CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Darrell V. McGraw Jr., a former longtime West Virginia attorney general and state Supreme Court justice who fought back against the state's drug overdose crisis, died Saturday. He was 88.
Jared Hunt, a spokesman for the state Supreme Court, said in an email that McGraw died of a heart attack.
The West Virginia Democratic Party called McGraw ''a tireless advocate for justice, fairness, and the people of our great state.''
''His legacy of service and commitment to our state will never be forgotten,'' it said in a statement. ''Darrell's work made a lasting impact on our state, and his spirit of public service will continue to inspire generations to come.''
A Democrat, McGraw won a 12-year term on the Supreme Court in 1976. He was elected attorney general in 1992 and re-elected four times before losing to Republican Patrick Morrisey in 2012. McGraw lost a bid to return to the Supreme Court in 2016.
''My prayers and sympathies go out to the family and friends of Darrell McGraw for their loss,'' Morrisey said in a statement on the social platform X.
In 2001, McGraw accused Purdue Pharma in a lawsuit of dishonestly marketing the painkiller OxyContin in West Virginia. The company agreed to a $10 million settlement in 2004.
McGraw later filed a lawsuit over excessive amounts of prescription painkillers that were flooding southern West Virginia pharmacies. After McGraw left office, the state announced settlements of $20 million with distributor Cardinal Health Inc. and $16 million with AmerisourceBergen Drug Co.