Tobacco industry activity Michigan
{{#badges:Tobaccowiki}} An article from the November 19, 1969 Grand Rapids (Michigan) Press describes a case where the Liggett and Myers Tobacco Company (L&M) tried to block the use of a death certificate as a foundation for medical testimony linking smoking to a fatal lung cancer in a deceased father of four. L&M was facing a $750,000 damage claim alleging that a man named Leslie Thayer died from lung cancer caused by 30 years of smoking Chesterfield cigarettes, an L&M product. One of the Liggett attorney's arguments before the jury to exclude the death certificate information, before the judge quickly stopped him, was that "the industry supplies 314,000 jobs and contribues $4 billion annually to the economy."[1]
Related Sourcewatch resources
- Tobacco industry
- Tobacco industry legislation
- Tobacco industry public relations strategies
- Leslie Thayer
- Tobacco industry position on indicating tobacco use on death certificates
- Tobacco industry and death certificates
External resources
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References
- ↑ Hank Bornheimer, Grand Rapids Press Tobacco Co. Overruled on Death Certificate Use Newspaper article. November 19, 1969. Tobacco Institute Bates No.TITX0013356