LOS ANGELES – A pathologist called by attorneys for Johnson & Johnson in a trial to decide if alleged asbestos in baby powder caused Amy Fong to contract the deadly disease said the product does not cause mesothelioma.
LOS ANGELES – On Thursday in a trial over allegations that asbestos in Johnson & Johnson Baby Power caused a woman to develop mesothelioma, attorneys for plaintiff Amy Fong focused on the deficiencies in the testing lab of the defendant's witness.
LOS ANGELES – Lawyers for plaintiff Amy Fong on Wednesday attempted to undercut the testimony of a key defense witness, challenging his presentations and using documents they said showed that officials at Johnson & Johnson were concerned about the possibility of asbestos in its baby powder.
LOS ANGELES – An expert witness for Johnson & Johnson on Tuesday attacked the testing techniques of an expert witness for plaintiff Amy Fong in a trial to decide if the company’s baby powder allegedly caused Fong to develop mesothelioma.
LOS ANGELES – An expert witness for Johnson & Johnson said on Monday in a trial to determine if asbestos allegedly caused a woman to develop mesothelioma that the mineral had not been detected in the company's baby powder.
LOS ANGELES – Attorneys for Johnson & Johnson on Thursday attempted to blunt a central premise advanced by plaintiff Amy Fong’s lawyers that a form of testing known as concentration not used by Johnson & Johnson could have spotted asbestos in the baby powder she alleges caused her mesothelioma.
LOS ANGELES – Attorneys for Amy Fong had the woman recount the hell of undergoing treatments for mesothelioma on Wednesday and showed a jury family photos to demonstrate what she could lose in a trial over allegations asbestos in Johnson & Johnson baby powder caused the disease.
LOS ANGELES – The husband of Amy Fong on Tuesday recounted the suffering his wife goes through battling mesothelioma in a trial over allegations her disease was caused by asbestos in Johnson & Johnson Baby Powder.
LOS ANGELES – In a trial to decide if Amy Fong contracted mesothelioma from asbestos allegedly in Johnson & Johnson Baby Powder, a statistician brought in as an expert witness by her lawyer said on Monday it’s almost a certainty Fong was exposed.
LOS ANGELES – In a trial over allegations asbestos in baby powder caused Amy Fong’s mesothelioma, attorneys for Johnson & Johnson on Friday continued to question if the baby powder she used was the same that a key plaintiff witness contends tested positive for the deadly mineral.
LOS ANGELES – In a trial over allegations that Johnson & Johnson Baby Powder tainted with asbestos caused a woman’s mesothelioma, attorneys for the company on Thursday sought to undermine the testimony of a key plaintiff witness saying bottles of the powder he tested were of uncertain origin.
LOS ANGELES – An expert witness for plaintiff Amy Fong said on Wednesday in a trial to decide if the talc caused Fong to develop mesothelioma that a majority of bottles of Johnson & Johnson Baby Powder tested positive for asbestos.
LOS ANGELES – An expert witness for plaintiff Amy Fong said on Tuesday that millions of particles of asbestos had been detected in a single bottle of Johnson & Johnson Baby Powder in a trial over allegations the talc caused Fong’s mesothelioma.
LOS ANGELES – In a trial to determine if Johnson & Johnson Baby Powder allegedly contaminated with asbestos caused a woman’s mesothelioma, documents on Wednesday revealed that at least one Johnson & Johnson executive wrote that the company should consider using corn starch instead of talc powder.
LOS ANGELES – An attorney for plaintiff Amy Fong on Tuesday appeared to be attempting to portray the Korean-mined Johnson & Johnson Baby Powder Fong alleges caused her mesothelioma to be under-tested and under-regulated.
LOS ANGELES – In a taped deposition filmed in September of 2018, a top company spokesman for Johnson & Johnson flatly denied the company knew corn starch was safer than talc in a trial to decide if Johnson & Johnson Baby Powder caused a woman’s mesothelioma.
LOS ANGELES – A physician who has treated hundreds of patients exposed to asbestos said on Tuesday that Johnson & Johnson Baby Powder was the cause of Amy Fong’s mesothelioma, not from breathing air in Hong Kong as Johnson & Johnson lawyers allege.
TORRANCE, Calif. – A pulmonary doctor specializing in lung diseases told a courtroom on Friday that plaintiff Carolyn Weirick’s mesothelioma was not caused by Johnson & Johnson baby powder, while Weirick’s attorneys portrayed him as a biased mercenary for major corporations that recklessly use asbestos in their products.
The attorney for plaintiff Carolyn Weirick sought last week to portray an expert witness for Johnson & Johnson as a highly paid industry spokesman and wrong in his testimony that there was no asbestos in the manufacturer's baby powder during a trial to decide if the product caused Weirick’s mesothelioma.
In a trial to decide if Johnson & Johnson Baby Powder allegedly laced with asbestos caused a woman’s mesothelioma, an expert witness for the company told a jury last week that there was no asbestos in the talc powder.