IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
FOR THE COUNTY OF PALM BEACH
STATE OF FLORIDA
THE STATE OF FLORIDA, LAWTON M. CHILES, JR.,
Individually and as GOVERNOR OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA, DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS
AND PROFESSIONAL REGULATIONS, and THE AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION,
Plaintiffs,
v.
THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY; AMERICAN BRANDS,
INC.; R.J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY; RJR NABISCO, INC.; B.A.T. INDUSTRIES,
PLC; BATUS HOLDINGS, INC.; BROWN & WILLIAMSON TOBACCO CORPORATION;
PHILIP MORRIS COMPANIES, INC.; PHILIP MORRIS INCORPORATED (PHILIP MORRIS
U.S.A.); LIGGETT GROUP, INC.; LIGGETT & MYERS, INC.; BROOKE GROUP,
LIMITED;
THE BROOKE GROUP LTD., INC.;
LOEWS CORPORATION; LORILLARD CORPORATION; UNITED
STATES TOBACCO COMPANY; UST INC.; THE COUNCIL FOR TOBACCO RESEARCH -- U.S.A.
INC. (SUCCESSOR TO TOBACCO INSTITUTE RESEARCH COMMITTEE); THE TOBACCO INSTITUTE,
INC.; HILL & KNOWLTON, INC.; BRITISH AMERICAN TOBACCO CO., LTD.; DOSAL
TOBACCO CORP., INC.,
Defendants.
Civil Action No. 95-1466AO
February 21, 1995
COMPLAINT
INTRODUCTION
1. Cigarette-related disease has killed and continues
to kill untold millions of Americans. In the name of profits, cigarette
manufacturers choose to ignore and suppress the truth about the hazards
of cigarette smoking. As a result, Medicaid recipients have contracted
smoking-related diseases including without limitation cancer, emphysema,
and heart disease. The care of these Medicaid recipients has placed a significant
burden on the State. This burden should rightfully be borne by the cigarette
manufacturers. The Governor of the State of Florida has determined that
the State of Florida can no longer afford to allow cigarette manufacturers
to reap this windfall. Therefore, the Governor, the State of Florida and
its various agencies as set out below have filed this lawsuit to force
the cigarette manufacturers to pay for the health care crises their products
have caused. The defendants have significantly benefited over many years
from not having to pay the medical costs of the impoverished Medicaid
recipients injured by their products and behavior. The defendants have
been able to privatize the profits while socializing the costs of their
misconduct. The impact on the State of Florida and its taxpayers has been
felt in every department as the dollars flow out.
2. The Governor, the State of Florida, the Department
for Business and Professional Regulation and the Agency for Health Care
Administration do hereby bring this action pursuant to Florida Statute
§ 409.910, et seq., as well as for the purposes of obtaining
reimbursement for all money paid for medical assistance to Medicaid recipients
as a result of diseases or injuries caused by the foreseeable and intended
use of the defendants' tobacco products, cigarettes.
3. For many years, the State has incurred significant
expenses associated with the provision of necessary health care and other
such necessary assistance under the Medicaid programs to Medicaid recipients
numbering in the thousands who suffer, or who have suffered, from tobacco-related
injuries, diseases or sickness. This civil action sounds in both equity
and common law and is also brought pursuant to Florida Statute § 409.910,
et seq., to obtain reimbursement of the State for the expenditures
made to provide medical assistance to Medicaid recipients as a result of
the actions of the defendants.
4. The defendants are a cartel who promote, market, distribute
and sell cigarettes, and/or materially assist others in so doing to residents
in Florida, and elsewhere throughout the United States, and have done so
for many years. Under the Medicaid program, the State pays out large sums
of money for the provision of necessary health care and other necessary
assistance to eligible residents in Florida ("Medicaid recipients"),
who have been and are now being treated in Palm Beach County, Florida,
and elsewhere throughout the State, for tobacco-induced disease, injury
and sickness, and the State has done so for many years. Thus, venue is
proper in the Circuit Court of Palm Beach County, Florida.
5. The defendants are certain cigarette manufacturers
and certain of their trade organizations and public relations firms that,
at all pertinent times, manufactured, tested, designed, promoted, marketed,
packaged, sold, distributed, and/or placed into the stream of commerce
in and into the State numerous brands of defective, unreasonably dangerous
and hazardous cigarettes, or other tobacco products, or. in the course
of business, materially participated with, conspired with and/or otherwise
aided, abetted and assisted others in so doing.
6. The tobacco products, cigarettes, for which these defendants
are responsible are substantially interchangeable.
7. Substantially similar issues, both legal and factual,
are involved in determining the liability of each of these defendants.
8. At all pertinent times, the defendants purposefully
and intentionally engaged in these activities, and continue to do so, knowing
full well that when the State's residents used those cigarettes as they
were intended to be used, that the State's residents would be substantially
certain to suffer disease, injury and sickness, including cancer, emphysema,
heart disease and other illnesses causing disability and death and that
the State itself would be economically injured thereby.
9. Also at all pertinent times, the defendants purposefully
and intentionally engaged in these activities, and continue to do so, knowing
full well that the State would confer a benefit upon the defendants by
providing or paying for health care and other necessary medical goods and
services for certain of the State's residents thus harmed by the intended
use of the defendants' cigarettes, and, in the absence of performance of
such duty by the defendants, that the State itself thereby would be harmed.
10. Plaintiffs are not, at this time, making a claim for
punitive damages but expect at the appropriate time to make a showing which
supports an award of punitive damages and to thereafter amend their complaint
pursuant to § 768.72 of the Florida Statutes.
11. The allegations made herein on information belief
are based on information now available to the plaintiffs. Further information
regarding the conduct of the defendants will be sought by plaintiffs through
discovery.
PARTIES
PLAINTIFFS
12. Plaintiff, the State of Florida, is a sovereign state
of the United States.
13. Plaintiff, LAWTON M. Chiles, Jr. ("Chiles"),
is a citizen, resident, and taxpayer of the United States and Florida.
Chiles is the Governor of the State of Florida and, pursuant to Article
IV of the Florida Constitution, exercises the supreme executive power of
the State of Florida. The Governor is also responsible for initial preparation
of the State budget which must be balanced. See Article VII, §
l(d), Florida Constitution; and Florida Statutes § 216.162 (1993).
As such, the Governor must take responsibility for recommending to the
Florida legislature that there either be cuts in other important State
spending or increases in Florida taxes to cover the costs of providing
essential services to Medicaid recipients. Chiles brings this action in
his individual and official capacities.
14. The Department of Business and Professional Regulations
("DBPR") is a department of the State of Florida pursuant to
§ 20.165 Florida Statutes (1993).
15. The Agency for Health Care Administration ("AHCA")
is a separate State of Florida government budget entity within the DBPR,
pursuant to § 20.42 Florida Statutes (1993) and is authorized by Florida
Statute § 409.910, et seq., to initiate this action.
DEFENDANTS
16. The American Tobacco Company is a Delaware corporation
whose principal place of business is or was located at 6 Stamford Forum,
Stamford, Connecticut 06904. The American Tobacco Company is a subsidiary
or division of American Brands, Inc. as of December, 1994.
17. American Brands, Inc., is a Delaware corporation whose
principal place of business is located at 1700 East Putnam Avenue, Old
Greenwich, Connecticut 06870. American Brands, Inc. is the parent corporation
of or the successor in interest to The American Tobacco Company and has
participated in the manufacture and distribution of cigarettes and other
tobacco products both individually and through its agent and alter ego
the defendant American Tobacco Company.
18. RJ. Reynolds Tobacco Company is a New Jersey corporation
whose principal place of business is located at 4th & Main Street,
Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27102. R.J. Reynolds is a wholly-owned subsidiary
of RJR Nabisco, Inc.
19. RJR Nabisco, Inc. is a Delaware corporation whose
principal place of business is 1301 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New
York 10015. RJR Nabisco is the parent corporation of R. J. Reynolds Tobacco
Company and has participated in the sale and manufacture of cigarettes
and other tobacco products both individually and through its agent or alter
ego defendant R J. Reynolds.
20. B.AT. Industries PLC, is a British corporation whose
registered office is located at Windsor House, 50 Victoria Street, London,
England SWIH ONL, which manufactured and sold cigarettes and other tobacco
products through its agent or alter ego Brown & Williamson.
21. British American Tobacco Co., Ltd., is a British corporation
whose principal place of business is Millbank, Knowle Green, Staines, Middlesex,
England TW181DY. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corporation is or was a
subsidiary or division of British American Tobacco Co., Ltd.
22. Batus Holdings, Inc., is a Delaware corporation with
its principal place of business at 1500 Brown & Williamson Tower, Louisville,
Kentucky 40202. Batus Holding, Inc., is a subsidiary of B.A.T. Industries
PLC. Batus Holdings, Inc. is or has been the parent corporation of Brown
& Williamson Tobacco Corporation and has participated in the manufacture
and distribution of cigarettes and other tobacco products both individually
and through its agent and alter ego the defendant Brown & Williamson.
23. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corporation is a Delaware
corporation whose principal place of business is located at 1500 Brown
& Williamson Tower, Louisville, Kentucky 40202. Brown & Williamson
Tobacco Corporation is or was a subsidiary or division of Batus Holdings,
Inc., and is a subsidiary or division of B.A.T. Industries PLC.
24. Philip Morris Companies, Inc., is a Virginia corporation
whose principal place of business is located at 120 Park Avenue, New York,
New York 10016. Philip Morris Companies, Inc., is the parent corporation
of Philip Morris Incorporated (Philip Morris U.S.A.) and has participated
in the manufacture and distribution of cigarettes and other tobacco products
both individually and through its agent and alter ego the defendant Philip
Morris Incorporated (Philip Morris U.S.A.)
25. Philip Morris Incorporated (Philip Morris U.S.A.),
a subsidiary of Philip Morris Companies, Inc., is a Virginia corporation
whose principal place of business is located at 120 Park Avenue, New York,
New York 10016.
26. The Brooke Group, Limited, the parent corporation
of Liggett Group, Inc. and Liggett & Myers, Inc., ("Brooke")
is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business at 300 North
Duke Street, Durham, North Carolina. Brooke participated in the manufacture
and sale of cigarettes and/or other tobacco products both individually
and through its agents or alter egos Liggett Group and Liggett & Myers.
27. The Brooke Group LTD., Inc., is a Florida corporation
doing business throughout the State of Florida during all times material
herein, including Palm Beach County, Florida.
28. Liggett Group, Inc., is a Delaware corporation whose
principal place of business is located at Main & Fuller Streets, Durham,
North Carolina 27702, and has participated in the manufacture and distribution
of cigarettes and other tobacco products both individually and through
its agent and alter ego the defendant Liggett & Myers, Inc.
29. Liggett & Myers, Inc., is a Delaware corporation
whose principal place of business is located at Main & Fuller Streets,
Durham, North Carolina 27702. Liggett & Myers, Inc., is a wholly-owned
subsidiary or division of Liggett Group, Inc.
30. Loews Corporation is a Delaware corporation whose
principal place of business is located at 1 Park Avenue, New York, New
York 10016. Loews Corporation participated in the manufacture and sale
of cigarettes and/or other tobacco products both individually and through
its agent or alter ego Lorillard Corporation.
31. Lorillard Corporation is a Delaware corporation whose
principal place of business is located at 1 Park Avenue, New York, New
York 10016. Lorillard Corporation is a wholly-owned subsidiary or division
of Loews Corporation.
