Special Report-Inside J&J’s secret plan to cap litigation payouts to
cancer victims
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[February 05, 2022]
By Mike Spector and Dan Levine
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Johnson & Johnson
created a plan last year to limit the financial bleeding from billions
of dollars in jury awards to plaintiffs who alleged the company’s Baby
Powder and other talc products caused deadly cancers. The healthcare and
consumer-goods giant assigned more than 30 staffers to “Project Plato.”
In a memo on the project in July, a company lawyer warned the team: Tell
no one, not even your spouse.
“It is critical that any activities related to Project Plato, including
the mere fact the project exists, be kept in strict confidence,” Chris
Andrew, a J&J lawyer, wrote in an internal memo reviewed by Reuters.
The covert team would go on to evaluate a strategy to shift all the
liability from about 38,000 pending talc cases onto a newly created
subsidiary, which would immediately declare bankruptcy. The goal, as a
lawyer for the subsidiary said in a court filing: To halt all the
litigation and transfer the cases to bankruptcy court, where plaintiffs
would compete for compensation from a limited pool of money.
In court and in public statements last July, Johnson & Johnson said it
intended to keep fighting the allegations that its products were unsafe
in trial courts. The company was actively defending itself in talc
trials, including one that would result in a $27 million jury award that
could be nullified by the bankruptcy maneuver. The plaintiff in that
case now may have to instead seek compensation through a bankruptcy
process.
Privately, J&J took concrete steps starting as early as April to
consider and plan the bankruptcy maneuver, according to internal company
documents, depositions and other court records reviewed by Reuters. The
strategy seeks to ensure the pending cases never reach a jury and
instead be handled in a bankruptcy court.
The documents provide the most detailed account to date of how the New
Jersey-based conglomerate strategized to limit compensation to tens of
thousands of talc plaintiffs.
Reuters exclusively reported the broad outlines of the bankruptcy
strategy being explored by J&J in July. The company went ahead with the
plan in October, offloading responsibility for the cases to the new
subsidiary, which then filed for bankruptcy. Before the filing, the
company faced costs from $3.5 billion in verdicts and settlements,
including one in which 22 women were awarded a judgment of more than $2
billion, according to bankruptcy-court records.
Now, J&J proposes to give the subsidiary in bankruptcy $2 billion to put
into a trust to compensate all 38,000 current plaintiffs, as well as all
future claimants. J&J has said in court filings and in public statements
that the subsidiary, LTL Management LLC, could also tap a stream of
royalty revenues valued at more than $350 million at the time of the
bankruptcy filing.
J&J did not answer detailed written questions from Reuters about its
planning of the bankruptcy maneuver. In a statement, J&J defended the
LTL bankruptcy as a way to resolve the talc claims.
“This filing follows established process, and courts have uniformly
acknowledged that equitably resolving these types of claims through
Chapter 11 is a legitimate use of the restructuring process,” the
statement said. “LTL’s objective is to reach a fair and equitable
resolution for claimants through a plan of reorganization and create a
reasonable framework to address the unprecedented number of existing and
future talc-related claims.”
It continued: “We stand behind the safety of Johnson’s Baby Powder,
which is safe, does not contain asbestos and does not cause cancer. We
continue to believe resolving this matter as quickly and efficiently as
possible is in the best interests of claimants and all stakeholders. We
will continue to follow the process and put forth our position in the
court.”
On Thursday, a lawyer for the J&J subsidiary appeared at a bankruptcy
hearing and accused attorneys for people who have sued Johnson & Johnson
over its talc products of sharing confidential documents with Reuters in
a "calculated" effort to try the case "in the press."
Later Thursday, lawyers for J&J and its subsidiary sought a temporary
restraining order from the bankruptcy judge to block Reuters from
publishing information that, the company claims, comes from confidential
documents.
A Reuters spokesperson called J&J’s claims without merit.
"We reject the factually-unfounded and legally-meritless claims made by
J&J's lawyers and will continue to report without fear or favor on
matters of public interest," the spokesperson said in a statement on
Thursday.
BANKRUPTCY BENEFITS WITHOUT BURDENS
J&J started secretly considering and planning the maneuver to redirect
plaintiffs to bankruptcy court as early as April, when company attorneys
were briefed on the strategy by lawyers at Jones Day, a firm with
experience in the tactic, according to deposition testimony from an LTL
lawyer.
On July 19, the day after Reuters broke the news of the strategy, a J&J
official contacted Moody’s, the Wall Street ratings firm, to ask if the
subsidiary bankruptcy would harm the company’s pristine credit,
according to emails reviewed by Reuters. She was told it likely wouldn’t
because the agency would only consider the maneuver’s impact on the
finances of J&J, and not those of the subsidiary in bankruptcy.
