3M Penalised With $110M Earplug Verdict In Florida

3M Penalised With $110M Earplug Verdict In Florida
Thu, 03/03/2022 - 08:11

Two U.S. service members who suffered hearing damage from using 3M earplugs have been awarded $110 million in damages by a Florida federal jury.

The U.S. Army veterans have been awarded punitive damages of $15 million and $40 million as they experienced tinnitus and hearing loss because of the usage of 3M's CAEv2 earplugs. As per the plaintiffs' attorneys, it is the largest verdict in the growing 3M earplug's MDL.

The attorneys even stated that the verdict is a part of a "sustained track record" of juries who rejected 3M's defenses and awarded each bellwether plaintiff with an adequate settlement. 3M responded to the verdict by stating that the juries must not consolidate multiple plaintiffs' cases into one jury trial as each case will have its own facts and circumstances.

The company even added that it will continue to defend its CAEv2 product throughout the litigation as the company's values and commitment is consistent in terms of providing safe products to U.S. military members. 3M has even indicated that it will appeal against the verdict.

Last month, federal juries awarded two consecutive bellwether cases in favor of 3M. So far, plaintiffs have won six of the 11 bellwether cases against 3M. This year five more 3M trials are scheduled in the federal court.

The 3M MDL includes nearly 300,000 service members who allege that the earplugs are defective in design which leads to hearing loss.


$114M Settlement For Rhode Island Over Opioid Crisis

$114M Settlement For Rhode Island Over Opioid Crisis
Thu, 03/03/2022 - 08:05

A settlement of more than $114 million has been reached between Rhode Island and opioid manufacturer and distributors over the opioid crisis in the state.

State Attorney General Peter Neronha announced that opioid manufacturer, Johnson & Johnson (J&J) will pay $21.1 million and opioid distributors, AmerisourceBergen, Cardinal Health and McKesson will pay  $90.8 million of the settlement amount. The settlement amount will be used to fight the opioid crisis and help opioid-addicted people.

The AG even stated that all these companies prioritized profits by overseeing the drawbacks of addictive opioids. The current settlement is separate from the nationwide $26 billion opioid settlement where most of the U.S. states have joined for a coordinated result.

Rhode Island will get the settlement amount within the next few weeks, and the second payment is expected in July. It also ensures that the state will get the money irrelevant to the final approval of the global opioid settlement.

The state will put an advisory board to decide how to use 80% of the settlement amount as 20% will be directly distributed to cities and towns to fight the opioid crisis.

The U.S. has witnessed hundreds of thousands of opioid overdose deaths and the drug distributors, along with J&J, face more than 3,300 lawsuits in federal courts across the nation.