32. United States Tobacco Company and its parent UST,
Inc., are Delaware corporations whose principal place of business are located
at 100 West Putnam Avenue, Greenwich, Connecticut. UST participated in
the manufacture and sale of cigarettes both individually and/or through
its agent or alter ego United States Tobacco.
33. The Council for Tobacco Research -- U.S.A. Inc. (successor
in interest to the Tobacco Institute Research Committee) is a nonprofit
corporation organized under the laws of the State of New York with its
principal place of business located at 900 3rd Avenue, New York New York
10022.
34. The Tobacco Institute, Inc. is a non-profit corporation
organized under the laws of the State of New York with its principal place
of business located at 1875 "I" Street N.W., Suite 800, Washington,
D.C. 20006.
35. Hill & Knowlton, Inc., is a Delaware corporation
with its principal place of business located at 420 Lexington Avenue, New
York, New York 10070.
36. Dosal Tobacco Corp., Inc., is a Florida corporation
with its principal place of business located at 13700 Northwest 19th Avenue,
Bay 2-3-4, Miami Florida 33054 (Opalaka, Florida). Dosal Tobacco Corp.,
Inc. is a manufactgurer of cigarettes and other tobacco products.
37. The defendants listed herein, and/or their predecessors
and/or their successors in interest, are either organized under the laws
of (i) Florida or (ii) a state other than Florida, or (iii) are partnerships
or other unincorporated associations with principal places of business
both within and without Florida, and each subject to suit under a common
name, who have either obtained certificates of authority to transact business
in Florida, or who transacted business in Florida without a certificate
of authority, but within the contemplation of § 48.193 of the Florida
Statutes.
38. The American Tobacco Company, American Brands, Inc.,
RJ. Reynolds Tobacco Company, RJR Nabisco, Inc., B.A.T. Industries PLC,
British American Tobacco Co., Ltd., Batus Corporation, Brown & Williamson
Tobacco Corporation, Philip Morris Companies, Inc., Philip Morris Incorporated
(Philip Morris U.S.A.), Liggett Group, Inc., Liggett & Myers, Inc.,
Brooke Group LTD., Inc., Brooke Group, Limited, Loews Corporation, Lorillard
Corporation, United States Tobacco Company, UST, Inc. collectively, are
referred to hereinafter as the "Tobacco Companies."
39. The Council for Tobacco Research -- U.S.A. Inc., (successor
to The Tobacco Institute Research Committee) and The Tobacco Institute,
Inc., collectively, are referred to hereinafter as the "Tobacco Trade
Associations."
40. Hill & Knowlton, Inc. is referred to hereinafter
as the "Tobacco Consultant."
41. West Brothers, Inc., is referred to hereinafter as
the "Tobacco Wholesaler."
JURISDICTION
42. Jurisdiction over all foreign corporation defendants
is proper pursuant to the Long-Arm Statute of Florida, Florida Statutes
§ 48.139.
43. The jurisdiction of the Circuit Court over this action
is set out in Florida Statutes § 26.012 (1994).
44. The damages sought by the State exceed the $15,000
minimum amount required for Circuit Court jurisdiction.
VENUE
45. Venue is proper in the Circuit Court for Palm Beach
County.
STATUTORY AUTHORITY
46. The Florida Legislature has authorized the AHCA to
initiate actions to recover the full amount of medical assistance provided
by Medicaid. Fl. St. § 409.910.
47. The AHCA is authorized by Florida Statutes §
409.910(9) to initiate or bring an action in order to recover in one proceeding
all sums paid to provide medical assistance to all Medicaid recipients
provided that (1) medical assistance has been provided to more than one
recipient; and (2) AHCA is seeking recovery from liable third parties due
to the actions by the third parties or circumstances which involve common
issues of fact or law.
48. As the conduct allegations set out below show, the
liability of the defendants involves common issues of both law and fact.
49. The Statutes further provide that in accordance with
the common law the issues of causation and damages may be proven by the
use of statistical analysis. F1. St. § 409.910(9).
50. As the number of recipients for which Medicaid assistance
has been provided is so large that it would be impractical to join
or identify each claim, the AHCA elects, pursuant to Florida Statutes §
410.910(9)(a), to proceed to seek recovery based on payments made on behalf
of the entire class of recipients whose diseases are the result of the
intended and foreseeable use of the cigarettes for which the defendants
are liable.
51. The defendants herein are liable as third parties
as a result of their participation in the manufacture, sale or distribution
of cigarettes. These cigarettes are substantially interchangeable and a
determination of the liability of each individual defendant involves the
resolution of common issues of both fact and law. As a result, the State
shall proceed under a market share theory.
THE BASIS OF LIABILITY
52. As enumerated below. the liability of the defendants
is grounded alternatively in the common law and equity and in the Medicaid
Third Party Liability Act, as amended.
CONDUCT ALLEGATIONS
53. At all pertinent times, defendants acted through their
duly authorized agents, servants, and employees who were then acting in
the course and scope of their employment, and in furtherance of the businesses
of said defendants. At all pertinent times, the Tobacco Wholesaler was
authorized retail and/or wholesale distributors, sellers, and/or dealers
of and on behalf of the Tobacco Companies. At all pertinent times, the
Tobacco Wholesaler and the Tobacco Trade Associations were the agents,
servants, and/or employees of the Tobacco Companies and acted within the
scope of said agency, servitude and/or employment. At all pertinent times,
the Tobacco Consultant was the agent, servant, and/or employee of the Tobacco
Companies and/or the Tobacco Trade Associations and acted within the scope
of said agency, servitude and/or employment.
54. The defendants listed above, and/or their predecessors
and successors in interest, did business in the State of Florida; made
contracts to be performed in whole or in part in Florida; and/or manufactured,
tested, sold, offered for sale, supplied or placed in the stream of commerce,
or, in the course of business, materially participated with others in so
doing, cigarettes which the defendants knew to be defective, unreasonably
dangerous and hazardous, and which the defendants knew would be substantially
certain to cause injury to the State and to persons within Florida thereby
negligently and intentionally causing injury to persons within Florida
and to the State, and as described herein, committed and continue to commit
tortious and other unlawful acts in the State of Florida.
55. The defendants, and/or their predecessors and successors
in interest, performed such acts as were intended to, and did, result in
the sale and distribution of cigarettes in the State of Florida.
56. Cigarette-related disease has killed, and continues
to kill, untold millions of Americans. The Centers for Disease Control
("CDC") has estimated that over 400,000 persons die each year
from smoking. This death toll is 26 times more deaths than from illegal
drugs and is more than the casualties suffered by the U. S. armed forces
in the 20th Century. Approximately one in five deaths is attributable to
smoking. Thousands of Florida residents die each year as a result of smoking
cigarettes. Each day, more than 3,000 young people begin to smoke -- or
more than 1 million each year. Most of the new smokers who replace the
smokers who quit or die prematurely from smoking-related disease are children
or teens. About 90% of smokers born since 1935 started smoking before age
21 and almost 50% started before age 18.
57. The economic consequences of smoking cigarettes are
equally as staggering. In May of 1993, the Office of Technology Assessment
advised the United States Congress that in 1990 smoking-related illnesses
cost United States taxpayers a total of approximately $68 Billion, broken
down as follows: $20.8 Billion in direct costs; $6.9 Billion in indirect
costs for morbidity; $40.3 Billion indirect cost for mortality.
58. The State of Florida spends millions of dollars each
year to provide or pay for health care and other necessary facilities and
services on behalf of indigents and other eligible residents whose said
health care costs are directly caused by tobacco-induced cardiovascular
disease, lung cancer, emphysema, other respiratory diseases as well as
the complications of pregnancy and childbirth including but not limited
to low-weight babies.
59. The defendants have known for decades of the lethal
dangers of smoking their cigarettes. By the late 1930's, based on published
research, the Tobacco Companies had notice of the potential health hazards
presented by smoking cigarettes. In 1946 Tobacco Company chemists themselves
reported concern for the health of smokers. A 1953 report by Dr. Ernst
L. Wynder heralded to the scientific community, and to the Tobacco Companies,
a definitive link between cigarette smoking and cancer. In these tests,
researchers painted condensed, puffed smoke onto the backs of mice. As
a result thereof, the mice grew cancerous tumors. While previous statistical
and epidemiologic studies had indicated a relationship between smoking
and cancer, Dr. Wynder's study was the first conclusive biological study
in this regard.
THE MANUFACTURE OF
FRAUDULENT SCIENCE
60. In response to the publication of Dr. Wynder's study
in 1953, the presidents of the leading tobacco manufacturers, including
American Tobacco Co., RJ. Reynolds, Philip Morris, U.S. Tobacco Co., Lorillard,
and Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corporation, hired the public relations
firm of Hill and Knowlton, Inc., to deal with the "health scare"
presented by smoking. Acting in concert, at a public relations strategy
meeting, the participants decided to organize a committee to be specifically
charged with the "public relations" function. This committee
was engineered to take an offensive, pro-cigarettes stance despite the
then obvious health dangers presented by cigarettes. As a result of these
efforts, the Tobacco Institute Research Committee ("TIRC"), an
entity later known as The Council for Tobacco Research ("CTR"),
was formed.
61. The TIRC immediately ran a full-page promotion in
more than 400 newspapers aimed at an estimated 43 million Americans. That
piece was entitled "A Frank Statement To Cigarette Smokers" and
contained the following language:
RECENT REPORTS on experiments with mice have given wide
publicity to a theory that cigarette smoking is in some way linked with
lung cancer in human beings.
Although conducted by doctors of professional standing,
these experiments are not regarded as conclusive in the field of cancer
research. However, we do not believe that any serious medical research,
even though its results are inconclusive, should be disregarded or lightly
dismissed.
At the same time, we feel it is in the public interest
to call attention to the fact that eminent doctors and research scientists
have publicly questioned the claimed significance of these experi-ments.
Distinguished authorities point out:
1. That medical research of recent years indicates many
possible causes of lung cancer.
2. That there is no agreement among the authorities regarding
what the cause is.
3. That there is no proof that cigarette smoking is one
of the causes.
4. That statistics purporting to link cigarette smoking
with the disease could apply with equal force to any one of many other
aspects of modern life. Indeed the validity of the statistics themselves
is questioned by numerous scientists.
We accept an interest in people's health as a basic responsibility,
paramount to every other consideration in our business.
We believe the products we make are not injurious to health.
We always have and always will cooperate closely with
those whose task it is to safeguard the public health.
For more than 300 years tobacco has given solace, relaxation,
and enjoyment to mankind. At one time or another during those years critics
have held it responsible for practically every disease of the human body.
One by one these charges have been abandoned for lack of evidence.
Regardless of the record of the past, the fact that cigarette
smoking today should even be suspected as a cause of a serious disease
is a matter of deep concern to us.
Many people have asked us what we are doing to meet the
public's concern aroused by the recent reports. Here is the answer:
1. We are pledging aid and assistance to the research
effort into all phases of tobacco use and health. This joint financial
aid will of course be in addition to what is already being contributed
by individual companies.
2. For this purpose we are establishing a joint industry
group consisting initially of the undersigned. This group will be known
as TOBACCO INDUSTRY RESEARCH COMMITTEE
3. In charge of the research activities of the Committee
will be a scientist of unimpeachable integrity and national repute. In
addition there will be an Advisory Board of scientists disinterested in
the cigarette industry. A group of distinguished men from medicine, science,
and education will be invited to serve on this Board. These scientists
will advise the Committee on its research activities.
