Johnson & Johnson Sues Plaintiffs' Talc Experts Accused of 'Widespread Deception'
Their 2020 study found 75 unnamed mesothelioma patients had no exposures to asbestos other than cosmetic talcum powder, but Johnson & Johnson has insisted those claims are false as to six or more of the individuals.
May 10, 2024 at 06:24 PM
5 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Law.com
What You Need to Know
- The lawsuit names Drs. Theresa Emory, John Maddox and Richard Kradin, plaintiffs' experts in dozens of talc cases.
- At issue is a 2020 study that found 75 unnamed mesothelioma patients had no exposures to asbestos other than cosmetic talc, but Johnson & Johnson has insisted those claims are false as to six or more of the individuals.
- The new suit, filed by McGuireWoods partner Benjamin Hatch, comes after a federal judge in New Jersey dismissed a 2023 case against the same three experts.
Johnson & Johnson launched a new legal incursion against the authors of an expert report that plaintiffs' lawyers have cited in lawsuits alleging its baby powder caused mesothelioma.
On Thursday, a Johnson & Johnson subsidiary filed a lawsuit against Dr. Theresa Emory, a pathologist at Peninsula Pathology Associates, and two other experts, Dr. John Maddox, also at Peninsula, and Dr. Richard Kradin, a pulmonologist and pathologist in New Hampshire.
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