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J&J Unit Files for Second Bankruptcy to Pursue $8.9 Billion Talc Cancer Settlement

Pharmaceutical giant Johnson & Johnson has proposed an $8.9 billion settlement to resolve thousands of lawsuits accusing the company of selling baby powder and other talc products that caused cancer.

The pharma firm shared details of the proposal in an April 4 statement announcing that it has re-filed its subsidiary LTL Management LLC for voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, a move it said could “equitably and efficiently resolve all claims arising from cosmetic talc litigation against the Company and its affiliates in North America.”

Johnson & Johnson created the LTL subsidiary in October to house its liabilities stemming from more than 40,000 lawsuits alleging the company’s baby powder and other talc products contained traces of asbestos, which has been blamed for causing ovarian cancer and mesothelioma, a deadly cancer that affects the lining of the lungs.

The LTL immediately filed for bankruptcy.

However, the U.S. Third Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia in January dismissed the bankruptcy, ruling that neither J&J nor the subsidiary had a legitimate need for bankruptcy protection because they were not in “financial distress.”

Tuesday’s bankruptcy protection filing marks the second time LTL Management has filed for Chapter 11 with the intent to present a reorganization plan with the proposed settlement to a judge as soon as May 14.

Johnson & Johnson and its other affiliates did not file for bankruptcy protection and will continue to operate their businesses as usual.

Settlement Details

According to the announcement, Johnson & Johnson has agreed to pay out up to $8.9 billion over 25 years to resolve all current and future talc claims, which is an increase of $6.9 billion over the $2 billion previously committed in LTL’s initial bankruptcy filing in October 2021.

The proposed settlement still needs the approval of a bankruptcy court, but the company said it had secured commitments from over 60,000 current claimants to support the new terms.

Johnson & Johnson announced in 2020 that it would stop selling its baby powder in the United States and Canada over what it called “misinformation” about the product, and said it would phase out sales of those products worldwide in 2023.

In Tuesday’s announcement, Johnson & Johnson said that neither its original filing for bankruptcy nor its re-filing amount to an admission of wrongdoing or an “indication that the company has changed its longstanding position that its talcum powder products are safe.”

“More than 40 years of studies by medical experts around the world continue to support the safety of cosmetic talc,” the company said. “Nonetheless, resolving this matter as quickly and efficiently as possible is in the best interests of the Company and all stakeholders.”

“The Company continues to believe that these claims are specious and lack scientific merit,” said Erik Haas, worldwide vice president of litigation at Johnson & Johnson.

J&J Touts Bankruptcy Plan

“However, as the Bankruptcy Court recognized, resolving these cases in the tort system would take decades and impose significant costs on LTL and the system, with most claimants never receiving any compensation. Resolving this matter through the proposed reorganization plan is both more equitable and more efficient, allows claimants to be compensated in a timely manner, and enables the Company to remain focused on our commitment to profoundly and positively impact health for humanity,” Haas said.

Leigh O’Dell, one of the lead attorneys representing plaintiffs in the talc lawsuits, told CNBC on Tuesday that Johnson & Johnson is “seeking an extremely deep discount on justice and is not really offering anything other than another bankruptcy and more delay, delay, and delay.”

“This new filing should be viewed as a shameful attempt to run out the clock on people dying of cancer and convince some lawyers to give up,” she said.

However, Mikal Watts, one of the plaintiff lawyers who negotiated the proposed settlement, said it is “the culmination of a job well done” and that J&J is committed to “fairly compensate these deserving women” who have dealt with cancer as a result of the talc products.

J&J said last month it ask the Supreme Court to revise its effort to resolve the thousands of lawsuits by putting its subsidiary through bankruptcy.

READ 2 COMMENTS
  • John says:

    So happy to hear that, bye-bye anti-white racist communist backing, Democrat contributing, luciferian agenda demons , have a nice company collapse, just the start of demonic woke dope fascist government controlled companies going down under this Satan worshiping Democrat New World Order of luciferian agenda

    • Diaper Wipes Biden says:

      Biden will bail them out and get his 10% which would be 89 million right? And lay it all on the taxpayers of course. After all they do make his diaper wipes!!! So it’s vital that we pay for their bailout.

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