Johnson
& Johnson wins California lawsuit claiming asbestos in
talc caused cancer
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[November 17, 2017] By
Nate Raymond
(Reuters) - A California jury on Thursday
ruled in favor of Johnson & Johnson in a lawsuit by a woman who said she
developed the cancer mesothelioma after being exposed to asbestos in the
company's talc-based products including J&J's Baby Powder.
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The Los Angeles Superior Court jury's verdict came in the first
trial centering on claims that J&J's talc products contained
asbestos. J&J is separately battling thousands of cases claiming
those products can also cause ovarian cancer.
The verdict came in a lawsuit by Tina Herford, who said she
developed mesothelioma after using J&J talcum powder products that
her lawyers claimed contained asbestos.
Reuters watched the verdict through an online broadcast by Courtroom
View Network. The jury also found in favor of talc supplier Imerys
Talc.
J&J in a statement welcomed the verdict. J&J said it believed that
setbacks dealt to individuals pursuing ovarian cancer cases had
"forced plaintiff attorneys to pivot to yet another baseless
theory."
"Johnson's Baby Powder has been around since 1894 and it does not
contain asbestos or cause mesothelioma or ovarian cancer," J&J said.
Chris Panatier, Herford's lawyer, in an email cautioned against
reading too much into a single verdict.
"It is a matter of time before juries begin holding them to
account," he said.
The verdict came as a federal jury, separately, ordered J&J to pay
$247 million to six patients who said they were injured by defective
Pinnacle hip implants.
Mesothelioma is a deadly form of cancer closely associated with
exposure to asbestos. It affects the delicate tissue that lines body
cavities, most often around the lungs, but also in the abdomen and
elsewhere.
Herford's lawyers contended that internal J&J documents showed the
New Jersey-based company for decades was aware of the presence of
asbestos in the talc that was used in its products but kept selling
them anyway.
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J&J faces lawsuits by around 5,500 plaintiffs nationally asserting
talc-related claims, largely based on claims it failed to warn women
about the risk of developing ovarian cancer from the products.
In five trials in Missouri involving ovarian cancer lawsuits, juries
found J&J liable four times and awarded the plaintiffs $307 million.
In California, a jury awarded a now-deceased woman $417 million.
But in October, J&J scored major victories when a Missouri appellate
court threw out the first verdict there for $72 million and a
California judge tossed the $417 million verdict.
The case is Herford et al v. AT&T Corp et al, Los Angeles Superior
Court, No. BC646315.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe and
Tom Brown)
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