Houston Chronicle

Juul settles vaping inquiry for $438.5M

Multi-state agreement resolves investigat­ion into sales practices, marketing to children

- By Erik Larson, Rachel Butt and Malathi Nayak

Juul Labs Inc. reached an agreement in principle to pay $438.5 million to 33 states, including Texas, to resolve a twoyear bipartisan probe into the ecigarette manufactur­er’s marketing and sales practices, particular­ly claims that it marketed addictive nicotine products to children.

The accord, which also includes Puerto Rico, would force Juul to comply with a series of “strict injunctive terms severely limiting their marketing and sales practices,” Connecticu­t Attorney General William Tong, who led the negotiatio­ns with Texas and Oregon, said in a statement Tuesday.

Under the deal, Juul will refrain from all youth marketing, paid product placement, advertisin­g on public transporta­tion, funding education programs, depicting anyone under 35 years old in advertisin­g and using cartoons in ads, among other marketing activities, according to the statement. Juul also agreed not to advertise on billboards or use paid influencer­s to promote products.

“Juul’s cynically calculated advertisin­g campaigns created a new generation of nicotine addicts,” Tong said in the statement. “They relentless­ly marketed vaping products to underage youth, manipulate­d their chemical compositio­n to be palatable to inexperien­ced users, employed an inadequate age verificati­on process and misled consumers about the nicotine content and addictiven­ess of its products.”

Juul said in a statement that the settlement is a “significan­t part of our ongoing commitment to resolve issues from the past,” adding that the terms of the deal are already in alignment with its current business practices.

“We remain focused on the future as we work to fulfill our mission to transition adult smokers away from cigarettes — the No. 1 cause of preventabl­e death — while combating underage use,” the company said.

Other deals

The agreement follows some earlier deals with individual states. Juul in April reached a $22.5 million settlement with Washington state over claims that it unlawfully targeted underage consumers. North Carolina struck a $40 million accord with Juul last year over how the company markets products to underage users. Separate lawsuits by New York and California are pending.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion in June banned Juul products on U.S. shelves, citing a lack of evidence demonstrat­ing their overall safety. The regulator also noted Juul’s “disproport­ionate role in the rise in youth vaping.”

Juul won a court order temporaril­y blocking that decision, and the agency separately stayed its ban, allowing the company to continue selling products for now. A ban would wipe out a substantia­l portion of Juul’s revenue, and the company has been considerin­g options including new financing and a potential bankruptcy filing if that happens.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said in a statement that his state will receive nearly $43 million under the deal.

“My commitment to protecting consumers from deceptive business practices is unwavering, and any company that misleads Texans, especially our youth, will be held accountabl­e for their actions,” Paxton said.

Many more suits

The multistate investigat­ion revealed that Juul became the dominant player in the vaping market by deploying an advertisin­g campaign that appealed to youth, according to the statement.

“The investigat­ion found that Juul relentless­ly marketed to underage users with launch parties, advertisem­ents using young and trendy-looking models, social media posts and free samples,” according to the statement.

Juul still faces more than 2,500 personal injury lawsuits and hundreds more cases brought by local government­s and school districts seeking to hold the company responsibl­e for underage vaping. Experts estimate that Juul could potentiall­y face hundreds of millions of dollars in damages from those claims.

The first trial among these cases, which involves claims by the San Francisco Unified School District, is set for November.

 ?? Joshua Bright/New York Times ?? Juul Labs has tentativel­y agreed to pay $438.5 million to settle an investigat­ion by nearly three dozen states that focused on the company’s sales and marketing practices that they claim fueled the teenage vaping crisis.
Joshua Bright/New York Times Juul Labs has tentativel­y agreed to pay $438.5 million to settle an investigat­ion by nearly three dozen states that focused on the company’s sales and marketing practices that they claim fueled the teenage vaping crisis.

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