Los Angeles Times

3 lawsuits filed over e-cigarette blasts

Suits in Kern and Orange counties allege vaping devices and their components are unsafe.

- By Hailey Branson-Potts hailey.branson@latimes.com Twitter: @haileybran­son

Vicente Garza was getting ready for bed in his Bakersfiel­d home when he decided to use an electronic cigarette.

He lifted the device to his mouth, pushed the vapor button and started to inhale. Then it exploded near his face, badly burning his mouth and dominant left hand, which had been holding the device. Doctors amputated Garza’s left index finger, and he had to undergo immediate surgery on his tongue after the Oct. 16 incident. He still can barely eat.

On Thursday, Garza’s attorney, Gregory L. Bentley, said he had filed a product liability lawsuit against the ecigarette’s manufactur­er and designer, Flawless Vapes & Supplies; the Bakersfiel­d store where Garza bought the battery and device, Luxor Cafe & Vape Lounge; and the Bakersfiel­d store where he bought his ecigarette charger, Vape Fame.

“I never in my life thought that something like this would happen,” Garza, 23, said at a Glendale news conference Thursday.

Garza’s is one of three ecigarette explosion lawsuits filed by Bentley this week in Kern and Orange counties.

“E-cigarette explosions are becoming all too common as this industry is taking off,” Bentley said. “Consumers have the right to expect that products have been properly designed, manufactur­ed and tested for safety before they are put into the marketplac­e.”

The suits allege the ecigarette­s and their components, including lithium-ion batteries and chargers, were unsafe and that the businesses in the supply chains failed to properly warn of the defects.

Employees at Luxor Cafe & Vape Lounge and Vape Fame said they were unaware of Garza’s lawsuit. Other defendants in his and the other suits could not be reached for comment.

E-cigarettes constitute a multibilli­on-dollar industry, with millions of users, according to a 2014 report on ecigarette fires and explosions by the U.S. Fire Administra­tion. The report said e-cigarettes use lithium-ion batteries that contain flammable liquid electrolyt­es that can explode when they overheat, such as when they receive too much voltage while charging.

Despite huge sales, the fledgling industry is largely unregulate­d, with few safeguards for consumer protection, Bentley said.

In September, a Riverside County Superior Court jury awarded Bentley client Jennifer Ries nearly $1.9 million after she sued the distributo­r, wholesaler and store where she bought vaping devices that exploded. She was badly burned after a charging e-cigarette battery caught fire in her car. Bentley said that was the first ecigarette explosion lawsuit to be tried in the country and that his phone has since been ringing nonstop with similar cases.

Bentley this week filed a suit in Kern County on behalf of Bakersfiel­d resident Gregory Phillips Jr., whose leg was burned in September when an e-cigarette battery exploded in his pocket. He required skin grafts. Phillips is suing the device’s seller, Bakersfiel­d store Cigarette World 4.

Bentley also filed suit this week in Orange County Superior Court on behalf of retired former Los Angeles Galaxy soccer player Daniel Califf. In February, Califf was using an e-cigarette when it exploded near his face, blasting a large hole in his cheek.

It gave him a concussion and caught the room on fire, the suit alleges. Califf is suing the distributo­r of one of the device’s components, Washington-based Uvaper Inc., and the seller, Newport Beach-based 32nd Street Vapors, which closed but is now doing business as R&D Creations, according to the attorney.

 ??  ?? AN IMAGE from the firm of Vicente Garza’s attorney shows his injuries from an e-cigarette.
AN IMAGE from the firm of Vicente Garza’s attorney shows his injuries from an e-cigarette.

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