Sentinel & Enterprise

Juul Labs sought to court AGs

- By Matthew Perrone and Richard Lardner

Juul Labs, the nation’s largest electronic-cigarette company, donated tens of thousands of dollars to the campaigns of state attorneys general in an effort to build relationsh­ips with these powerful officials and potentiall­y head off legal challenges over how it promoted and sold its vaping products.

But the company’s approach hasn’t stopped officials from taking action. Thirty-nine states announced late last month that they will investigat­e whether Juul’s early viral marketing efforts illegally targeted teens and made misleading claims about the nicotine levels in its devices.

Health officials have declared underage vaping an epidemic, largely driven by the discrete, high-nicotine, fruity flavored pods that Juul sold until late last year.

“Juul really created this crisis,” said Dr. Scott Gottlieb, the former Food and Drug Administra­tion commission­er. “Juul created the pool of nicotine-addicted teens and I think they popularize­d the idea of vaping among kids.”

The Food and Drug Administra­tion and Congress are probing whether Juul’s early promotions deliberate­ly appealed to minors, including the use of online influencer­s, “launch parties,” and product giveaways.

Yet Juul may face an even bigger threat from the nation’s state attorneys general, who previously used their collective power to force changes in the way Big Tobacco companies do business.

In an emailed response to written questions, a Juul spokesman declined to say how many state attorneys general company representa­tives have met with. Juul, the spokesman said, is working to earn “the trust of society,” by working with various government officials. The company says its outreach to attorneys general was aimed at collaborat­ing with them on key issues, including combating underage use.

Documents obtained by The Associated Press through open records requests shed new light on the unusual connection Juul forged with Iowa’s Tom Miller, the longest serving state attorney general in U.S. history. The records show that Miller served as a behind-thescenes adviser, helping the company respond to media requests and inquiries from government officials. Miller did not receive campaign contributi­ons from Juul.

The documents also provide new details about former state attorneys general who were hired by the company, including Massachuse­tts’ Martha Coakley, who became a key messenger as Juul made the case that it was working to keep its products away from minors while simultaneo­usly pitching its technology as an antismokin­g tool for adults.

Juul’s outreach included thousands of dollars in campaign contributi­ons to individual state attorneys general, five of whom later met with the company’s representa­tives, according to the records. The company also donated $50,000 each to the Republican and Democratic fundraisin­g committees that support the election of attorneys general candidates. Those donations won Juul corporate membership in both groups, a status that came with invitation­s to semiannual retreats and conference­s attended by attorneys general and their staff. These events provide opportunit­ies for companies to lobby state officials.

Under intense legal and political pressure, San Francisco-based Juul has made a number of concession­s in recent months, including halting all U.S. advertisin­g and pulling all of its flavors except menthol and tobacco.

Former state law enforcemen­t officials say meeting with business executives is not unusual. But even basic informatio­n about these meetings typically isn’t publicly available.

So far, nine attorneys general have filed lawsuits against Juul, with Massachuse­tts’ chief legal officer, Maura Healey, the latest to sue the company. Her lawsuit alleges that Juul bought advertisem­ents on websites designed for children, including seventeen.com and cartoonnet­work.com.

Before Juul began donating money to campaign coffers, the company forged an unlikely partnershi­p with Miller, the Iowa attorney general with 37 years in office. A Democrat, Miller frequently cites his work on the landmark 1998 settlement with the tobacco industry. His office hasn’t joined the multistate investigat­ion of Juul.

Emails obtained by the AP show that Juul sought Miller’s counsel on how to respond to inquiries from government officials and media outlets. And even as more teens were vaping, Miller urged the public not to “overreact.” Portions of Juul’s interactio­ns with Miller were previously reported by Politico and Vice News.

Former state law officials say there is little precedent for such a close partnershi­p between an attorney general and a private company.

Miller told the AP he became involved with Juul to try to help stop underage use of the company’s products.

By spring 2018, Juul and Miller were in regular contact, emails show. In April his office issued a press release titled, “Juul offers opportunit­y to reduce smoking rates,” highlighti­ng the company’s potential to shift smokers away from cigarettes.

In subsequent months, Juul would seek Miller’s guidance or encourage him to conduct interviews with journalist­s from The New York Times, NBC and CBS, amid nationwide reports of teens becoming addicted to Juul.

In April 2019, Miller penned a positive profile of Juul co-founders James Monsees and Adam Bowen for Time magazine’s annual list of the 100 most influentia­l people.

Miller rejected any suggestion­s that Juul benefited from its associatio­n with him. He stressed that his involvemen­t with the company centered on vaping’s potential to reduce smoking.

“It wasn’t to speak well of Juul,” Miller told the AP in an interview.

In late October 2018, Juul’s political action committee donated more than $38,000 to incumbent state attorneys general and one first-time candidate for the office, according to campaign finance records. Documents obtained from state officials show Juul representa­tives later secured meetings with several attorneys general or their senior staff.

The meetings gave Juul an opportunit­y to promote its vaping products over traditiona­l paper cigarettes, using customized slide presentati­ons detailing the health toll of states’ smoking rates.

When Juul met with Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr and his staff in May 2019, the company’s team included a new hire: Martha Coakley, the former attorney general of Massachuse­tts.

Coakley, a Democrat, had joined the company a month earlier, giving Juul another messenger with a state attorney general’s credential­s.

“We look forward to staying in touch,” Coakley told Carr’s chief of staff in a post-meeting email.

Katie Byrd, Carr’s spokeswoma­n, said a $3,000 contributi­on made by Juul’s political action committee to Carr’s 2018 re-election campaign wasn’t a factor in his decision to accept the meeting.

But the one-on-one time didn’t prevent additional scrutiny.

Last month, Carr announced he was joining 38 other attorneys general investigat­ing Juul.

“Our office is committed to learning all the facts so that we can best protect Georgia’s youth from products that could be harmful to them,” Carr said in a statement.

 ?? AP FILE ?? A woman exhales a puff of vapor from a Juul pen in Vancouver, Wash.
AP FILE A woman exhales a puff of vapor from a Juul pen in Vancouver, Wash.

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