This statement is being issued because we believe the
people are entitled to know where we stand on this matter and what we intend
to do about it.
62. In this advertisement, the participating Tobacco Companies
recognized their "special responsibility" to the public, and
promised to learn the facts about smoking and health. The participating
Tobacco Companies promised to sponsor independent research on the subject,
claiming they would make health a basic responsibility, paramount to any
other consideration in their business. The participating Tobacco Companies
also promised to cooperate closely with public health officials. However,
these promises so publicly and dramatically made to the public, the residents
of the State of Florida and government regulators were breached over and
over again.
63. After thus beginning to lull the public into a false
sense of security concerning smoking and heath, the TIRC continued to act
as a front for tobacco industry interests. Despite the initial public statements
and posturing, and the repeated assertions that the tobacco industry was
committed to full disclosure and vitally concerned with public health,
the TIRC did not make the public health a primary concern. The Tobacco
Trade Associations acted at the direction of the Tobacco Companies and
the Tobacco Consultant to protect tobacco industry profits, and did not
act to protect the public health. In fact. there was a coordinated, industry-wide
strategy designed actively to mislead and confuse the public about the
true dangers associated with smoking cigarettes.
Rather than work for the good of the public health as
it had promised, and sponsor independent research, the Tobacco Companies
and Tobacco Consultant, acting through the Tobacco Trade Associations,
refuted, undermined, and neutralized information coming from the scientific
and medical community.
64. The strategy employed by the Tobacco Companies, aided
and abetted by The Tobacco Trade Associations and the Tobacco Consultant,
Tobacco Wholesaler was a strategy best described as see no evil, hear no
evil, and speak no evil concerning the health effects of cigarette smoking.
A publication called Tobacco and Health (later, Tobacco and Health
Research) was created by the Tobacco Companies, the Tobacco Trade Associations,
and the Tobacco Consultant, and was used by them to disseminate false information
and create confusion over the causal connection between cigarette smoking
and disease. It was sent to the press, doctors, and health officials. The
"Criteria For Selection" of articles for publication included
an example of "a report in which smoking-associated diseases are questioned."
65. The tobacco industry repeatedly emphasized its commitment
to full public disclosure of CTR-sponsored research: "We are cooperating
in efforts to learn and to make known all the facts." The CTR
often repeated its representation that it promoted the disclosure of all
relevant facts: "The Tobacco Institute believes that the American
public is entitled to complete, authenticated information about cigarette
smoking and health." At the same time, the tobacco industry widely
represented the "independent" and "objective"
nature of the CTR, disclaiming any affiliation with or influence of the
tobacco industry in the workings of the CTR. These statements extended
to representations of independent decision-making regarding the funding
of research proposals.
66. The Tobacco Companies, through the Tobacco Trade Associations
and on the advice of the Tobacco Consultant, intentionally breached their
promises to the American public, to the residents of Florida and to the
State to independently and honestly study and report on the health effects
of smoking. They caused the cancellation of press conferences where their
scientists sought to inform the public, actively and wrongfully suppressed
the publishing of reports concerning the health dangers presented by cigarette
smoking, attacked research linking smoking to disease, and threatened professionally
the researchers themselves. Their scientists were not allowed to "freely
publish what they find as they choose" as a CTR director once claimed.
Numerous scientists formerly employed by the Tobacco Companies and the
Tobacco Trade Associations have spoken out against the suppression of scientific
data and the practice of deception known to exist in the tobacco industry
generally.
67. For example, in April of 1994, Dr. Victor DeNoble,
a former research scientist for Philip Morris Incorporated, testified before
the United States House of Representatives Health & Environment Subcommittee
that the Philip Morris Company in 1983 suppressed and refused to allow
him or his colleague, Dr. Paul Mele, to publish or to talk publicly about
the research that they had conducted with respect to nicotine tolerance
in rats, the potentially addictive nature of nicotine in rats, and research
with respect to synthetic nicotine substances. Dr. DeNoble testified that
his research demonstrated that the animals would administer nicotine to
themselves and that this fact indicated that nicotine had the potential
to be addictive. Dr. DeNoble testified that the focus of his research was
nicotine's effect on the brain, not nicotine's effect on the flavor of
tobacco in cigarettes. He further testified that his laboratory was closed
and his research was terminated following the filing of a lawsuit by Rose
Cipollone against Philip Morris and other tobacco companies.
68. In a similar vein, defendant Liggett & Myers,
Inc., while publicly refusing to acknowledge Dr. Wynder's tests mentioned
above, hired the consulting firm of Arthur D. Little, Inc., to duplicate
Dr. Wynder's tests. Defendant Lorillard Corporation also duplicated those
mouse tests. The results of the duplicated tests were essentially the same
as Dr. Wynder's, and both Liggett & Myers and Arthur D. Little became
aware by 1954 of the cancer causing propensity of cigarettes. A Liggett
& Myers researcher requested that the results of this testing be published,
but Defendant Liggett & Myers would not allow it, and the results
of these additional tests were never made public.
69. The vast body of evidence that identifies smoking
as a leading cause of lung cancer is uncontroverted and of long standing.
While reputable scientists do have questions about the specific mechanism
of causality, there is virtually no disagreement that smoking is a major
cause of disease. Tobacco industry scientific consultants also have accepted
the causal association between smoking and disease.
70. In addition to the carcinogenic nature of tobacco
itself, several thousand compounds have been found in cigarette smoke.
These include, for example, carbon monoxide, nicotine, carbon dioxide,
benzene, formaldehyde, Polonium-210, ammonia, nicotine sulfate, freon 11,
hydrogen cyanide and certain liver toxins known collectively as "furans";
some of these have been deliberately added by the Tobacco Companies. Over
forty (40) known carcinogens have been found in cigarettes as well. The
defendants were aware decades ago that their cigarettes contain harmful
substances and additives such as arsenic and various insecticides, yet
they continue to sell and promote the sale of their cigarettes.
"SAFER" CIGARETTES - SUPPRESSED
71. The Tobacco Companies could have designed and manufactured
a safer cigarette, but refused to do so. At defendant Liggett & Myers,
Inc., Dr. James Mold conducted tests to divide the components of cigarette
smoke into separate entities and to interrupt the process which produces
carcinogens by using a catalyst. Defendant Liggett & Myers, Inc., researchers
were able to produce a so-called "safer" cigarette which eliminated
the carcinogenic activity on mouse skin. However, defendant Liggett &
Myers, Inc., did not want to be publicly identified as the source of the
research behind this non-carcinogenic "safe" cigarette.
72. Defendant Liggett & Myers instructed its researchers
that any meetings held that pertained to the "safe" cigarette
project were to be attended by a lawyer, and that all reports, notes
or memoranda should go to the Liggett & Myers, Inc., legal department.
Defendant Liggett & Myers, Inc., has denied that this project had any
implications with regard to the health consequences of smoking, and a report
of the project was suppressed by defendant Liggett & Myers, Inc., and
was not allowed to be submitted for publication. The "safe" cigarette
was never marketed.
73. Two reasons apparently led Liggett to abandon its
XA project for a safer cigarette. One was fear that the marketing of a
"safer" cigarette would be, in essence, a confession that its
-- and the industry's -- other cigarettes were not safe. Thus, one Liggett
executive wrote that, "Any domestic activity will increase risk of
cancer litigation on existing products. " In addition, there was an
apparent threat of retaliation from industry leader Philip Morris if Liggett
broke ranks.
74. James Mold, who was assistant director of research
at Liggett during the development of the safer cigarette, has provided
the following overview of the XA project and its abandonment:
a. Mold stated that the XA project produced a safer cigarette.
He stated, "We produced a cigarette which was, we felt, was commercially
acceptable as established by some consumer tests, which eliminated carcinogenic
activity...."
b. Mold stated that after 1975, all meetings on the project
were attended by lawyers, lawyers collected all notes after the meetings,
and all documents were directed to the law department to maintain
the attorney-client privilege. He stated, "Whenever any problem came
up on the project, the Legal Department would pounce upon that in an attempt
to kill the project, and this happened time and time again."
c. Mold was asked why Liggett didn't market a safer cigarette.
He stated, "Well, I can't give you, you know, a positive statement
because I wasn't in the management circles that made the decision, but
I certainly had a pretty fair idea why....[T]hey felt that such a cigarette,
if put on the market, would seriously indict them for having sold other
types of cigarettes that didn't contain this, for example." Also,
"[a]t a meeting we held in...New Jersey at the Grand Met headquarters...at
which the various legal people involved and the management people involved
and myself were present. At one point Mr. Dey...who at that time, and I
guess still is the president of Liggett Tobacco, made the statement that
he was told by someone in the Philip Morris company that if we tried to
market such a product that they would clobber us."
75. Philip Morris also explored research to develop a
safer cigarette, or, in the words of one memorandum to the board of directors,
cigarettes with "superior physiological performance." This memo-randum
noted competitive pressures to produce "less harmful" cigarettes.
However, the memorandum was careful to state that, "Our Philosophy
is not to start a war, but if war comes, we aim to fight well and
to win." Philip Morris never marketed such a safer cigarette.
76. A memorandum authored by an attorney at the firm of
Shook Hardy & Bacon, long-time lawyers for the cigarette industry,
confirmed that there was an industry-wide position regarding the issue
of a safer cigarette.
77. The 1987 memorandum was written in the context of
the marketing by R.J. Reynolds of a smokeless cigarette, Premier, which
heated rather than burned tobacco. The Shook Hardy attorney wrote that
the smokeless cigarette could "have significant effects on the tobacco
industry's joint defense efforts" and that "[t]he industry position
has always been that there is no alternative design for a cigarette as
we know them." The attorney also noted that, "Unfortunately,
the Reynolds announcement… seriously undercuts this component of industry's
defense."
TOBACCO AND NICOTINE
78. Cigarettes manufactured and sold by the defendants
contain nicotine, a highly addictive substance. The defendants know of
the difficulties that smokers experience in quitting smoking and of the
tendency of addicted individuals to focus on any rationalization to justify
their continued smoking. The defendants exploit this weakness and capitalize
upon the known addictive nature of nicotine. Nicotine addiction is similar
to the addictions of illegal drugs such as heroin, cocaine, and amphetamines.
An internal tobacco industry memo acknowledged in 1972: "[w]ithout
nicotine… there would be no smoking… the cigarette [is] a dispenser for
a dose unit of nicotine." Nicotine addiction guarantees a market for
cigarettes. The addictive nature of the nicotine in cigarettes virtually
extinguishes personal choice in those who became addicted.
79. The industry's recognition of the extent to which
nicotine -- and not tobacco -- defines its product is illustrated in a
1972 Philip Morris report on a CTR conference, which stated:
As with eating and copulating, so it is with smoking.
The physiological effect serves as the primary incentive; all other incentives
are secondary. The majority of the conferees would go even further and
accept the proposition that nicotine is the active constituent of cigarette
smoke. Without nicotine, the argument goes, there would be no smoking."
***
Why then is there not a market for nicotine per se, to
be eaten, sucked, drunk, injected, inserted or inhaled as a pure aerosol?
The answer, and I feel quite strongly about this, is that the cigarette
is in fact among the most awe-inspiring examples of the ingenuity of man.
Let me explain my conviction.
The cigarette should be conceived not as a product but
as a package. The product is nicotine.
