin pointed to some of the messages, saying they were misleading and false. He specifically pointed to ads, that people reported seeing on social media, alleging that lawmakers “may shut down every CVS pharmacy in the state.”
“No we’re not, you liars. Quit being liars. Quit using scare tactics,” McMakin said.
Republican Rep. Bryan Fontenot held up his phone, showing that he, too, had received a text message from CVS.
“It’s in the same text thread (used) to notify when my prescription is filled,” he said. “They’ve now taken that to send me political texts.”
CVS sent messages to “large numbers” of state employees and their families to lobby against proposed legislation involving the company’s pharmaceutical benefits manager, Murrill said in an X post.
Customers gave CVS their phone numbers to receive pharmaceutical information such as vaccine availability or prescription pick-ups but the company is using this personal information “for their own personal corporate interests against pending legislation,” Murrill told reporters. “That’s not why anybody gave them their phone number.”
Amy Thibault, a spokesperson for CVS, said the texts were the result of a last-minute amendment to the bill Wednesday without an opportunity for a public hearing.
The amendment was crafted behind closed-doors by a conference committee — a regular practice utilized in the statehouse when the House and Senate cannot agree on final versions of a bill.
“We believe we have a responsibility to inform our customers of misguided legislation that seeks to shutter their trusted pharmacy, and we acted accordingly,” Thibault said in an email. “Our communication with our customers, patients and members of our community is consistent with law.”
Republican Gov. Jeff Landry has continued to push the bill as the state’s legislature concluded Thursday afternoon.
The bill, which proponents said would bolster independent pharmacies and reduce the cost of prescription medications, received overwhelming approval in the House, with a vote of 88-4.
Among those who voted against the measure was Rep. Mandie Landry. The Democrat said that while she wanted to vote in favor, but she was receiving messages from people in her district urging her not to. She said CVS’s lobbying had reached them and as a result they feared that they wouldn’t be able to access their medications.
“CVS … you should be so ashamed of this. You are scaring people,” Landry said.
The bill ultimately died with the Senate opting not to take it up in the final hour of the 2025 session.
Landry spokesperson Kate Kelly said the governor plans to call a special session in hopes of passing similar legislation.
“Yes we will have a special to lower prescription drugs for our citizens,” Kelly said. “It’s that important.”
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Brook reported from New Orleans.
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