Courts: Victim blamed cancer on asbestos in the cigarette filter. Its maker contends the illness could not have been from smoking that brand.
Scanning his newspaper one day in 1991, Norman Braun was amazed to read that Kent cigarettes–once touted as offering “the greatest health protection in cigarette history”–had contained a particularly virulent form of asbestos. He clipped and mailed the article to his sons, along with a note: “I smoked these damn cigarettes.”
Still, Braun felt more indignant than fearful. The executive with Encyclopaedia Britannica in Chicago had quit smoking in the 1960s and was exceptionally fit for a man of 60–a dedicated cyclist who trained with riders half his age.
But then Braun got a death sentence. In 1993, he was found to have mesothelioma–a rare and uniformly fatal cancer whose only significant known cause is asbestos exposure. Before dying last winter, he filed a lawsuit claiming that asbestos he inhaled from smoking Kents became a time bomb ticking in his chest.
Scheduled for trial this week in U.S. District Court in Chicago, the Braun case is one of about 15 lawsuits filed by mesothelioma victims against Lorillard Inc., maker of Kents, and Hollingsworth & Vose Co., the Massachusetts firm that made the asbestos material used in Kent filters from 1952 to 1956. Besides these suits by smokers, damage claims have also been filed by employees of Lorillard and Hollingsworth & Vose who handled the filter material and later contracted asbestos illness.
Read more: http://articles.latimes.com/1995-11-05/news/mn-65287_1_cigarette-filter