***
Think of the cigarette pack as a storage container for
a day's supply of nicotine….Think of the cigarette as a dispenser for a
dose unit of nicotine.
80. Accordingly, the industry has developed sophisticated
technology to control the levels of nicotine in order to maintain its market.
David A. Kessler, M.D., Commissioner of Food and Drugs, recently testified
before a congressional committee that cigarette manufacturers can manipulate
precisely nicotine levels in cigarettes, manipulate precisely the rate
at which the nicotine is delivered in cigarettes, and add nicotine to any
part of cigarettes.
81. Dr. Kessler testified that "the cigarette industry
has attempted to frame the debate on smoking as the right of each American
to choose. The question we must ask is whether smokers really have that
choice." Dr. Kessler stated:
a. Accumulating evidence suggests that cigarette manufacturers
may intend this result -- that they may be controlling smokers' choice
by controlling the levels of nicotine in their products in a manner that
creates and sustains an addiction in the vast majority of smokers.
b. We have information strongly suggesting that the amount
of nicotine in a cigarette is there by design.
c. The public thinks of cigarettes as simply blended tobacco
rolled in paper. But they are much more than that. Some of today's cigarettes
may, in fact, qualify as high technology nicotine delivery systems that
deliver nicotine in precisely calculated quantities - quantities that are
more than sufficient to create and to sustain addiction in the vast majority
of individuals who smoke regularly.
d. The history of tobacco industry is a story of how a
product that may at one time have been a simple agricultural commodity
appears to have become a nicotine delivery system.
e. [T]he cigarette industry has developed enormously sophisticated
methods for manipulating nicotine levels in cigarettes.
f. In many cigarettes today, the amount of nicotine present
is a result of choice, not chance.
g. [S]ince the technology apparently exists to reduce
nicotine in cigarettes to insignificant levels, why, one is led to ask
does the industry keep nicotine in cigarettes at all?
82. In a subsequent appearance before Congress, Dr. Kessler
testified that one manufacturer, Brown & Williamson, had developed
a tobacco plant code-named Y-1 with perhaps twice the nicotine content
of regular tobacco. Brown & Williamson manufactured and marketed cigarettes
with Y-1 tobacco in the United States in 1993.
83. As a result of the industry's actions, as many as
74% to 90% of smokers are addicted. Eight out of 10 smokers say they wish
they had never started smoking. Two-thirds of adults who smoke say they
wish they could quit. Seventeen million try to quit each year, but fewer
than one out of ten succeed. A high percentage of the smokers who have
had surgery for lung cancer or heart attacks return to smoking, as do 40%
of smokers who have had their larynxes removed.
84. Beyond its addictive qualities, nicotine is believed
to contribute to cardiovascular disease and death -- a fact of which the
cigarette industry has long been aware.
DECEIT AND FRAUD - A
CONTINUING CONSPIRACY
85. The joint efforts of the industry on the issue of
smoking and health also included the general counsel of the major cigarette
manufacturers, sometimes referred to as the Big Six, meeting to review
proposals for scientific research and the scientific directors of the Big
Six meeting and acknowledging "a general feeling that an industry
approach as opposed to an individual company approach was highly desirable."
86. There was also a "gentlemen's agreement"
among the manufacturers to suppress independent research on the issue of
smoking and health. This agreement was referenced in a 1968 internal Philip
Morris draft memo, which stated, "We have reason to believe that in
spite of gentlemens [sic] agreement from the tobacco industry in previous
years that at least some of the major companies have been increasing biological
studies within their own facilities."
87. As indicated by this memo, it was believed within
the industry that individual companies were performing certain research
on their own, in addition to the joint industry research. But the fundamental
understanding and agreement remained intact that harmful information and
activities would be restrained, suppressed, and/or concealed. This included
restraining, suppressing, and concealing research on the health effects
of smoking, including the addictive qualities of cigarettes, and restraining,
concealing, and suppressing the research and marketing of safer cigarettes.
88. The defendants have employed a strategy over the years
that was and is designed to confuse the medical evidence, stonewall, delay,
refuse reasonably to settle claims, and to run up plaintiffs' attorneys'
fees in a war of attrition. By way of example, a memo written by J. Michael
Jordan, an attorney for defendant R J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, noted:
"[T]he aggressive posture we have taken regarding depositions and
discovery in general continues to make these cases extremely burdensome
and expensive for plaintiffs' lawyers, particularly sole practitioners.
To paraphrase General Patton, the way we won these cases was not by spending
all of Reynolds' money, but by making that other son of a bitch
spend all his."
89. Additionally, corporate officials of the Tobacco Companies,
the Tobacco Trade Associations and the Tobacco Consultant have attempted
wrongfully to create a privilege for various documents that they wish to
conceal by sending such documents through their legal departments and law
firms at every opportunity in order that they might claim the documents
to be protected by the attorney-client or attorney work-product privileges.
A "Special Projects" division within CTR was set up to conceal
research that was harmful to the tobacco industry and to promote and develop
research and expert witnesses needed for the defense of tort litigation.
Incriminating reports and documents contained within this division were
passed through attorneys and are now claimed by the defendants to be privileged.
90. The industry has congratulated itself on a brilliantly
conceived and executed strategy to create doubt about the charge that cigarette
smoking is deleterious to health without actually denying it. A 1962 memo
stated that the industry had handled the "emergency" [of the
Wynder report] effectively, by treating the public health threat as a public
relations problem that was solved for the self-preservation of the industry's
image and profit. One defendant's executive called the CTR the best, cheapest
insurance the tobacco industry can buy, noting that without it the Tobacco
Companies would have to invent CTR or would be dead.
91. Not content with the holding strategy employed by
the TIRC and the CTR, the Tobacco Companies advocated a more offensive
role through their lobbying arm, the Tobacco Institute ("TI").
This tobacco industry backed group actively seeks to increase doubt about
the negative health effects of smoking by suggesting that there are alternative
explanations to the data. One "theory" detailed how individual
genetic makeups predisposed individuals to illness. Another, the "multi-factorial
hypothesis," asserted that multiple factors should be blamed, i.e.,
food additives, viruses, occupational hazards, air pollution, or stress,
as causing cancer. These public relations strategies have been somewhat
successful in the public thinking, if not in the scientific and medical
literature. In short, the tobacco industry financed, supported and encouraged
the manufacture of fraudulent science.
92. However, evidence began to surface concerning defendants'
illegal scheme. On February 6, 1992, United States District Court Judge
H. Lee Sarokin for the District of New Jersey issued an opinion in Haines
v. Liggett Group. Inc., Civ. Action 84-678, after reviewing 1500 documents
in camera. Judge Sarokin noted that "In 1954, the tobacco industry
promised to disseminate the results of industry-sponsored, independent
scientific research for the purpose of answering the question: 'Does cigarette
smoking cause illness?' To fulfill its promise, the tobacco industry proffered
the allegedly 'independent research organization, the Council for Tobacco
Research (the 'CTR'), which purportedly would examine the risks of smoking
and report its findings to the public.'" After his review of the withheld
documents, Judge Sarokin concluded:
Despite the industry's promise to engage independent researchers
to explore the dangers of cigarette smoking and to publicize their findings
the evidence clearly suggests that the research was not independent; that
potentially adverse results were shielded under the caption of "special
projects;" that the attorney-client privilege was intentionally employed
to guard against such unwanted disclosure; and that the promise of full
disclosure was never meant to be honored, and never was.
As a result of this finding, Judge Sarokin went on to
note:
A jury might reasonably conclude that the industry's announcement
of proposed independent research into the dangers of smoking and its promise
to disclose its findings was nothing but a public relations ploy -- a fraud
-- to deflect the growing evidence against the industry, to encourage smokers
to continue and non-smokers to begin, and to reassure the public that adverse
information would be disclosed.
93. Undaunted by Judge Sarokin's findings, in November
1993, Tobacco Company executives asserted, under oath, that tobacco does
not conclusively cause cancer, that smoking is not addictive, and
that tobacco advertising does not target new smokers. Recently, the fight
to uncover the truth has been joined by the Food and Drug Administration
("FDA").
94. On February 25, 1994, David A. Kessler, M.D., Commissioner
of the FDA, sent a letter to Scott D. Ballin, Esq., Chairman of the Coalition
on Smoking OR Health, asserting:
Evidence brought to our attention is accumulating that
suggests that cigarette manufacturers may intend that their products contain
nicotine to satisfy an addiction on the part of some of their customers.
The possible inference that cigarette vendors intend cigarettes to achieve
drug effects in some smokers is based on mounting evidence we have received
that: (1) the nicotine ingredient in cigarettes is a powerfully addictive
agent and (2) cigarette vendors control the levels of nicotine that satisfy
this addiction.
95. In response to Kessler's letter, on March 15, 1994,
in a letter to The New York Times, James W. Johnston, Chairman and
Chief Executive Officer of R.J. Reynolds, continued to assert that cigarettes
were not addictive. Johnston based his assertion upon the success rate
of American adults who had quit smoking.
96. The Chief Executive Officers of The American Tobacco
Company, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Brown & Williamson Tobacco
Corporation, Philip Morris Incorporated, Lorillard Corporation and Liggett
Group, Inc. all testified under oath before the same Subcommittee in April
of 1994 that they believed nicotine is not addictive.
97. For many years, the defendants have engaged in a vast
and misleading promotional, public relations, and lobbying blitz which
has as its goal increasing the numbers of people addicted to nicotine in
cigarettes and decreasing the numbers of people who attempt or succeed
in quitting. Much of their efforts in this regard have been and continue
to be directed toward minors. They have done so and continue to do so in
contravention of their duty not to make false statements of material fact
and their duty not to conceal such true facts from the public. At the cost
of countless lives, the defendants spend billions of dollars every year
misleading the public and promoting the myth that smoking cigarettes does
not cause cardiovascular disease, lung cancer, emphysema and other diseases
and that smokers live healthy and vital lives. The defendants have at all
pertinent times presented and promoted smoking as an attractive, glamorous,
youthful, and relaxing pastime, associating it with movie stars, athletes,
and other successful professionals, including doctors.
TARGETING MINORS
98. The defendants specifically target groups they deem
susceptible to their efforts, such as minors. By way of example, the Joe
Camel campaign waged by defendant R:J. Reynolds Tobacco Company is intended
to and has had great appeal to children. Over one million new underage
smokers are addicted in the United States each year. Such efforts by the
defendants create more sales for the tobacco industry, and more resulting
health care costs for the AHCA.
99. Florida Statutes § 859.06(1) states:
(1) It is unlawful to sell, deliver, barter, furnish,
or give, directly or indirectly, to any person who is under 18 years of
age, any cigarette or other tobacco product or cigarette wrapper. As used
in this section, the word "cigarette" includes a clove cigarette
or tobacco substitute.
Florida Statutes § 859.06(1).
As previously alleged, the defendants have engaged in
a concerted effort to circumvent and violate the laws of the State of Florida
by targeting minors with sophisticated promotional schemes designed to
create successive generations of addicted customers. It is virtually impossible
for parents or law enforcement resources to control the efforts of the
defendants to make children the users of cigarettes.
100. Every day, more than 1,200 cigarette smokers die
of cigarette-related diseases. Others manage to break their addiction to
nicotine and quit. In order to prevent a precipitous decline in cigarette
sales, the big cigarette companies must attract more than 3,000 new smokers
a day. Children and teenagers became the main target; and as a result of
the Tobacco Companies' fraudulent and false advertising, over 3,000 of
them begin smoking every day.
