J&J
loses trial over claims linking cancer to asbestos in
talc
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[April 06, 2018] By
Nate Raymond
(Reuters) - Johnson & Johnson
suffered its first trial loss in a lawsuit claiming its talc-based
products including Johnson's Baby Powder contain cancer-causing
asbestos, with a New Jersey jury on Thursday ordering J&J and another
company to pay $37 million in damages.
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The verdict of liability in Middlesex County Superior Court in New
Brunswick came as J&J fights thousands of cases claiming its talc
products can also cause ovarian cancer. The jury found J&J and
another company liable after more than two months of trial.
The lawsuit was brought by New Jersey resident Stephen Lanzo, who
said he developed mesothelioma after inhaling dust that was
generated through his regular use of J&J talc powder products since
his birth in 1972.
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.
The jury awarded Lanzo $30 million and his wife $7 million in
compensatory damages. It found J&J was responsible for 70 percent of
the damages and said a unit of France-based Imerys SA <IMTP.PA>, its
talc supplier, was responsible for 30 percent.
The jury will return on Tuesday for further proceedings to determine
whether to award punitive damages, according to an online broadcast
of the trial by Courtroom View Network.
J&J denied the allegations and says Johnson's Baby Powder does not
contain asbestos or cause cancer.
J&J in a statement said it was disappointed but would withhold
further comment until the trial's completion. Gwen Myers, an Imerys
spokeswoman, said Imerys plans to appeal and is confident talc did
not cause Lanzo's cancer.
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The Lanzos did not respond to requests for comment.
J&J, based in New Brunswick, New Jersey, faces talc-related lawsuits
by 6,610 plaintiffs nationally, largely based on claims it failed to
warn women about the risk of developing ovarian cancer by using its
products for feminine hygiene.
In five trials in Missouri involving ovarian cancer lawsuits, juries
found J&J liable four times and awarded the plaintiffs a total of
$307 million. In California, a jury awarded a now-deceased woman
$417 million.
But in October, a Missouri appellate court threw out the first
verdict there for $72 million and a California judge tossed the $417
million verdict. J&J is seeking to reverse the other verdicts.
Asbestos claims are a more recent challenge for J&J. It won the only
other asbestos-related trial in November when a Los Angeles Superior
Court jury ruled in its favor.
(This story corrects headline to show case was J&J's first trial
loss in an asbestos-related case involving talc, not first loss in
talc cancer lawsuit. Corrects paragraph 1 to say both J&J and
another company have been ordered to pay $37 mln, not just J&J)
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Susan Thomas and
Leslie Adler)
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