South
Carolina court orders Johnson & Johnson to pay $136
million in Risperdal case
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[February 26, 2015]
(Reuters) - South Carolina's Supreme
Court ordered Johnson & Johnson to pay a penalty of $136 million,
upholding a jury's finding that the drugmaker's Janssen unit had
improperly marketed its anti-psychotic drug Risperdal and concealed its
risks.
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A trial court had earlier ordered J&J to pay $327 million, but the
Supreme Court more than halved that penalty, citing a provision in
South Carolina law that no action can be taken in such cases after
three years of the discovery of unlawful conduct. South Carolina
filed its complaint in April 2007.
"Janssen's desire for market share and increased sales knew no
bounds, leading to its egregious violation of South Carolina law,"
Justice John Kittredge wrote in the ruling on Wednesday.
"Yet, the absence of significant actual harm resulting from
Janssen's deceptive conduct leads us to conclude the trial court
erred in part in its penalty assessment."
J&J spokeswoman Pamela Van Houten did not immediately respond to a
request for comment.
The state had sought civil penalties on two claims.
The first arose from the content of the written material of
Risperdal prescriptions since 1994. The second claim centered on
alleged false information contained in a November 2003 letter
Janssen sent to South Carolina's prescribing physicians.
The South Carolina ruling conflicts with decisions by two other
states' high courts last year.
J&J won a reversal of a $1.2 billion judgment by the Arkansas
Supreme Court and won an appeal in Louisiana on a $258 million
penalty.
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Risperdal, launched in 1994, is used to treat conditions including
schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and irritability in people with
autism.
The drug and other anti-psychotic treatments have also been linked
to side effects such as strokes, diabetes and weight gain.
The case is State of South Carolina v. Ortho-McNeil-Janssen
Pharmaceuticals Inc, No. 2012-206987.
(Reporting by Supriya Kurane in Bengaluru; Editng by Ted Kerr)
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