101. Despite the best efforts of parents, educators and
the medical profession, smoking among young people has remained alarmingly
constant since the late 1970's. This is because cigarette company advertising
is used to create a mental image associating smoking with good health,
glamorous and athletic lifestyles, with success and sexual attractiveness.
This increases demand for cigarettes among young people. The ease with
which children and teenagers can obtain cigarettes from vending machines
assures that there is a ready supply to meet this demand. In five major
trials testing minors' access to cigarette vending machines, encompassing
more than 1,000 attempts by young teenagers to purchase cigarettes, these
youngsters were never stopped -- not once. It has been shown repeatedly
that cigarette vending machines (even those located in bars and other supposedly
adult locations) are readily available to children and teenagers. Within
a short period of time, the young smoker becomes physiologically and emotionally
dependent, i.e., addicted to tobacco. Later, as the maturing smoker begins
to wish he or she could quit, advertising reinforces the practice and seeks
to minimize health concerns, create doubt, confusion and mistake which
are used by smokers as an excuse to avoid the pain and discomfort of attempting
to break their addiction to nicotine. This is the vicious cycle of fraudulent
tobacco industry advertising of their products.
102. The advertising imagery used to promote cigarette
smoking among young people particularly appeals to those with low self-esteem
and emotional insecurity. Once the young person has been predisposed toward
smoking, a variety of factors can precipitate actual experimentation. For
many young people, the precipitating factor is being given a free pack
of cigarettes by a tobacco company represen-tative, or purchasing cigarettes
in order to obtain an attractive tee-shirt, baseball cap, or other gimmick
used to promote cigarette smoking.
103. One of the best examples of this was the transformation
of Marlboro cigarettes from a red-tipped cigarette for women to the cigarette
for the macho cowboy. By changing advertising imagery, Philip Morris was
able to tap into a wholly new and different market. In 1950, RJ. Reynolds
was the king of the cigarette business. It sold more cigarettes than any
other company. Philip Morris, though doing well on the basis of its fraudulent
health-oriented advertising, was still far behind. In 1981, Philip Morris
passed RJ. Reynolds, and each year has extended its lead by developing
an effective marketing campaign for recruiting young new smokers to its
brands. The wild spirit of the Marlboro man captured the adolescent imagination.
Also, Philip Morns' representatives fanned out to colleges across the country,
giving free cigarettes to incoming freshmen to get them hooked. The children
and teenagers, who started smoking Marlboro, became tenaciously loyal customers.
Soon, Marlboro became the "gold standard" of cigarettes among
teenagers. Up until 1988, nearly three-fourths of teenage smokers used
Marlboro.
104. At about the time it lost market leadership to Philip
Morris, R.J. Reynolds dedicated itself to a ruthless advertising campaign
encouraging children and teenagers to smoke. One of the key elements of
the R.J. Reynolds' strategy for attracting children was to reposition many
of its cigarette brands to younger audiences. Just as Marlboro was repositioned
from the women's market to the macho male market by a new advertising campaign,
R J. Reynolds has positioned its cigarette advertising campaigns to younger
and younger audiences using a succession of advertising images of men engaged
in extraordinary feats of physical and athletic achievements.
105. RJR's Vantage cigarettes entered the 1980's as a
brand targeted at the health conscious adult smoker. Advertisements were
intended to assuage fears of lung cancer and other diseases and give the
concerned smoker arguments for rationalizing their continuation of the
addiction. Through multiple-advertising transmogrifications, Vantage cigarettes
have been progressively repositioned to ever-younger audiences. During
the mid-1980's, this advertising campaign featured young successful professionals
(including architects, fashion designers, lawyers, etc.) with the slogan
"The Taste Of Success." These ads promoted the implication that
smoking is helpful -- if not essential -- to social success or prominence.
In the late 1980's, the advertising theme for Vantage cigarettes began.
to feature professional-caliber athletes, like wind surfers, aerobic dancers,
downhill ski-racers, and auto-racers. These advertisements depict physical
activity requiring strength or stamina beyond those of everyday activity,
i.e., smoking does not harm you.
106. During the 1980's, advertising for Salem cigarettes
also became more youth-oriented. Whereas the dominant advertising theme
for Salem cigarettes used to be clean, fresh country air, during the 80's
Salem ads were populated by muscular surfers and beach bunnies, fun loving
party animals, and other attractive adolescent role models. Another successful
advertising campaign targeted at young people is the Lorillard Tobacco
Company campaign promoting Newport cigarettes. Newport ads frequently show
men and women in sexually suggestive positions always having fun using
the slogan "Alive With Pleasure."
107. Another successful advertising campaign has been
the "You've Come A Long Way Baby" campaign, promoting Virginia
Slims cigarettes. One of the most important psychological needs of most
adolescent girls is to become independent from their parents. By associating
smoking with women's liberation, Philip Morris hopes to create in the minds
of these teenage girls the vision of smoking as a symbol of autonomy and
independence. Ads for Virginia Slims and other "feminine" cigarettes
prey upon the natural and almost universal insecurity and sense of inferiority
experienced by adolescents by portraying the cigarette as a crutch and
a symbol of superiority. Perhaps the most acute psychological need of adolescence
is to fit in, to be accepted, to be popular. Ads for Philip Morris' Benson
& Hedges cigarettes thus developed an image of smoking as a happy pleasure
to be shared in the company of others and the easy road to instant acceptance
within a group.
108. Many teenage girls are obsessed with their appearance
and the need to perceive themselves as being attractive. In today's culture,
a prerequisite to popularity is to be thin. Philip Morris and other cigarette
companies capitalize upon this perception by presenting cigarette smoking
is a suitable alternative to a diet for being thin. Virtually every "feminine"
cigarette includes words like slim, light, thin, super slim, ultra light,
etc. The photographic imagery in cigarette advertising that targets young
females universally portrays gorgeous young women in glamorous outfits.
Smoking is thus associated with being sexy and beautiful. In reality, however,
cigarette smoking is neither: Smokers have yellow teeth, and cough up vile
phlegm, and are addicted. In cigarette ads, the air is fresh and clear;
magic things happen.
109. The ultimate status symbol and secret desire of almost
every teenage boy is a powerful motorcycle. It is for this reason that
so many cigarette brands have used motorcycle imagery to encourage teenage
boys to smoke. Many cigarette ads, that target young boys, glamorize high
risk activities like hang gliding, motorcycle racing, mountain climbing,
etc. Cigarette makers do this deliberately to undermine awareness that
smoking is dangerous. In its campaign to attract adolescent boys to become
smokers, the R.J. Reynolds cigarette company has made extensive use of
risk-taking and danger in its advertising. By glorifying risk-taking, these
ads have a more insidious purpose. How a person estimates the magnitude
and likelihood of a risk can be significantly affected by what it is compared
against. By portraying extremely dangerous activities like hang-gliding,
mountain climbing, and stunt motorcycle riding, RJ. Reynolds minimizes
the dangers of smoking in adolescent minds.
110. The greatest success that R.J. Reynolds had in its
effort to gain on Philip Morris in the youth market is the "Joe Camel"
cartoon character. This campaign was inaugurated in the United States in
1987 to commemorate the 75th anniversary of Camel cigarettes. In the first
ads, the camel leered out over the saying, "75 Years And Still Smoking."
The implication is obvious. It soon became evident that "Joe Camel"
would strike a responsive chord among children and teenagers and has been
used by RJ. Reynolds to target young persons -- even children -- to get
them to start smoking at as early an age as possible, so they can be addicted
to nicotine as early an age as possible. RJ. Reynolds has more than tripled
its advertising expenditures for Camel cigarettes after 1988, utilizing
themes like "Joe Camel" guaranteed to be attractive to young
people at high risk of becoming smokers.
111. When RJ. Reynolds began the Joe Camel cartoon campaign,
Camel's share of the children's market was only 0.5%. In just a few years,
Camel's share of this illegal market has increased to 32.8%, representing
sales estimated at $476 million per year. Another indication of the phenomenal
success of this marketing campaign is the fact that in a recent survey
of six-year-olds, 91% of the children could correctly match Joe Camel with
a picture of a cigarette, and both the silhouette of Mickey Mouse and the
face of Joe Camel were nearly equally well recognized by almost all children
surveyed.
112. Both the themes and the location of cigarette advertising
betray the real target. During the decade of the 1980's, there was a steady
migration of cigarette advertising into youth oriented publications. Magazines
with sexually-oriented themes and those concerning entertainment and sporting
activities had the highest concentration of cigarette ads. For many of
these magazines, teenagers comprise a quarter or more of the total readership.
Cigarette ads in these youth-oriented magazines were frequently multi-page,
pop-up ads which are significantly more costly but also more attention-grabbing
than conventional ads. News magazines, like Time and Newsweek,
which have older audiences, had few cigarette ads, and those tended to
emphasize implicit health promises concerning tar and nicotine rather than
glamorous images.
113. The cigarette companies sell more than one billion
packs of cigarettes per year to minors under the age of 18. In 1988, these
sales accounted for about $1.25 billion in sales. Approximately 3% of the
total tobacco industry profits ($221 million in 1988) are derived directly
from the sale of cigarettes to children under the age of 18, an activity
that is illegal in 43 states. Marlboro and Camel cigarettes, produced by
Philip Morris and RJR Nabisco respectively, dominate the teenage smoking
market.
114. In tests all across the country, it has been demonstrated
that children as young as 12 years old can buy cigarettes in three out
of four retail outlets. A study by the Inspector General's Office of the
Department of Health and Human Services concluded that, while there are
laws prohibiting the sate of tobacco to minors in 43 states (47 as of mid-l991),
these are almost uniformly unenforced. The risk of a merchant being punished
for selling cigarettes to minors is about one in 33 million. Cigarettes
are available in unlimited quantities to children through vending machines
as well.
115. In late 1990, the Tobacco Institute, on behalf of
the industry, inaugurated a public relations campaign designed to convince
the public that they want to discourage young people from smoking. Several
Tobacco Companies began their own campaigns at the same time. In fact,
these programs are just a continuation of the defendants' ongoing fraud
and conspiracy. While these programs call for age 18 as the national standard
for tobacco sales to minors, and for requiring "adult supervision"
of cigarette vending machines, in fact, the Institute and Tobacco Companies
hope to freeze the status quo with regard to minors' access to tobacco
as most states already have a minimum age of 18 or older. Brochures, like
"Tobacco: Helping Youth Say No", are being distributed by the
Institute and tobacco industry. In reality, this is a pro-smoking subterfuge.
The brochure presenting smoking as a permissible "adult" decision
and smoking as something an "adult" can safely do. The only reason
given kids for not smoking is that -- like getting married or driving a
car -- smoking is for grownups, i.e., which only makes the activity more
desirable to kids. An R.J. Reynolds' brochure even tells parents to tell
their children that they smoke "because they enjoy it." None
of these brochures disclose that smoking is highly addictive and harmful
to human life.
116. Perhaps the most vicious element of this advertising
campaign has been advertising aimed at young girls. Nearly every issue
of magazines for young girls, like Teen and Young Miss includes
an advertisement by Reynolds urging children not to smoke. But the reasons
given for refraining are not that smoking is addictive, that it can harm
or kill the infants of pregnant women, or that it causes cancer and other
awful diseases; rather, the reason given is that it is an "adult custom."
