The Morning Call

Johnson & Johnson hit with $8B verdict over antipsycho­tic

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PHILADELPH­IA — A Philadelph­ia jury has awarded $8 billion in punitive damages against Johnson & Johnson and one if its subsidiari­es over a drug the companies made that the plaintiff’s attorneys say is linked to the abnormal growth of female breast tissue in boys, an incurable condition known as gynecomast­ia.

Johnson and Johnson immediatel­y denounced the award after the jury’s decision late Tuesday in the Court of Common pleas, saying it’s “excessive and unfounded” and vowing immediate action to overturn it.

Johnson & Johnson used an organized scheme to make billions of dollars while illegally marketing and promoting the antipsycho­tic drug Risperdal, plaintiff’s attorneys TomKline and Jason Itkin said in a statement.

Thousands of lawsuits have been filed over the drug, but the attorneys said this was the first in which a jury decided whether to award punitive damages and came up with an amount.

Johnson & Johnson said in a statement on its website it was confident that the award would be overturned, calling it “grossly disproport­ionate” with the initial compensato­ry damage award and “a clear violation of due process.”

Johnson & Johnson said the court’s exclusion of key evidence left it unable to present a meaningful defense, including what they said was a drug label that “clearly and appropriat­ely outlined the risks associated with the medicine” or Risperdal’s benefits for patients with serious mental illness. They also said the plaintiff’s attorneys failed to present any evidence of actual harm. additional medical kits to help care for more than 110,000 people infected with the measles. More than 1.4 million children have been vaccinated this year.

The U.N. agency said Congo’s government will launch a vaccinatio­n campaign in late October.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who spoke to Trump on Wednesday, has urged the woman to return to the U.K.

 ?? FERNANDO LLANO/AP ?? A mourner places roses on crooner Jose Jose’s casket during a memorial Wednesday in Mexico City. It was agreed after a dispute among relatives that half the ashes would remain in South Florida, where he died, and the other half would be brought to Mexico.
FERNANDO LLANO/AP A mourner places roses on crooner Jose Jose’s casket during a memorial Wednesday in Mexico City. It was agreed after a dispute among relatives that half the ashes would remain in South Florida, where he died, and the other half would be brought to Mexico.

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