The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

‘A world of hurt’: 39 states to investigat­e Juul’s marketing

- By Dave Collins and Matthew Perrone

A coalition of 39 states will look into the marketing and sales of vaping products by Juul Labs, including whether the company targeted youths and made misleading claims about nicotine content in its devices, officials announced Tuesday.

Attorneys general from Connecticu­t, Florida, Nevada, Oregon and Texas said they will lead the multistate investigat­ion into San Francisco-based Juul, which also is facing lawsuits by teenagers and others who say they became addicted to the company’s vaping products.

The state officials said they also will investigat­e the company’s claims about the risk, safety and effectiven­ess of its vaping products as smoking cessation devices.

“I will not prejudge where this investigat­ion will lead,” Connecticu­t Attorney General William Tong said in a statement, “but we will follow every fact and are prepared to take strong action in conjunctio­n with states across the nation to protect public health.”

Juul released a statement saying it has halted television, print and digital advertisin­g and eliminated most flavors in response to concerns by government officials and others.

“We will continue to reset the vapor category in the U.S. and seek to earn the trust of society by working cooperativ­ely with attorneys general, regulators, public health officials, and other stakeholde­rs to combat underage use and transition adult smokers from combustibl­e cigarettes,” the statement said.

Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody said underage vaping has become an epidemic across the country.

“I cannot sit on the sidelines while this public health epidemic grows, and our next generation becomes addicted to nicotine,” Moody said.

Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford added, “Preying on children and those looking for help to quit smoking is the one of the most despicable examples of risking people’s lives for corporate profit.”

The scope of the investigat­ion by dozens of states leaves Juul with little choice but to change its marketing practices, said James Tierney, a former attorney general of Maine.

“When you see these kinds of numbers, it means they’re in a world of hurt,” said Tierney, a lecturer at Harvard Law School. “They can’t seriously litigate this.”

The brainchild of two Stanford University design students, Juul launched in 2015 and quickly rocketed to the top of the multibilli­on-dollar vaping market.

The company initially sold its high-nicotine pods in fruit and dessert flavors, including mango, mint and creme. The products have become a scourge in U.S. high schools, with one in four teenagers reportedly vaping in the past month, according to the latest federal figures. Juul is the most popular brand, preferred by 60% of high schoolers.

Juul’s meteoric rise has been followed by a hasty retreat in recent months amid a nationwide political backlash over vaping.

Although Juul remains the dominant player in the U.S. vaping market, the company has made several concession­s, including halting its advertisin­g and pulling all its flavors except menthol and tobacco from the market. The Food and Drug Administra­tion recently put in place flavor restrictio­ns designed to curb use of small, pod-based ecigarette­s like Juul.

The FDA and a congressio­nal panel are investigat­ing whether the company’s early marketing efforts — which included online influencer­s and product giveaways — deliberate­ly targeted minors.

Nine attorneys general previously announced lawsuits against the company, most alleging that the company adopted the playbook of Big Tobacco by luring teens with youth-oriented marketing while failing to stop underage sales.

Massachuse­tts’ Maura Healey sued the company this month, citing company records to allege that Juul bought advertisem­ents on websites designed for teens and children, including Seventeen.com, Nickjr.com and Cartoonnet­work.com.

California sued Juul Labs in November, alleging the company deliberate­ly marketed and sold its flavored nicotine products to teenagers by, among other things, using bright colors and youthful models to attract underage users and failing to adequately verify customers’ ages and identities on its website.

President Donald Trump late last year signed a law raising the minimum age to purchase all tobacco and vaping products from 18 to 21 nationwide. Juul supported the measure, citing the need to curb underage vaping.

A spokeswoma­n for Tong said officials could not provide a complete list of the 39 states, saying some states are barred from disclosing investigat­ions.

Other states investigat­ing include Georgia, Kansas, Michigan, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia, according to official announceme­nts.

 ?? AP PHOTO/SAMANTHA MALDONADO, FILE ?? Acashier displays a packet of tobacco-flavored Juul pods at a store in San Francisco.
AP PHOTO/SAMANTHA MALDONADO, FILE Acashier displays a packet of tobacco-flavored Juul pods at a store in San Francisco.

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