117. The likely effect of these ads is that, rather than
discouraging children from smoking, they plant in impressionable young
girls' minds the notion that smoking is something to do to show one's independence,
to act grown up. This notion is, of course, reinforced by the ubiquitous
cigarette ads depicting glamorous young adult women smoking as a way of
demonstrating their independence.
118. This despicable conduct has gone on for 40 years
and continues into this decade. In January 1990, the Manager of Public
Relations of R.J. Reynolds wrote the principal of a public school that:
The tobacco industry is also concerned about the charges
being made that smoking is responsible for so many serious diseases. Long
before the present criticism began, the tobacco industry, in a sincere
attempt to determine what harmful effects, if any, smoking might have on
human health established the Council for Tobacco Research--USA. The industry
has also supported research grants directed by the American Medical Association.
Over the years the tobacco industry has given in excess of $162 million
to independent research on the controversies surroun-ding smoking -- more
than all the voluntary health associations combined.
Despite all the research going on. the simple and unfortunate
fact is that scientists do not know the cause or causes of the chronic
diseases reported to be associated with smoking.
The answers to the many unanswered controversies surrounding smoking --
and the fundamental causes of the diseases often statistically associated
with smoking -- we believe can only be determined through much more scientific
research. Our company intends, therefore, to continue to support such research
in a continuing search for answers.
We would appreciate your passing this information along
to your students. (emphasis added)
119. The targeting of minors while unquestionably wanton,
reckless and unethical and cynically denied by the industry was, and continues
to be, vitally important to the tobacco industry. Cigarette smoker death
rates require it. Minors enticed into smoking provide a guaranteed market
for a product which kills the industry's customers by the tens of thousands.
THE IMPACT OF DEFENDANTS'
ACTIONS ON FLORIDA
120. During all or part of the exposure period, many residents
of Florida were exposed, through inhalation, to the smoke created when
the defendants' cigarettes were burned.
121. When inhaled, cigarette smoke causes a variety of
diseases including but not limited to:
a. Emphysema.
b. Pulmonary or bronchogenic carcino-ma.
c. Impaired pulmonary capacity.
d. Obstructive lung disease.
e. Cardiac and circulatory disease.
f. Increased susceptibility to one of the foregoing as
well as asbestos-related diseases such as lung cancer.
g. Exacerbated or increased the risk of and/or the physical
burdens caused by other respiratory ailments including pneumoconiosis,
asbestosis, bronchitis, pneumonia and others.
h Complications of pregnancy and childbirth as well as
low-birth weight babies and related pediatric health problems.
i. Premature death.
122. Each of the defendants knew, or should have known,
about the adverse impact of the inhalation of cigarette smoke on the health
of both users and bystanders. Instead of warning intended users, the general
public, the State of Florida or government regulators about these dangers,
the defendants ignored, or actively and fraudulently concealed such information
or condoned such concealment, and commanded, directed, advised, encouraged,
aided and abetted, or conspired with others, or each other, in so doing
in order to sell cigarettes and avoid litigation by those who were injured
by inhalation of cigarette smoke. Additionally, the defendants not only
concealed the hazards of cigarette smoking but also actively advertised
cigarettes as safe and beneficial to the health of smokers. Said actions
or inactions constitute gross negligence and show a callous disregard for
the rights and safety of residents of Florida and other states.
123. As a direct and proximate contri-buting result of
having inhaled cigarette smoke during the exposure period, certain residents
of Florida have contracted diseases or suffered certain injuries which
resulted in the expenditure by the State of substantial sums of money in
order to provide medical care for.
124. Plaintiffs further charge that, as a direct and proximate
result of having inhaled cigarette smoke, residents of Florida will continue
to suffer from the above-referenced conditions, and the State will continue
to expend substantial sums of money to care for them.
125. Because of the latency period of the above diseases
and the active concealment by the defendants of the causes and effects
of exposure to cigarette smoke, the State has only recently discovered
the liability of the defendants to the State for medical expenses expended
for medical care.
126. The defendants collectively sold or aided and abetted
in the sale of cigarettes containing tobacco, which cigarettes were and
are defective and unreasonably dangerous.
127. The Tobacco Companies' cigarettes are designed, manufactured,
marketed and sold by the defendants to be smoked by the consuming public.
128. The smoking of cigarettes was not only a foreseeable
use, it was the very purpose for which these defendants manufactured, sold
or distri-buted cigarettes.
129. At all pertinent times, the defendants knew, or should
have known, that the smoking of cigarettes was and is hazardous to human
health.
130. The Tobacco Companies, the Tobacco Trade Associations,
and Hill & Knowlton through their funding and control of certain studies
concerning the effects of smoking on human health, their control over trade
publications, promoting, marketing, and/or through other agreements, under-standings
and joint undertakings and enterprises, conspired with, cooperated with
and/or assisted each other in the wrongful suppression, active concealment
and/or misrepresentation of the true relationship between smoking cigarettes
and various diseases, all to the detriment of the public health, safety
and welfare and thereby causing harm to the State.
131. Cigarettes are inherently, abnor-mally, and unreasonably
dangerous. The health risks and costs of cigarette smoking to the residents
of the State and to the State greatly outweigh any claimed utility of cigarettes.
The defendants knew, or should have known, of the dangers inherent in the
use of their cigarettes, and that the public and the State would be harmed
by the intended and foreseeable use of their cigarettes.
132. For many years, the defendants have been engaged
in the business of manufacturing, testing, designing, promoting, marketing,
packaging, selling, distributing, and/or placing into the stream of commerce
in and into the State numerous defective, unreasonably dangerous and hazardous
cigarettes, or, in the course of their business, materially have participated
with, conspired with and/or otherwise aided, abetted and assisted other
defendants in so doing.
133. As a direct and proximate result of the defective
design, testing, manufacturing, marketing, and assembly choices and practices
of the defendants, the defendants' cigarettes were and are themselves defective
and unreasonably dangerous.
134. The defendants' cigarettes reached the users. consumers
and bystanders thereof in substantially the same condition which they were
in when originally manufactured, distributed and sold by the defendants.
At the time the defendants' cigarettes were sold or placed on the market,
they were in a defective condition, unreasonably dangerous to users and
consumers, and to bystanders in the vicinity of the users and consumers.
135. The defective condition of the defendants' cigarettes
directly and proximately caused thousands of Florida residents to suffer
various tobacco-related diseases, injuries and sicknesses, and directly
and proximately caused the State to expend millions of dollars in order
to provide necessary health care to these residents, thereby damaging the
State.
136. At all pertinent times, it was foreseeable by the
defendants that certain of the Florida residents who used the defendants'
cigarettes would become ill and suffer injury, disease and sickness as
a result of using the cigarettes as the defendants intended, and it was
further foreseeable by the defendants that the State would be required
to expend millions of dollars each year in order to provide necessary medical
treatment and facilities to those residents so injured.
137. The Tobacco Companies, the Tobacco Trade Associations,
and Hill & Knowlton have conspired together, sometimes acting through
a clandestine "Special Projects" program of the Tobacco Institute
Research Committee, later called the Council for Tobacco Research--U.S.A.
Inc., said conspiracy being for the purpose of fraudulently misleading
the public, including Florida residents, the State and government regulators,
with regard to the health risks of smoking, all for the purpose of furthering
the defendants' profits from the sale of their cigarettes.
138. Specifically, and in addition to the allegations
above, the Tobacco Companies, the Tobacco Trade Associations, and Hill
& Knowlton knew of the hazards of cigarette smoking. The defendants
affirmatively and actively concealed information which clearly demonstrated
the dangers of smoking and affirmatively mislead the public with regard
to the material and clear risks of smoking. The defendants knowingly engaged
in these activities with the intent that the public would continue to purchase
the defendants' cigarettes. The defendants knew that the public would not
be in a position to know the true risks of smoking and knew that the public
would rely upon the misleading information that the defendants promulgated
to their detriment.
139. At all pertinent times, the defendants purposefully
and intentionally engaged in these activities, and continue to do so, knowing
full well that when the State's residents use their cigarettes as those
cigarettes were and are intended to be used, that the State's residents
would be substantially certain to suffer disease, injury and sickness,
including cancer, emphysema, heart disease and other illnesses, and that
the State would be injured thereby, as described above.
140. At all pertinent times, the defendants purposefully
and intentionally engaged in these activities, and continue to do so, knowing
full well that the State, as a result of these efforts by the defendants,
would be obligated to, and would, provide health care and other necessary
facilities and services for certain of the State's residents thus harmed
by the intended use of the defendants' cigarettes, and that the State itself
thereby would be harmed.
141. At all pertinent times, these defendants, individually
and collectively, had a duty not to deceive or mislead government regulators
as well as the American public which they intentionally breached by their
individual and collective activities.
142. The statements and representations made and promotional
schemes used by the defendants were deceptive, false, incomplete, misleading
and untrue. The defendants knew, or should have known, that the said statements,
representations and adver-tisements were deceptive, false, incomplete,
misleading and untrue at the time of making such statements. The defendants
had an economic interest in making such statements. The residents of Florida
who purchased and used the defendants' cigarettes had no knowledge of the
falsity, misleading or deceptive nature of the defendants statements, representations
and advertise-ments when they purchased the defendants' cigarettes; moreover,
those residents had a right to rely on such statements, representations
and advertisements. Each of the defendants' misleading and deceptive statements,
representations and advertisements were material to those residents' purchasing
the defendants' cigarettes in that Florida's residents would not have purchased
the defendants' cigarettes if they had known that said statements, representations
and advertisements were deceptive, false, incomplete, misleading and untrue.
143. The residents of the State of Florida, the State
and government regulators had a right to rely upon the representations
of the Tobacco Companies, the Tobacco Trade Associations, the Tobacco Consul-tant,
and the Tobacco Wholesaler.
144. The defendants' decision to mislead and deceive the
residents of Florida, the State and government regulators directly, proximately
and foreseeably caused the damage suffered by the State.
COUNT ONE
RESTITUTION-UNJUST ENRICHMENT
145. The plaintiffs reallege and incorporate herein the
foregoing allegations of this Complaint.
146. Many of the State's residents who are afflicted with
tobacco-related diseases are poor, undereducated, and unable to provide
for their own medical care. These residents rely upon the State to provide
their medical care, which reliance results in an extreme burden on the
taxpayers and the financial resources of this State. Yet, these very residents,
along with our youth, are targeted by tobacco promotional techniques. The
State's taxpayers have thus unofficiously expended hundreds of millions
of dollars in caring for their fellow residents who have and are suffering
from lung cancer, cardiovascular disease, emphysema, chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease, and a variety of other cancers and diseases that were
and are caused by cigarettes and other tobacco products.
147. The State is also responsible for the costs of medical
assistance for Medicaid recipients pursuant to the State Medicaid Plan
and §§ 409.903-409.906 of the Florida Statutes.
148. While the State and its various agencies and institutions
are struggling to pay for the health care costs of tobacco, the tobacco
industry and its co-conspirators continue to reap billions of dollars in
profits from the sale of cigarettes and other tobacco products.
149. The defendants have avoided regulations and have
been and are able legally to promote the sale of their cigarettes and other
tobacco products to the residents of Florida by continuing to misinform
the federal and State authorities about the true carcinogenic, pathologic
and addictive qualities of cigarettes and other tobacco products.
150. In direct contradiction to and in spite of this State's
specific statutory prohibition, Florida Statute § 859.06, the Tobacco
Companies have spent billions on targeted marketing programs designed to
encourage minors to purchase and smoke cigarettes.
