In Minnesota, Judge Kenneth J. Fitzpatrick instructed a jury that the
state did not even have to show that Medicaid expenses it was blaming
on the tobacco industry were actually caused by smoking. A statistician
had testified that the state's $1.8 billion damage estimate included
costs for treating hemorrhoids, schizophrenia, bone fractures, and
other conditions not commonly associated with tobacco use.
[Ed.: It is widely stated in advertisements and public service announcements that secondhand smoke kills 50,000 Americans each year. If, on the other hand, a firm were to claim similarly fraudulent benefits for that number of people on behalf of its product, it would be subject to truth-in-advertising laws.]