Greg Gordon, a lawyer for J&J subsidiary LTL Management LLC, raised
during a hearing before U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Michael Kaplan the
idea of a court-appointed examiner that could "come in and do
whatever investigation it wants" to determine whether the
restructuring short-changed cancer victims.
Bankruptcy judges have wide discretion over the scope and budget for
an appointed examiner. Any such examination would be contingent on
LTL remaining in bankruptcy, an arrangement that cancer plaintiffs
oppose.
Cancer plaintiffs have asked Kaplan to dismiss LTL's bankruptcy case
and allow them to resume the lawsuits against J&J. Kaplan, who
presided over a week-long hearing on the matter in Trenton, New
Jersey, has said he will decide by the end of the month whether to
dismiss the case.
J&J is attempting to use LTL's bankruptcy case to resolve about
38,000 lawsuits alleging the company's talc products caused ovarian
cancer and mesothelioma, an illness linked to asbestos exposure. J&J
maintains that its talc products are safe and asbestos-free, but
attorneys for LTL argued that bankruptcy is the only practical way
to resolve the sheer volume of lawsuits.
During closing arguments in the hearing, Gordon floated the option
of an independent examiner to clear the air after lawyers for cancer
victims argued the bankruptcy was improper.
J&J, which has a stock market value of more than $400 billion,
created LTL to take on the responsibility for the cancer lawsuits in
October 2021. LTL filed for bankruptcy just days later. Cancer
plaintiffs have called the corporate restructuring and bankruptcy
"rotten to the core."
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Legal experts have dubbed this
type of maneuver a "Texas two-step" because it
exploited a Texas law that allows a company to
split into two via a so-called divisive merger,
saddling one company with liabilities while the
other takes valuable assets.
Gordon said if a court-ordered investigation
finds evidence of improper corporate
maneuvering, the talc plaintiffs would be able
to sue for fraud related to the restructuring
while the bankruptcy case proceeds.
In the bankruptcy of media company Tribune Co,
an examiner found evidence of dishonesty in the
media company's disastrous 2007 leveraged
buyout, ultimately leading to a $200 million
settlement of related fraud claims in 2019.
Before Gordon raised the possibility of an
examiner, the U.S. Justice Department's
bankruptcy watchdog suggested another
alternative path, saying on Thursday that the
court should consider appointing a Chapter 11
trustee to take over LTL's operations from the
J&J-appointment management team.
(Reporting by Dietrich Knauth, Tom Hals and Mike
Spector; Editing by Will Dunham and Amy Stevens)
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