Florida Jury Hits Big Tobacco in the Pocketbook
A Florida jury has ordered cigarette maker R.J. Reynolds to pay $30 million in damages to a woman whose husband, a long-time cigarette smoker, died of lung cancer.
Benny Martin of Pensacola, who died in 1995, took up smoking 20 years before cigarette packs carried health warnings, according to lawyers in the case, who argued that R.J. Reynolds hid the health risks of smoking while making cigarettes increasingly addictive.
The Pensacola jury agreed, ordering R.J. Reynolds to pay $5 million in compensatory damages and another $25 million in punitive damages to Martin’s widow and family.
R.J. Reynolds has announced that it will appeal the verdict, the Winston-Salem Journal reports.
Last month, a federal appeals court in D.C. upheld a lower court ruling which found that big tobacco companies engaged in a decades-long pattern of deception over the dangers of smoking, in violation of federal fraud and racketeering laws.
And in March, the U.S. Supreme Court nixed cigarette giant Philip Morris’s appeal to overturn a $79.5 million award of punitive damages order in Oregon, which also was won by the widow of a cigarette smoker.
You Don’t Have To Solve This on Your Own – Get a Lawyer’s Help
Civil Rights
Block on Trump’s Asylum Ban Upheld by Supreme Court
Criminal
Judges Can Release Secret Grand Jury Records
Politicians Can’t Block Voters on Facebook, Court Rules