The exchange underscores why the strategy was so attractive: J&J could
create a related-party bankruptcy to limit liability, while avoiding
“the burdens” of declaring bankruptcy itself, seven legal experts argued
in an amicus brief filed with the court.
Moody’s declined to comment.
In court papers, a lawyer for the J&J subsidiary said the bankruptcy
filing was a "prudent and necessary" step that "offered the only
alternative for equitably and permanently resolving" all the talc
litigation.
Last July, Reuters reported that one of J&J’s attorneys told plaintiffs’
lawyers that the company could pursue the bankruptcy plan, according to
people familiar with the matter. At the time, J&J publicly downplayed
concerns about the strategy and did not confirm that it was exploring
the option. “Johnson & Johnson Consumer Inc has not decided on any
particular course of action in this litigation other than to continue to
defend the safety of talc and litigate these cases in the tort system,
as the pending trials demonstrate,” the company told Reuters at the
time.
A few days later, in a California courtroom, a lawyer defending J&J
against talc plaintiffs told a judge that news of the bankruptcy
strategy amounted to unsubstantiated “rumors.” J&J executed the
bankruptcy plan starting on Oct. 11, taking the first steps to create
the new subsidiary. The new company swiftly filed for Chapter 11, on
Oct. 14.
'ALTERNATIVE JUSTICE SYSTEM'
The strategy, while rare, could be adopted more widely by big companies
facing liability crises if Johnson & Johnson gets bankruptcy-court
approval, according to lawyers for talc plaintiffs and some legal
experts. If J&J succeeds, they argue, it could provide a blueprint for
Corporate America on how to circumvent jury trials involving allegations
of defective products or misconduct.
Such a precedent could allow companies to routinely pursue related-party
bankruptcies to escape accountability from juries, said Melissa Jacoby,
a University of North Carolina law professor.
“That's one step closer to making bankruptcy an alternative justice
system for big corporations,” Jacoby said. “If a company as deeply
pocketed as J&J can do this, where does it stop?”
In testimony last November, a lawyer for the Johnson & Johnson
subsidiary said the company pursued the strategy in reaction to an
onslaught of litigation with the potential for outsized jury awards. A
bankruptcy court, the lawyer argued, could provide a more consistent and
equitable process for compensating claimants. Johnson & Johnson has said
it would provide a fair amount of money to the subsidiary to pay claims.
Johnson & Johnson, valued at more than $450 billion, had about $31
billion in cash and marketable securities on hand at the end of the
third quarter, securities filings show.
The New Jersey judge overseeing the subsidiary’s bankruptcy is scheduled
on Feb. 14 to begin hearing arguments on plaintiff-creditors’ contention
that the bankruptcy should be dismissed because it was filed in bad
faith.
The October bankruptcy temporarily halted the litigation against Johnson
& Johnson. LTL has said it will seek to “permanently” resolve the talc
litigation through a reorganization plan that would prohibit current and
future plaintiffs from seeking redress in a trial court. Instead, their
claims would be directed to a trust, which would divvy up a limited
amount of money through an administrative process approved by the
bankruptcy court.
TENS OF THOUSANDS OF PLAINTIFFS
J&J’s bankruptcy strategy is the latest example of the company’s efforts
to manage liability amid mounting allegations that asbestos lurks in its
iconic Baby Powder and other talc products. A December 2018 Reuters
investigation revealed that the company knew for decades about tests
showing its talc sometimes contained carcinogenic asbestos but kept that
information from regulators and the public.
Tens of thousands of plaintiffs, many with mesothelioma or ovarian
cancer, have filed lawsuits alleging that exposure to talc in J&J’s Baby
Powder and other company products made them sick. Records J&J produced
in response to those lawsuits led plaintiff lawyers to refine their
argument: The culprit wasn’t necessarily talc itself, but also asbestos
in the talc.
That assertion, backed by decades of science showing that asbestos
causes mesothelioma and is associated with ovarian and other cancers,
has had mixed success in court. The company has insisted in lawsuits and
public-relations campaigns that the product was safe and asbestos-free.
One plaintiff is Thomas McHattie, 78 years old, who traveled the world
as an obstetrician-gynecologist before receiving a mesothelioma
diagnosis in March 2020. McHattie said he recommended Baby Powder to
“countless pregnant women” while also using it himself. McHattie said he
endured five courses of chemotherapy to treat tumors in his abdomen, and
has suffered from pronounced fatigue and shortness of breath.
He sued J&J in New York in July, a few months after receiving his
diagnosis. His case had not yet gone to trial when LTL Management filed
for bankruptcy.
In a 2020 court filing, J&J said it denied “each and every allegation,
statement, matter and thing” asserted by McHattie in his lawsuit.
McHattie told Reuters in an interview that he was “disappointed they’ve
chosen to do what is expedient and not what is right.”
