OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — The Oklahoma Supreme Court has denied a request by drugmakers to postpone the trial in the state’s lawsuit accusing them of fueling the opioid epidemic.

Attorney General Mike Hunter’s office says the state’s highest court handed down the decision Monday, a week after attorneys made
oral presentations
on the request to delay the trial’s scheduled May 28 start.

Drugmakers say they need more time to prepare.

Sandy Coats, an attorney for one of the drugmakers, Purdue Pharma Inc., hasn’t returned a call seeking comment.

Oklahoma Attorney General Mike Hunter
sued 13 opioid manufacturers
in 2017, alleging they fraudulently engaged in marketing campaigns that led to thousands of overdose addictions and deaths. Several states have filed similar lawsuits, but Oklahoma’s is expected to be the first to go to trial.