J&J puts talc liabilities into bankruptcy
By Kathi on Oct 15, 2021 | 04:35 AM IST
Johnson &
Johnson on Thursday put into bankruptcy tens of thousands of legal claims
alleging its Baby Powder and other talc-based products caused cancer,
offloading the potential liabilities into a newly created subsidiary.
J&J put the talc claims
into an entity called LTL Management LLC, which filed for bankruptcy protection
on Thursday in North Carolina, according to the company and court records.
J&J and its affiliates were not part of the bankruptcy filing.
Tens of thousands of
plaintiffs have alleged J&J's Baby Powder and other talc products contained
asbestos and caused cancer, which the company denies. The plaintiffs include
women suffering from ovarian cancer and others battling mesothelioma.
J&J executed Thursday's
corporate reshuffling through a contentious legal maneuver known as a Texas
two-step bankruptcy, a strategy other companies facing asbestos litigation have
used.
In that process, a J&J
business split in two through a so-called divisional merger under Texas law.
That transaction created LTL, the new entity saddled with J&J's talc
liabilities, according to court papers filed Thursday.
J&J, with a market value
exceeding $400 billion, said the talc cases would be halted while LTL navigates
bankruptcy proceedings.
The company's costs defending
nearly 40,000 cases have approached $1 billion, according to bankruptcy-court
filings Thursday. Settlements and verdicts have cost J&J about $3.5 billion
more.
"We are taking these
actions to bring certainty to all parties involved in the cosmetic talc
cases," J&J General Counsel Michael Ullmann said in a statement.
"While we continue to
stand firmly behind the safety of our cosmetic talc products, we believe
resolving this matter as quickly and efficiently as possible is in the best
interests of the (company) and all stakeholders," Ullmann added.
Plaintiffs' lawyers decried
the bankruptcy filing. J&J's "bankruptcy gimmick is as despicable as
it is brazen" and "an unconscionable abuse of the legal system,"
said Linda Lipsen, chief executive of the American Association for Justice, a
trial lawyers' group, in a statement.
J&J said it would fund
LTL's legal costs for talc cases in an amount later determined by a bankruptcy
judge, with an initial advance of $2 billion. LTL has also received certain
royalty revenue streams with a present value of more than $350 million to
contribute to potential legal costs, J&J said.
Reuters first reported in July
that J&J was exploring offloading its talc liabilities and placing them
into bankruptcy.
Thursday's move shifted
high-stakes litigation over the safety of J&J’s talc from courtrooms across
the United States to one legal proceeding before a federal bankruptcy judge who
could potentially force a settlement among the blue-chip company and
plaintiffs.
During earlier settlement
discussions, a J&J attorney told plaintiffs' lawyers that the company could
pursue the bankruptcy plan, which might result in lower payouts for cases that
do not settle beforehand, Reuters previously reported.
In the weeks leading up to
Thursday’s bankruptcy filing, lawyers representing women with cancer claims
asked multiple judges to forbid J&J from executing such a maneuver, only to
be turned down.
The company maintained in
statements and in court proceedings over the summer that it had not decided
whether to pursue the maneuver.
A 2018 Reuters investigation
found J&J knew for decades that asbestos, a known carcinogen, lurked in its
Baby Powder and other cosmetic talc products. The company stopped selling Baby
Powder in the United States and Canada in May 2020, in part due to what it
called "misinformation" and "unfounded allegations" about
the talc-based product.
J&J maintains its consumer
talc products are safe and confirmed through thousands of tests to be
asbestos-free.
In bankruptcy-court papers,
lawyers for the newly created J&J subsidiary said the Chapter 11 filing was
“necessitated by an unrelenting assault by the plaintiff trial bar, premised on
the false allegations that the ... talc products contain asbestos and cause
cancer."
In June, the U.S. Supreme
Court declined to hear J&J's appeal of a Missouri court ruling that
resulted in $2 billion of damages awarded to women alleging the company's talc
caused their ovarian cancer.
J&J has prevailed in other
recent talc cases.