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A bottle of Johnson and Johnson Baby Powder is seen in a photo
illustration taken in New York, February 24, 2016. REUTERS/Mike
Segar/Illustration/File Photo
“There is no excuse for them filing
a bankruptcy,” McHattie said. “Why? This is a solvent company.”
RELEASED FROM LIABILITY
J&J’s subsidiary bankruptcy is one variation of a longstanding and
increasingly controversial tactic of limiting liability through
so-called nondebtor releases granted to companies, owners or
executives. The releases can allow companies or executives to
piggyback on the bankruptcies of other entities to obtain broad
protection from lawsuits and restrict litigation payouts. The party
receiving the release typically agrees to contribute a lump sum to
the company in bankruptcy to pay off plaintiffs in exchange for an
exemption from all future liability.
That was the case with members of the Sackler family, the
billionaire owners of Purdue Pharma LP, which filed for bankruptcy
as a hail of lawsuits alleged it had contributed to a deadly
addiction epidemic with its opioid painkiller, OxyContin. In a
landmark decision in December, a U.S. district judge in New York
invalidated Purdue’s bankruptcy reorganization plan on the grounds
that it improperly insulated the Sackler family from liability
through nondebtor releases.
Purdue has appealed the ruling. The company pleaded
guilty in November 2020 to three felonies covering misconduct
regarding its handling of opioids. Sackler family members, who also
faced litigation, have denied allegations they contributed to the
opioid crisis.
J&J’s bankruptcy takes the approach a step further. Instead of
seeking releases from liability in an existing bankruptcy
proceeding, the company created a bankruptcy by forming a company
that plaintiff-creditors allege has no business purpose other than
to limit J&J’s legal exposure.
Lawyers for talc plaintiffs contend that the J&J maneuver amounts to
an abuse of the bankruptcy system, which is intended to help a
struggling business reorganize – and not to help a well-capitalized
conglomerate limit legal liability for alleged wrongdoing.
“This case is all about litigation advantage” for J&J, said Robert
Stark, a Brown Rudnick LLP lawyer representing a creditors’
committee of talc plaintiffs during a December hearing of the
subsidiary’s bankruptcy. J&J successfully halted the claims by tens
of thousands of plaintiffs “while people are dying of cancer” and
trying to prepare their families financially for their deaths, Stark
said at the hearing. “It does not get more inhumane than that,” he
said.
The Purdue and J&J bankruptcy strategies have sparked efforts in the
U.S. Congress to stop such tactics. U.S. Senator Dick Durbin of
Illinois is co-sponsoring legislation with other Democrats that
would all but outlaw the strategy J&J is using and restrict the
ability of companies to obtain liability releases without declaring
bankruptcy themselves.
“Our bankruptcy code and civil procedure has to be explored to make
sure that this exploitation does not take place,” Durbin said in an
interview.
Business groups and some bankruptcy lawyers say that nondebtor
releases can be an effective tool to resolve litigation to the
benefit of both plaintiffs and the companies they sue. While limited
amounts for compensation are often criticized, they offer plaintiffs
better odds of getting paid than if they take their chances in trial
courts, said Donald Workman, a Baker & Hostetler restructuring
lawyer who isn’t involved in the J&J subsidiary’s case.
“You have an elegant solution to resolve burdensome if not crushing
obligations,” Workman said, that “provides funding for
constituencies that might otherwise receive nothing.”
TEXAS TWO-STEP
J&J turned to the bankruptcy plan following a series of setbacks.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration found trace amounts of
asbestos in a bottle of Baby Powder purchased online, forcing the
company to issue a recall in October 2019. In May 2020, the company
stopped selling talc-based Baby Powder in the U.S. and Canada,
citing “misinformation” and “unfounded allegations” regarding the
product's safety.
In April, J&J attorneys consulted with Jones Day lawyers, who
explained how the company could use a Texas law to split the
company’s consumer-product business into two parts. One would absorb
all the talc liability; the other would carry on the business free
from the threat of billion-dollar judgments. Texas pioneered the
so-called divisional merger, which allows companies to break apart
and more easily divvy up assets and liabilities among the resulting
companies.
Jones Day helped Georgia-Pacific, a company owned by conglomerate
Koch Industries, execute the maneuver in 2017 to offload mounting
asbestos litigation. Georgia-Pacific faced allegations regarding
asbestos exposure from building products that spanned decades.
Georgia-Pacific used the Texas law to create a new subsidiary called
Bestwall to shoulder asbestos liability. As the subsidiary declared
bankruptcy, the “new” Georgia-Pacific continued to produce Brawny
paper towels and other lucrative brands. The maneuver came to be
known in legal circles as a “Texas two-step.”