151. In equity and fairness, it is the defendants, not
the taxpayers of Florida, who should bear the costs of tobacco-related
diseases. By avoiding their own duties to stand financially responsible
for the harm done by their cigarettes and other tobacco products, the defendants
wrongfully have forced the State of Florida to perform such duties and
to pay the health care costs of tobacco related disease. As a result, the
defendants have been unjustly enriched to the extent that Florida's taxpayers
have had to pay these costs.
152. Wherefore, premises considered, the plaintiffs pray
for relief and judgment against the defendants, jointly and severally,
as follows:
a. for damages in an amount which is sufficient to provide
restitution and re-pay the plaintiffs for the sums the plaintiffs have
expended on account of the defendants' wrongful conduct including, without
limitation, costs for medical care with said amount to be determined at
trial;
b. for damages in restitution for the sums of money currently
being paid and to be paid by the plaintiffs in the future on account of
the defendants' wrongful conduct including, without limitation, costs for
medical care;
c. for prejudgment interest, as well as the plaintiffs'
reasonable attorneys' fees, expert witness fees and other costs of this
action;
d. for such other and further extraordinary equitable,
declaratory and/or injunctive relief as permitted by law as necessary to
assure that the plaintiffs have an effective remedy; and
e. for such other and further relief, as the Court deems
just and proper, to which the plaintiffs may be entitled.
COUNT TWO
INDEMNITY
153. The plaintiffs reallege and incorporate herein the
foregoing allegations of this Complaint.
154. As a direct and proximate result of the breaches
of duty and omissions of the defendants as alleged above, the State was
obligated to pay and has paid millions of dollars in the past for the provision
of necessary medical care, facilities and services for certain of those
aforementioned Florida residents injured by the defendants' cigarettes
and unable to afford and otherwise obtain such necessary medical care,
facilities and services.
155. The State was legally obligated to pay the aforementioned
sums and did not conduct itself in any wrongful manner in being so obligated
to pay and in paying the aforementioned sums.
156. The defendants have been unjustly enriched as a result.
157. In all fairness and justice, the defendants should
indemnify the plaintiffs for the provision of necessary medical care, facilities
and services for those aforementioned residents injured by the defendants'
cigarettes.
158. Wherefore, premises considered, the plaintiffs pray
for relief and judgment against the defendants, jointly and severally,
as follows:
a. for damages in an amount which is sufficient to provide
restitution and repay the State for the sums the plaintiffs have expended
on account of the defendants' wrongful conduct, with said amount to be
determined at trial;
b. for damages in restitution for the sums of money currently
being paid and to be paid by the plaintiffs in the future on account of
the defendants' wrongful conduct;
c. for prejudgment interest, as well as the plaintiffs'
reasonable attorneys' fees, expert witness fees and other costs of this
action;
d. for such other and further extra-ordinary equitable,
declaratory and/or injunctive relief as permitted by law as necessary to
assure that the plaintiffs have an effective remedy; and
e. for such other and further relief, as the Court deems
just and proper, to which the plaintiffs may be entitled.
COUNT THREE
NEGLIGENCE
159. The plaintiffs reallege and incorporate herein the
foregoing allegations of this Complaint.
160. The defendants had a duty to exercise reasonable
care in the manufacture, sale and/or distribution of defendants' cigarettes.
161. The defendants breached that duty by the conduct
alleged above.
162. As a result of defendants' breach, cigarettes were
manufactured, sold and distributed in the State of Florida, and the Medicaid
recipients contracted diseases as a result of the intended and foreseeable
use of defendants' cigarettes. The State was required to provide medical
assistance to these Medicaid recipients.
163. Wherefore, premises considered, the plaintiffs pray
for relief and judgment against the defendants, jointly and severally,
as follows:
a for damages in an amount which is sufficient to provide
restitution and repay the plaintiffs for the sums the plaintiffs have expended
on account of the defendants' wrongful conduct, with said amount to be
determined at trial;
b. for damages in restitution for the sums of money currently
being paid and to be paid by the plaintiffs in the future on account of
the defendants' wrongful conduct;
c. for prejudgment interest, as well as the plaintiffs'
reasonable attorneys' fees, expert witness fees and other costs of this
action;
d. for such other and further extraordinary equitable,
declaratory and/or injunctive relief as permitted by law as necessary to
assure that the plaintiffs have an effective remedy; and
e. for such other and further relief, as the Court deems
just and proper, to which the plaintiffs may be entitled.
COUNT FOUR
STRICT LIABILITY FOR DEFECTIVE AND UNREASONABLY
DANGEROUS PRODUCT
164. The plaintiffs reallege and incor-porate herein the
foregoing allegations of this Complaint.
165. The residents of the State of Florida have, for many
years, consumed and used the defendants' cigarettes in the manner in which
the cigarettes were intended to be used, without any substantive alteration
or change in the product.
166. The defendants' cigarettes were delivered to the
residents of the State of Florida in a condition that was unreasonably
dangerous to the user. The defendants expected and intended for the product
to be used by residents of the State of Florida without substantial change
affecting the unreasonably dan-gerous condition.
167. The defendants' cigarettes were unreasonably dangerous
due to their design in that:
a. The cigarettes failed to perform as safely as an ordinary
consumer would expect when used as intended; and
b. The risk of danger in the design of the cigarettes
outweighed any benefits associated with the use of cigarettes.
168. In breaching their duties to the plaintiffs, as described
above, the defendants acted intentionally, recklessly, maliciously and
wantonly in that each defendant knew or should have known through information
available exclusively to them and otherwise that their cigarettes were
defective and unreasonably dangerous if used in the manner intended by
the defendants. The defendants further knew or should have known that their
aforesaid breach of duty would be substantially certain to result in the
injuries complained of herein.
169. Wherefore, premises considered, the plaintiffs pray
for relief and judgment against the defendants, jointly and severally,
as follows:
a. for damages in an amount which is sufficient to provide
restitution and repay the plaintiffs for the sums the plaintiffs have expended
on account of the defendants' wrongful conduct, with said amount to be
determined at trial;
b. for damages in restitution for the sums of money currently
being paid and to be paid by the plaintiffs in the future on account of
the defendants' wrongful conduct;
c. for prejudgment interest, as well as the plaintiffs'
reasonable attorneys' fees, expert witness fees and other costs of this
action;
d. for such other and further extra-ordinary equitable,
declaratory and/or injunctive relief as permitted by law as necessary to
assure that the plaintiffs have an effective remedy; and
e. for such other and further relief, as the Court deems
just and proper, to which the plaintiffs may be entitled.
COUNT FIVE
BREACH OF EXPRESS AND/OR
IMPLIED WARRANTIES
170. The plaintiffs reallege and incorporate herein the
foregoing allegations of this Complaint.
171. The Tobacco Companies made affirmations or promises
through extensive advertising and promotion relating to their products
regarding the health effects of their products to the public. The Tobacco
Companies affirmed or promised through their "Frank Statement"
in 1954 to study the health effects of their products and fully disclose
the results of this research to the residents of the State of Florida.
172. These affirmations, as well as the extensive advertising
of the industry, became the basis of the bargain for many individuals,
both in beginning to use tobacco or continuing to use tobacco. The residents
of the State of Florida, including Medicaid recipients, relied on these
continuing affirmations in buying and using the Tobacco Companies' products.
The residents of Florida relied on the Tobacco Companies' skill or judgment
in manufacturing a product fit for human consumption.
173. The Tobacco Companies' products are unmerchantable
and are unfit for safe use when sold and consumed as intended. The Tobacco
Companies have breached their implied warranty of merchantability because
their products are not fit for their intended purposes. The Tobacco Companies
had reason to know that the particular purposes for which their products
are intended are unreasonably dangerous.
174. The Tobacco Companies have breached both the express
and implied warranties described above and should be held accountable for
the damages inflicted as a result.
175. As a direct result of the defendants' breach of express
and implied warranties of merchantability, the plaintiffs have been damaged
because they have been forced to incur medical expenses under the Medicaid
program in the treatment of sickness, disease or injury caused by the defendants'
conduct.
176. Wherefore, premises considered, the plaintiffs pray
for relief and judgment against the defendants, jointly and severally,
as follows:
a for damages in an amount which is sufficient to provide
restitution and repay the plaintiffs for the sums the plaintiffs have expended
on account of the defendants' wrongful conduct, with said amount to be
determined at trial;
b. for damages in restitution for the sums of money currently
being paid and to be paid by the plaintiffs in the future on account of
the defendants' wrongful conduct;
c. for prejudgment interest, as well as the plaintiffs'
reasonable attorneys' fees, expert witness fees and other costs of this
action;
d. for such other and further extraordinary equitable,
declaratory and/or injunctive relief as permitted by law as necessary to
assure that the plaintiffs have an effective remedy; and
e. for such other and further relief, as the Court deems
just and proper, to which the plaintiffs may be entitled.
COUNT SIX
NEGLIGENT PERFORMANCE OF A VOLUNTARY UNDERTAKING
177. The plaintiffs reallege and incor-porate herein the
foregoing allegations of this Complaint.
178. The Tobacco Companies and their trade organizations
voluntarily assumed the duty and responsibility to report honestly and
completely on all research regarding cigarette smoking and health via their
public pronouncements referenced above.
179. The defendants breached this duty not only by failing
to report on such research but also by knowingly and actively publishing
and publicizing fraudulent science.
180. The defendants further breached this duty by suppressing
negative research data regarding cigarettes and health.
181. The defendants knew or should have known that smokers,
the plaintiffs, government regulators and others would rely on their pronouncements.
182. The defendants knew or should have know that such
reliance would result in injury.
183. Wherefore, premises considered, the plaintiffs pray
for injunctive relief and judgment against the defendants, jointly and
severally, as follows:
a. for damages in an amount which is sufficient to provide
restitution and repay the plaintiffs for the sums the plaintiffs has expended
on account of the defendants' wrongful conduct, with said amount to be
determined at trial;
b. for damages in restitution for the sums of money currently
being paid and to be paid by the plaintiffs in the future on account of
the defendants' wrongful conduct;
c. for prejudgment interest, as well as the plaintiffs'
reasonable attorneys' fees, expert witness fees and other costs of this
action;
d. for such other and further extra-ordinary equitable,
declaratory and/or injunctive relief as permitted by law as necessary to
assure that the plaintiffs have an effective remedy; and
e. for such other and further relief, as the Court deems
just and proper, to which the plaintiffs may be entitled.
COUNT SEVEN
FRAUD, INTENTIONAL MISREPRESENTATION
184. The plaintiffs reallege and incor-porate herein the
foregoing allegations of this Complaint.
185. The defendants intentionally supp-ressed material
facts about the hazards of cigarette smoking.
186. The defendants knowingly and intentionally lied to
and deceived the government regulators who sought to investigate the hazards
of cigarettes and control those hazards through regulations.
187 The defendants participated in advertising of cigarettes
which portrayed them as, at least, harmless and, at best, healthy; such
a portrayal was an intentional misrepresentation of the hazardous nature
of cigarettes.
188. The purpose of the suppression of damaging research
data and the manufacture of fraudulent science was to confuse potential
consumers about the hazards of cigarettes thereby encouraging them to smoke
and to allay the fears of smokers thereby encouraging them to continue
to smoke.
189. The residents of the State of Florida, including
Medicaid recipients, relied on said advertising, purchased cigarettes and
smoked them.
