A jury in a class action lawsuit brought by Florida smokers ordered
the five leading tobacco companies to pay $145 billion in punitive
damages, the largest liability award to date and far exceeding the
companies' net worth. The judgement will almost certainly be reversed
on appeal, thanks to a change in the rules for appeal brought by the
Florida legislature, which feared that the state might otherwise not
receive the $13 billion the industry had already agreed to pay in
settling the state's own lawsuit. That settlement came only after the
legislature rigged legal rules to prevent the industry from putting
forth its strongest defense.
[Ed.: In a survey of state treasurers two years later, the
Investor Responsibility Research Center
found that seven states—Texas, Connecticut, New Mexico, North
Carolina, North Dakota, Utah, and West Virginia—had taken millions
of dollars intended to reimburse them for tobacco-related health
expenditures and invested the funds in tobacco companies. As little of
5 percent of tobacco-settlement funds were being directed towards
smoking prevention programs.]
†