Georgia-Pacific paid nearly $3 billion in dividends to Koch over the
next several years, according to a court filing, that it might have
been unable to dole out had it filed for bankruptcy itself.
Georgia-Pacific has proposed giving Bestwall $1 billion to settle
all asbestos claims, an amount plaintiff-creditors are still
challenging in bankruptcy court.
Koch Industries and Georgia-Pacific declined to comment; Jones Day
did not respond to a request for comment.
When J&J needed help last year, it hired Dallas-based Jones Day
partner Greg Gordon and other members of the firm’s Georgia-Pacific
legal team.
As the bankruptcy planning moved forward, a major court defeat
heightened the urgency. In June of last year, J&J lost a bid to
reverse a watershed verdict in favor of 22 women who blamed their
ovarian cancer on Baby Powder and other talc products. The women had
initially won a verdict of $4.69 billion from a Missouri jury. A
state appeals court reduced the award to more than $2 billion.
PROJECT PLATO
By July 12, the company had secretly set up the Project Plato team.
The more than 30 employees staffing it came from J&J’s finance, risk
management, tax and business development operations, according to
the internal J&J memo and deposition testimony.
A week later, J&J treasurer Michelle Ryan reached out to Moody’s to
get guidance on the impact to J&J’s credit rating.
“We are looking at a number of ways of capping our talc liability,”
Ryan said in a July 19 email to Michael Levesque, a senior vice
president at the credit-ratings firm focused on pharmaceutical
companies. One scenario under consideration, Ryan said, would be to
“capture the liability in one subsidiary” and then “basically
bankrupt that subsidiary.”
Ryan asked whether the bankruptcy would hurt the company’s credit
rating. J&J at the time was one of just two U.S. companies with a
triple-A rating, the other being Microsoft.
Levesque replied that the “technical aspect” of the subsidiary
bankruptcy wasn’t likely to cause concern about J&J’s
creditworthiness. Rather, he said, Moody’s was “highly likely” to
focus on how the subsidiary’s Chapter 11 filing affected J&J’s
finances, which the maneuver intended to help.
Ryan did not respond to a request for comment.
To execute the plan, J&J created a limited liability company on Oct.
11 in Texas through a series of transactions. That company then
merged with J&J’s existing consumer products business. The merged
company then divided itself under the state’s divisional merger law,
creating the subsidiary that would take on all the talc liability.
The consumer business could then go on as if the lawsuits had never
been filed.
GREEN LIGHT
Early on the morning of Oct. 11, Andrew, the in-house J&J lawyer who
initially sent the internal memo to the Project Plato team, sent an
email to eight J&J colleagues, including several senior executives.
He asked them to approve the Texas two-step bankruptcy plan “as soon
as possible” and no later than that day, according to Andrews’ email
to his colleagues, which was reviewed by Reuters.
He attached a detailed memo outlining the impending bankruptcy’s
purported benefits. It would allow, the memo said, the bankruptcy
court to determine the final amount of money for resolving all of
the litigation, in a process enabling claims to be settled in an
“equitable and efficient manner, without the waste and abuses
experienced in the state court tort system.”
The memo warned of risks. The plan would be consummated under a
tight time frame and would be scrutinized by the media. “Appropriate
messaging (internally and externally) will be required to avoid or
mitigate misunderstandings about the nature of the restructuring and
negative publicity,” the memo said.
Andrew quickly received the green light, within hours of the
request, internal emails reviewed by Reuters show.
LTL, the new subsidiary, held its first board meeting on Oct. 14.
The board members and lawyers discussed that LTL faced what they
viewed as “exorbitant” costs if the current talc litigation barrage
continued, which included 12,000 lawsuits alone through the first
nine-and-a-half months of 2021, according to meeting minutes and
deposition testimony Reuters reviewed. The group noted that J&J
faced a total of about $5 billion in costs from judgments,
settlements and legal fees.
The board voted to pursue a Chapter 11 filing. J&J disclosed the
move in a news release that evening as one that would “equitably”
resolve the litigation.
A plaintiffs’ lawyer grilled Robert Wuesthoff – a J&J manager
appointed president of LTL Management – on that point in a Dec. 22
deposition.
“One of the considerations was to treat claimants equitably; it was
for their benefit? Is that what you're saying?” asked Jeffrey Jonas,
a Brown Rudnick lawyer representing a creditors committee comprising
talc plaintiffs.
“Yes, it would be more equitable to the claimant. Yes, we believe
that,” Wuesthoff responded.
“But the real reason we filed for bankruptcy,” the LTL executive
said, was that the large and growing amount of talc cases – some
with “lottery-size” awards – put J&J’s consumer products business in
“financial distress.”
(Reporting by Mike Spector and Dan Levine; editing by Janet Roberts
and Brian Thevenot)
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