190. As a result, certain residents of the State of Florida,
including the Medicaid recipients, became ill and required medical care
which the State was required to provide.
191. Wherefore, premises considered, the plaintiffs pray
for injunctive relief and judgment against the defendants, jointly and
severally, as follows:
a for damages in an amount which is sufficient to provide
restitution and repay the plaintiffs for the sums the plaintiffs have expended
on account of the defendants' wrongful conduct, with said amount to be
determined at trial;
b. for damages in restitution for the sums of money currently
being paid and to be paid by the plaintiffs in the future on account of
the defendants' wrongful conduct;
c. for prejudgment interest, as well as the plaintiffs'
reasonable attorneys' fees, expert witness fees and other costs of this
action;
d. for such other and further extraordinary equitable,
declaratory and/or injunctive relief as permitted by law as necessary to
assure that the plaintiffs have an effective remedy; and
e. for such other and further relief, as the Court deems
just and proper, to which the plaintiffs may be entitled.
COUNT EIGHT
CONSPIRACY AND CONCERT OF ACTION
192. The plaintiffs reallege and incorporate herein the
foregoing allegations of this Complaint.
193. The Tobacco Companies entered into an agreement to
suppress and conceal scientific and medical information relating to cigarette
smoking and the resulting diseases.
194. The Tobacco Companies partici-pated in and cooperated
with each other in the above conspiracy enabling each and every manufacturer
and distributor of cigarettes to take the position that the association
between cigarette smoking and disease had not been established.
195. In order to carry out their conspiracy, the Tobacco
Companies formed The Tobacco Institute ("TI") and the Council
for Tobacco Research ("CTR").
196. The TI and the CTR actively participated in the conspiracy
to conceal and suppress the hazards of cigarette smoking.
197. The TI and the CTR, acting on behalf of the Tobacco
Companies monitored research and literature in the scientific and medical
communities regarding cigarette smoking and actively attempted to suppress
any negative reports.
198. When TI and CTR were unsuccess-ful in suppressing
negative reports regarding cigarette smoking, the two organizations acted
to challenge, dilute and diminish the influence of such reports.
199. As a result of the conspiracy, the Tobacco Companies
were able to continue selling tobacco cigarettes to an unsuspecting and
confused public including the Medicaid recipients.
200. As a result of the conspiracy, govern-ment regulators
were misled and deceived; thereby making it impossible for such regulators
to properly assess and control the hazards presented by cigarette use.
201. As a direct and proximate result of the defendants'
actions, the Medicaid recipients became ill and required medical care paid
for by the State.
202. Wherefore, premises considered, the plaintiffs pray
for injunctive relief and judgment against the defendants, jointly and
severally, as follows:
a for damages in an amount which is sufficient to provide
restitution and repay the plaintiffs for the sums the plaintiffs have expended
as a proximate and foreseeable result of the defendants' wrongful conduct,
with said amount to be determined at trial;
b. for damages in restitution for the sums of money currently
being paid and to be paid by the plaintiffs in the future as a direct and
proximate result of the defendants' wrongful conduct;
c. for prejudgment interest, as well as the plaintiffs'
reasonable attorneys' fees, expert witness fees and other costs of this
action;
d. for such other and further extraordinary equitable,
declaratory and/or injunctive relief as permitted by law as necessary to
assure that the plaintiffs have an effective remedy; and
e. for such other and further relief, as the Court deems
just and proper, to which the plaintiffs may be entitled.
COUNT NINE
AIDING AND ABETTING LIABILITY
203. The plaintiffs reallege and incor-porate herein the
foregoing allegations of this Complaint.
204. The actions of the defendants, individually and collectively,
provided substantial support and encouragement and aid to the Tobacco Companies
in the sale of cigarettes and other tobacco products.
205. All of the defendants, individually and collectively,
aided and abetted the fraud perpetuated on the State of Florida, government
regulators and the residents of Florida.
206. All of the defendants, individually and collectively,
in aiding and abetting the sale of a product containing tobacco including
cigarettes which they knew to be hazardous and defective.
207. As a result, all of the defendants, individually
and collectively, are liable for the fraud upon the State of Florida, government
regulators and the residents of Florida, as well as the sale of a hazardous
and defective product, cigarettes.
208. Wherefore, premises considered, the plaintiffs pray
for injunctive relief and judgment against the defendants, jointly and
severally, as follows:
a for damages in an amount which is sufficient to provide
restitution and repay the plaintiffs for the sums the plaintiffs have expended
as a proximate and foreseeable result of the defendants' wrongful conduct,
with said amount to be determined at trial;
b. for damages in restitution for the sums of money currently
being paid and to be paid by the plaintiffs in the future as a direct and
proximate result of the defendants' wrongful conduct;
c. for prejudgment interest, as well as the plaintiffs'
reasonable attorneys' fees, expert witness fees and other costs of this
action;
d. for such other and further extraordinary equitable,
declaratory and/or injunctive relief as permitted by law as necessary to
assure that the plaintiffs have an effective remedy; and
e. for such other and further relief, as the Court deems
just and proper, to which the plaintiffs may be entitled.
COUNT TEN
INJUNCTIVE RELIEF
209. The plaintiffs reallege and incorporate herein the
foregoing allegations of this Complaint.
210. Plaintiffs will suffer irreparable injury as a result
of the conduct detailed in the foregoing allegations in that the children
of Florida will start using tobacco products without adequate knowledge
of its harmful and addictive affects. Thus, the children will become addicted
to tobacco products and subsequently become ill and need to be treated
for tobacco-related illnesses. Many of these addicted children will become
Medicaid recipients thereby causing the State to have to bear the costs
of these illnesses.
211. There is no adequate remedy at law which will protect
the plaintiffs from this irreparable injury.
212. Wherefore, premises considered, the plaintiffs pray
for injunctive relief which:
a. Enjoins defendants and their respective agents, servants,
officers, directors, employees, and all persons acting in concert with
them, directly or indirectly, from engaging in consumer fraud in violation
of the laws of the State of Florida;
b. Orders defendants to disclose, disseminate, and publish
all research previously conducted directly or indirectly by themselves
and their respective agents, affiliates, servants, officers, directors,
employees, and all persons acting in concert with them, that relates to
the issue of smoking and health;
c. Orders defendants to fund a corrective public education
campaign relating to the issue of smoking and health, administered and
controlled by an independent third party;
d. Orders defendants to take reasonable and necessary
affirmative steps to prevent the distribution and sale of cigarettes to
minors under the age of 18;
e. Orders defendants to fund clinical smoking cessation
programs in the State of Florida;
f. Orders the Tobacco Companies to dissolve the Council
for Tobacco Research and the Tobacco Institute, or, in the alternative,
to divest their ownership, sponsorship, and/or membership in the Council
for Tobacco Research and the Tobacco Institute; and,
g. Orders the defendants to disgorge all profits from
sales of cigarettes in Florida.
Respectfully submitted:
W. Dexter Douglass, Esq.
General Counsel
Executive Office of the Governor
The Capitol, Suite 209
Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0001
(904) 488-3494
(904) 488-9810 (Fax)
Florida Bar Number 0020263
Robert A. Butterworth, Esq.
Attorney General
The Capitol, PL-01
Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1050
(904) 487-1963
(904) 487-2564 (Fax)
Florida Bar Number 114422
James A. Peters, Esq.
Assistant Attorney General
Office of the Attorney General
The Capitol, PL-01
Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1050
(904) 488-1573
(904) 488-4872 (Fax)
Florida Bar Number 230944
Eric Taylor, Esq.
Assistant Attorney General
Office of the Attorney General
Alexander Building, Suite 307
Tallahassee, Florida 32301
(904) 488-5899
(904) 488-4872 (Fax)
Florida Bar Number 037609
Professor Laurence H. Tribe
Hauser Hall, Suite 420
Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138
(617) 661-6868
(617) 661-4104 (Fax)
Jonathan S. Massey, Esq.
North Hampton Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20015
(202) 686-0457
(202) 686-0497 (Fax)
Allen R. Roman, Esq.
Senior Attorney Medicaid Division
Agency for Health Care Administration
Ft. Knox Building
2727 Mahan Drive
Tallahassee, Florida 32308-5431
Florida Bar Number 115998
Lynda L. Goodgame, Esq.
Office of the Secretary
Department of Business & Professional Regulation
Northwood Center
1940 North Monroe Street, Suite 60
Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0750
(904) 922-0117
(904) 922-2936 (Fax)
Florida Bar Number 0798071
Counsel for Plaintiffs:
David Fonvielle, Esq.
Fonvielle & Hinkle
Capital Circle, Northeast, Bld. A
Tallahassee, Florida 32308
(904) 422-7773
(904) 422-3449 (Fax)
Florida Bar Number 141980
W.C. Gentry, Esq.
Gentry & Phillips, P.A.
No. 6 East Bay Street, Suite 400
Jacksonville, Florida 32202
(904) 356-4100
(904) 358-1895 (Fax)
Florida Bar Number 137134
Wayne Hogan, Esq.
Brown, Terrell, Hogan, Ellis, McClamma & Yegelwel
804 Blackstone Building
233 East Bay Street
Jacksonville, Florida 32202
(904) 632-2424
Florida Bar Number
P. Tim Howard, Esq.
Howard & Associates, P.A.
131 North Monroe Street
Tallahassee, Florida 32301
(904) 224-6191
(904) 224-3644 (Fax)
Florida Bar Number 0655325
Robert G. Kerrigan, Esq.
400 East Government Street
Pensacola, Florida 32501
(904)444-4444
Michael Maher, Esq.
Maher, Gibson and Guiley
East Livingston, Suite 200
Orlando, Florida 32801
(904) 839-0866
(904) 425-7958 (Fax)
Florida Bar Number 092290
Robert M. Montgomery, Esq.
Montgomery & Larmoyeux, P.A.
1016 Clearwater Place
P.O. Drawer 3086
West Palm Beach, Florida 33402-3086
(407) 832-2800
(407) 832-0887 (Fax)
Ronald L. Motley, Esq.
Ness, Motley, Loadholt, Richardson & Poole
Meeting Street, Suite 600
P.O. Box 1137
Charleston, SC 29402
(803) 577-6747
(803) 577-7513 (Fax)
South Carolina Bar Number 4123
James H. Nance, Esq.
Nance, Cacciatore, Sisserson, Duryea & Hamilton
Post Office Drawer 361817
Melbourne, Florida 32936-1817
(904) 254-8416
(904) 259-8243 (Fax)
Florida Bar Number 057881
R.W. Payne, Jr., Esq.
Spence, Payne, Masington, Needle & Leeds, P.A.
Southwest 27th Avenue, Suite 300
Miami, Florida 33133
(904) 447-0641
(904) 443-6102 (Fax)
Florida Bar Number 061967
Sheldon J. Schlesinger, Esq.
1212 S.E. Third Avenue
Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33316
(305) 467-8800
Richard F. Scruggs, Esq.
Scruggs, Millette, Lawson & Dent, P.A.
Delmas Avenue
Post Office Drawer 1425
Pascagoula, Mississippi 50568-1425
(601) 762-6068
(601) 762-1207 (Fax)
Mississippi Bar Number 6582
C. Steven Yerrid, Esq.
Yerrid, Knopik & Valenzuela
East Kennedy Boulevard, Suite 2160
Tampa, Florida 33602
(904) 222-8222
(904) 222-8224 (Fax)
Florida Bar Number 207594