Smoker wins $28-billion judgment
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Deepa Bharath
NEWPORT BEACH -- A Los Angeles Superior Court jury on Friday
awarded an unprecedented $28 billion in punitive damages to a
64-year-old Newport Beach woman.
Betty Bullock, a longtime smoker with terminal lung cancer, had
accused tobacco giant Philip Morris of negligence and fraud.
Last week, jurors awarded Bullock $850,000 in compensatory
damages. Bullock, who has been smoking since she was 17, primarily
smoked Benson and Hedges cigarettes, a popular brand manufactured by
Philip Morris.
Bullock’s attorney, Mike Piuze, said that Philip Morris “got
exactly what it deserved.”
“Philip Morris did not deny that they purposely misled all of
their addicted smokers about the dangers of smoking and gave them
false hope,” he said. “Miss Bullock admitted that she was partially
responsible for her fate because she believed their lies.
“Philip Morris never apologized to her,” he said.
Bullock knows she will probably never see any of the money from
the award, Piuze said. Her plan is to use the money to set up a
foundation “to prevent youth smoking, prevent smoking initiation and
to encourage smoking cessation by other addicted smokers.
“In this way, maybe something positive can come from her
misfortune,” he said.
In her lawsuit, Bullock claimed that Philip Morris made and sold
cigarettes that were defective. Further, she claimed that the company
concealed the addictiveness of nicotine and the nature and extent of
its dangers, and manipulated the level of nicotine to keep smokers,
including her, addicted.
The $28 billion is the largest punitive award ever in a U.S. case.
Philip Morris attorney William Ohlemeyer said the company will
appeal the jury’s verdict. The decision should be overturned “because
it is inconsistent with the evidence and applicable law,” he said.
“This jury should have focused on what the plaintiff knew about
the health risks of smoking and whether the company ever said or did
[anything that] improperly influenced her decision to smoke or not to
quit,” he said.
The company intends to file a motion in trial court to set aside
the verdict and order a new trial. Failing that, it will ask the
court to reduce the amount of punitive damages awarded, Philip Morris
officials said. In addition, they said they would appeal the decision
to the state Court of Appeals.
The case was initially filed in state court. It was removed three
times to federal court and sent back three times to the state court.
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at deepa.bharath@ latimes.com.
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