The widow who won a $23.6 billion lawsuit against R.J. Reynolds talks to TIME about the suit and what she hopes the victory will accomplish
http://time.com/3016961/23-6-billion-la ... awake-now/
Is it $23 billion or million?
The widow who won a $23.6 billion lawsuit against R.J. Reynolds talks to TIME about the suit and what she hopes the victory will accomplish
http://time.com/3016961/23-6-billion-la ... awake-now/
You read it correctly, Billion, with a B. RJR is appealing for obvious reasons.Is it $23 billion or million?
Carbon wrote:You read it correctly, Billion, with a B. RJR is appealing for obvious reasons.Is it $23 billion or million?
16 billion in medical costs, loss of a loved one, etc. The rest as punitive damages.WilliamsF1 wrote:Carbon wrote:You read it correctly, Billion, with a B. RJR is appealing for obvious reasons.Is it $23 billion or million?
On what basis were damages awarded?
beelsebob wrote: 16 billion in medical costs, loss of a loved one, etc. The rest as punitive damages.
As far as I'm concerned, it seems fair. If you do business selling something you know will kill people, and advertising that they should do something that will kill them with it, then... you should be liable when those people die.
Note, the case was won explicitly because the company did not advertise any of the risks, and in fact advertised it as a good and healthy thing to do.
It's called personal responsibility Bob.beelsebob wrote: 16 billion in medical costs, loss of a loved one, etc. The rest as punitive damages.
As far as I'm concerned, it seems fair. If you do business selling something you know will kill people, and advertising that they should do something that will kill them with it, then... you should be liable when those people die.
Note, the case was won explicitly because the company did not advertise any of the risks, and in fact advertised it as a good and healthy thing to do.
I have no problem with verdicts for those who died long before there was any information about the dangers of tobacco use, but once it became well-known what the ramifications of it were, that becomes the responsibility of the users.FoxHound wrote:Seems like smoking 60 a day was never gonna kill you back in the 80s, which had even back then had vast information regards the health implications of smoking.
This here is being held up against the tobacco industry because "profit came before it's duty to the public".
Well if that's the case.... I'm opening a case against ikea, that sold me a bed with dangerous screws my nephew could've swallowed. There was no warning label either, so I must be right.
Absolute bullshit.
I smoke. I respect those that don't. I even respect their wish that I go outside to light up.
But I ain't kidding myself that this was ever going to ever do anything but physical damage.
McDonald's must quaking in their boots I tell you.
Makes you wonder what qualifies as human intellect these days.GitanesBlondes wrote:Unreal.
Actually - that was exactly the finding of the court - these specific packs didn't have a warning, and that's why she won.flynfrog wrote:From the time the guy started smoking the packs of cigarettes had a warning label on them....
I haven't read the briefing the the Surgeon General required all packs of cigarettes to carry warning labels starting in 65. It had been well published for a decade that cigarettes are bad for you. So where was this guy getting smokes from?beelsebob wrote:Actually - that was exactly the finding of the court - these specific packs didn't have a warning, and that's why she won.flynfrog wrote:From the time the guy started smoking the packs of cigarettes had a warning label on them....
The 1964 report on smoking and health had an impact on public attitudes and policy. A Gallup Survey conducted in 1958 found that only 44 percent of Americans believed smoking caused cancer, while 78 percent believed so by 1968. In the course of a decade, it had become common knowledge that smoking damaged health, and mounting evidence of health risks gave Terry's 1964 report public resonance. Yet, while the report proclaimed that "cigarette smoking is a health hazard of sufficient importance in the United States to warrant appropriate remedial action," it remained silent on concrete remedies. That challenge fell to politicians. In 1965, Congress required all cigarette packages distributed in the United States to carry a health warning, and since 1970 this warning is made in the name of the Surgeon General. In 1969, cigarette advertising on television and radio was banned, effective September 1970.