J&J Must Pay $29 Million Over Woman's Talc-Linked Cancer
- California woman blamed fatal illness on baby powder use
- Verdict is company’s seventh trial loss over iconic powder
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Johnson & Johnson must pay about $29 million to a dying California woman who blamed asbestos-tainted talc for causing her cancer, the company’s latest loss in nationwide litigation over its iconic baby powder.
Jurors in state court in Oakland, California, Wednesday held J&J responsible for Teresa Leavitt’s mesothelioma, a cancer linked to asbestos exposure. The panel, which included a lawyer and a state-court judge, also found the world’s largest maker of health-care products didn’t warn Leavitt its baby powder was tainted with the carcinogen.