Current:Home > ScamsJohnson & Johnson offers to pay $6.5 billion to settle talc ovarian cancer lawsuits -ValueCore
Johnson & Johnson offers to pay $6.5 billion to settle talc ovarian cancer lawsuits
View
Date:2025-04-14 21:43:59
Johnson & Johnson said Wednesday it has offered to pay $6.5 billion to settle allegations that its talc products caused cancer, a key step in the pharmaceutical giant potentially resolving decades of litigation over what was once one of the most widely used consumer products in the U.S.
The proposal is aimed at ending a protracted legal battle stemming from thousands of lawsuits that accused J&J of selling products that allegedly led women to develop ovarian cancer, in some cases causing their death.
J&J maintains that its talc products are safe. But the company stopped selling talc-based items in 2020, and two years later announced plans to cease sales of the product worldwide.
The company said the proposal would settle 99.75% of the pending talc lawsuits in the U.S. The legal actions not covered by the proposal relate to mesothelioma, a rare cancer that affects the lungs and other organs. The company said it would address those suits outside the proposed settlement.
"The Plan is the culmination of our consensual resolution strategy that we announced last October," Erik Haas, worldwide vice president of litigation for J&J, said in a statement Wednesday. "Since then, the Company has worked with counsel representing the overwhelming majority of talc claimants to bring this litigation to a close, which we expect to do through this plan."
Johnson & Johnson made its settlement offer as part of a bankruptcy reorganization plan for a subsidiary, LLT Management, that J&J said would give ovarian claimants three months to vote for or against the plan.
While the majority of law firms support the plan, attorneys for some plaintiffs dismissed the settlement offer, saying "would cheat victims legitimately harmed by talc."
"We believe any bankruptcy based on this solicitation and vote will be found fraudulent and filed in bad faith under the Bankruptcy Code," Andy Birchfield, head of the Mass Torts Section at the Beasley Allen Law Firm, said in a statement to CBS MoneyWatch. "On behalf of our clients who deserve better, we are blowing the whistle on this cynical legal tactic and will resist it at every turn."
- In:
- Johnson & Johnson
Megan Cerullo is a New York-based reporter for CBS MoneyWatch covering small business, workplace, health care, consumer spending and personal finance topics. She regularly appears on CBS News 24/7 to discuss her reporting.
veryGood! (4637)
Related
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Stock market rebounds after S&P 500 slides into a correction. What's next for your 401(k)?
- Army said Maine shooter should not have gun, requested welfare check
- Florida health clinic owner sentenced in $36 million fraud scheme that recruited fake patients
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- As Israel ramps up its ground war, Hamas says death toll in Gaza Strip has soared over 8,000
- Zoë Kravitz and Channing Tatum Are Engaged After 2 Years of Dating
- Alabama Trump supporter indicted for allegedly threatening Fulton County D.A. and sheriff
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- How The Golden Bachelor's Susan Noles Really Feels About Those Kris Jenner Comparisons
Ranking
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Progressive 'Bernie Brew' owner ordered to pay record $750,000 for defaming conservative publisher
- India-led alliance set to fund solar projects in Africa in a boost to the energy transition
- ACC releases college football schedules for 2024-30 with additions of Stanford, Cal, SMU
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- 'Bun in the oven' is an ancient pregnancy metaphor. This historian says it has to go
- Some 5,000 migrants set out on foot from Mexico’s southern border, tired of long waits for visas
- Ex-military couple hit with longer prison time in 4th sentencing in child abuse case
Recommendation
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
Wife of Grammy winner killed by Nashville police sues city over ‘excessive, unreasonable force’
Matthew Perry mourned by ‘Friends’ cast mates: ‘We are all so utterly devastated’
Army said Maine shooter should not have gun, requested welfare check
This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
2 Georgia State University students, 2 others shot near campus in downtown Atlanta
U.S. says Russia executing soldiers who refuse to fight in Ukraine
A North Carolina woman and her dad enter pleas in the beating death of her Irish husband