Bangkok Post

J&J CEO refuses to attend hearing

Gorsky ‘not talc testing expert’

- LISA GIRION CARL O’DONNELL

Johnson & Johnson chief executive officer Alex Gorsky has declined to appear at a US congressio­nal hearing on the safety of the company’s baby powder and other talc-based cosmetics.

In an announceme­nt on Monday, the House of Representa­tives Subcommitt­ee on Economic and Consumer Policy said that its efforts to persuade Gorsky to testify included “repeated attempts to accommodat­e the company” over nearly a month.

Democrat Raja Krishnamoo­rthi, chairman of the House panel investigat­ing concerns about cancer-causing asbestos in cosmetic talc and powders, said he was disappoint­ed Gorsky turned down the invitation.

“Mr Gorsky refuses to speak to the subcommitt­ee under oath, yet he has not refrained from making multiple public comments on the topic,” he said in a statement.

J&J spokesman Ernie Knewitz said that the subcommitt­ee had rejected the company’s offers to send a talc testing expert or a J&J executive in charge of consumer products.

“Gorsky is not, as we have repeatedly told the subcommitt­ee, an expert in the stated subject of the hearing,” he said. “We have respectful­ly declined the invitation for our CEO to testify.”

Knewitz said that the compositio­n of the hearing, which includes two experts who have testified for plaintiffs against J&J, also factored into the company’s decision.

Gorsky has played a lead role in J&J’s efforts to reassure consumers and investors that its talc powders are safe and asbestos free.

Last year, he issued a statement vouching for the safety of the products after a jury issued a $4.69 billion verdict in favor of 22 women who sued over allegation­s their ovarian cancers were caused by J&J powders.

Gorsky appeared on CNBC’s Mad Money with Jim Cramer and in a video posted on J&J’s website to rebut a December 2018 Reuters report that the company knew for decades about the presence of small amounts of asbestos in its talc and powders.

“Since tests for asbestos in talc were first developed, J&J’s baby powder has never contained asbestos,” Gorsky said in the video.

In October, Gorsky testified in a deposition in a lawsuit filed by an Indiana man, saying, “We unequivoca­lly believe that our talc and our baby powder does not contain asbestos.”

J&J faces more than 16,000 similar lawsuits.

Concerns over asbestos in talc cosmetics have grown in recent months as the US Food and Drug Administra­tion announced that the carcinogen had been found in several products, including a bottle of baby powder.

J&J said it recalled 33,000 bottles of baby powder “out of an abundance of caution.” Later, the company said labs it hired found no asbestos — other than some contaminat­ion it blamed on an air conditione­r — in samples from the same baby powder bottle and its production lot.

The FDA has said it stands by its finding.

Chief executives of companies embroiled in controvers­ies routinely comply with lawmakers’ invitation­s to testify.

In recent months, the CEOs of Boeing Co and Facebook Inc have appeared before congressio­nal committees to answer questions about how their companies were safeguardi­ng consumers.

Charles M. Elson, director of the John L. Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance at the University of Delaware, said “CEOs have a responsibi­lity to go to Washington when Congress calls, just like other citizens.’’

But Elson said Gorsky’s pass was understand­able.

He said the CEO and his advisers probably figured that the downside was greater to testifying than not.

“It’s being invited in for a punch in the nose,” Elson said. “For Gorsky, nothing good will come out of it.”

 ??  ?? Gorsky: Declines to appear at hearing
Gorsky: Declines to appear at hearing

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