June 8, 2005
Tobacco Escapes Huge Penalty
U.S. Seeks $10 Billion Instead of $130 Billion
By Carol D. Leonnig
Washington Post Staff Writer
After eight months of courtroom argument, Justice Department lawyers
abruptly upset a landmark civil racketeering case against the tobacco
industry yesterday by asking for less than 8 percent of the expected
penalty.
As he concluded closing arguments in the six-year-old lawsuit, Justice
Department lawyer Stephen D. Brody shocked tobacco company
representatives and anti-tobacco activists by announcing that the
government will not seek the $130 billion that a government expert had
testified was necessary to fund smoking-cessation programs. Instead,
Brody said, the Justice Department will ask tobacco companies to pay
$10 billion over five years to help millions of Americans quit smoking.
Before it was cut, the cessation program was the most significant
financial penalty still available to the government as part of its
litigation, which had been the largest civil racketeering and
conspiracy case in U.S. history. The government contended that six
tobacco companies engaged in a 50-year conspiracy to defraud and addict
smokers and then conceal the dangers of cigarettes.
"We were very surprised," said Dan Webb, lawyer for Altria Group's
Philip Morris USA and the coordinating attorney in the case. "They've
gone down from $130 billion to $10 billion with absolutely no
explanation. It's clear the government hasn't thought through what it's
doing."
The Justice Department offered little explanation for the figure.
Associate Attorney General Robert D. McCallum Jr. and members of the
trial team declined to answer questions as the court session ended. In
2001, then-Attorney General John D. Ashcroft tried to settle or shelve
the government's racketeering case against the industry before a public
outcry forced its revival.
"It feels like a political decision to take into consideration the
tobacco companies' financial interest rather than health interests of
45 million addicted smokers," said William V. Corr, director of the
Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. "The government proved its case, but
the levels of funding are a shadow of the cessation treatment program
that the government's own expert witness recommended."
Sources and government officials close to the case said the trial
lawyers wanted to request $130 billion for smoking-cessation programs
but were pressured by leaders in the attorney general's office,
particularly McCallum, to make the cut. Arguments within the Justice
Department continued behind the scenes through yesterday morning,
according to the sources, who spoke on the condition of anonymity
because of the controversy over the matter.
When the case began in 2004, the government sought to force the tobacco
industry to pay $280 billion in allegedly ill-gotten profits. But in
February, a federal appeals court ruled that the administration could
not seek that penalty.
Michael Fiore, the government expert who recommended $130 billion for
cessation programs, is a medical professor and director of a tobacco
research center who chaired the subcommittee on tobacco cessation in
the Department of Health and Human Services' Interagency Committee on
Smoking and Health.
His testimony was widely considered to represent the sum the government
was seeking for a cessation program, though Justice Department lawyers
had made no formal demand until yesterday.
The strength of the government's case hinged on a large collection of
internal tobacco company documents, many of which were never before
made public. The government began its case in September by showing on
an oversized projection screen the written memos of tobacco executives
and scientists as they described their plans to keep customers in the
dark about whether their habit was addictive or dangerous and to
encourage young people to smoke.
Facing those same internal documents in another suit,the tobacco
industry in 1998 agreed to pay $246 billion to settle a lawsuit filed
by states to recover their costs for the medical treatment of smokers.
Justice Department spokeswoman Cynthia Magnuson said the department
could ask the court to force the industry to pay more in future years
for cessation programs, which include a staffed help line for smokers,
treatment programs and possibly free medications. She suggested the
penalty was designed to comply with the recent appeals court ruling
that such penalties could not be used to punish past fraud. Sources
close to the case said the cessation program is either a valid penalty
or it's not; the dollar figure should not change that.
"This proposal has been designed to be a forward-looking remedy to
prevent and restrain future wrongful conduct consistent with the recent
Circuit Court opinion in this case," she said.
U.S. District Judge Gladys Kessler, who is presiding over the case, is
expected to decide in the next few months whether the government proved
its case of an industry-wide conspiracy and whether to order any
penalties against the companies. Among the other remedies the
government is still seeking are an industry-funded anti-smoking
educational campaign and a court injunction to stop the companies from
targeting youth in their marketing.
The government also wants the judge to appoint a court monitor to watch
over industry practices and ensure that tobacco companies do not commit
fraud in the future. Kessler has repeatedly expressed concern about how
such proposals would work.
Defendants in the case include Philip Morris USA; R.J. Reynolds Tobacco
Co. and Brown & Williamson, which have merged to form Reynolds American
Inc.; British American Tobacco; the Lorillard Tobacco unit of Loew's
Corp.; and Vector Group Ltd.'s Liggett Group Inc. They began their
closing arguments today.
Anti-smoking advocates assailed the decision as a self-inflicted blow
that would help the tobacco companies' bottom line and miss a
well-earned chance to help American smokers.
William B. Schultz, a former Justice Department official who oversaw
the lawsuit under the Clinton administration, said that "it's
disappointing, to say the least, that at the final stages of this
litigation they have pulled their punches in such a significant way.
This is the loss of a significant opportunity to advance public health.
Smoking is the number one preventable disease. It kills 400,000 people
a year."
Lead government attorney Sharon Eubanks had summed up the trial early
yesterday, saying the government had proved the industry engaged in a
"decades-long pattern of . . . misrepresentations, half-truths,
deceptions and lies that continue to this day."
---
http://www.ElmerFudd.US/ http://www.notserver.com/
Scientology crooks: http://sf.irk.ru/www/ot3/otiii-gif.html
http://PerkinsTragedy.org http://www.rightard.org/
End Republican race hatred: http://www.thedarkwind.org/
.
|