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court rules against German certifier in French breast implant case
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[October 11, 2018]
MARSEILLE, France (Reuters) - France's
highest court threw out on Wednesday a 2015 ruling that cleared a German
certifier of negligence after it approved faulty breast implants
produced with counterfeit silicone.
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The Court of Cassation rejected the ruling by a lower appeals court
that had overturned a negligence conviction against TUV Rheinland
for its role in approving the implants made by Poly Implant Prothèse
(PIP) until the French firm shut in 2010.
PIP sold implants globally over almost two decades until
investigators discovered it was passing off low-grade industrial
silicone as a much pricier medical product.
The supreme court referred the case to a different appeals tribunal
in Paris for a fresh hearing, ruling that TUV Rheinland's
obligations required it to check the implants and documents on the
manufacturer's raw materials, as well as staging surprise visits to
PIP.
TUV Rheinland defended the actions of its unit involved in the case.
"The fraud committed by PIP was not detectable by TUV Rheinland LGA
Products GmbH, and could not be discovered," TUV Rheinland said in a
statement.
The counterfeit substance was used in implants given to 300,000
women. About a quarter of those subsequently removed were found to
have ruptured, regulators said, raising concerns over the long-term
health effects of exposure to their contents.
PIP founder Jean-Claude Mas was jailed for four years and fined
75,000 euros (now $86,000) in 2013 after a police investigation
revealed a sophisticated fraud.
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PIP employees would remove evidence of the cheaper silicone gel
before annual inspections by TUV Rheinland, it found.
An association representing 15,000 former PIP implant patients said
that the supreme court's ruling set the stage for the "world's
largest collective trial".
"The Court of Cassation renders a decision in accordance with the
law, fair and consistent with the objective elements of the case
which are devastating for TUV," the association's lawyer Olivier
Aumaitre said in a statement.
The association said that a ruling against TUV could cost it as much
as 6 billion euros.
($1 = 0.8677 euros)
(Reporting by Jean-Francois Rosnoblet; writing by Leigh Thomas;
Editing by Richard Lough and David Stamp)
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