Tobacco Lawyers Grill Whistle-Blower Over Diary

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A slender, hand-written diary recounting colorful details of tobacco whistle-blower Jeffrey Wigand’s struggles within the Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. has come under intense scrutiny in the company’s bitter lawsuit against Wigand.

The 43-page diary, which surfaced publicly this week at Wigand’s marathon deposition in Louisville, describes the frustrations of the tobacco industry’s highest-ranking defector, while portraying an industry consumed by fear of legal catastrophe.

In one anguished entry in 1991, Wigand wrote: “I have come to the feeling and knowledge that we are nothing but merchants of death and will not make the effort, while totally feasible, to reduce the risks associated with an addictive habit.”

Another time, he wrote: “Some of what I have seen, heard and witnessed are just plain criminal.”

But lawyers for B&W, the third-biggest U.S. cigarette maker, have challenged the authenticity of the diary, claiming that a vengeful Wigand, angry at losing his $300,000-a-year job as vice president for research and development, fabricated entries years after the fact to support a stream of false allegations. They have not substantiated the claim, but got Wigand to acknowledge one inaccurate date in the diary.

“Our belief is that that diary is entirely made up,” said Gordon Smith, an attorney for B&W.

Read more: http://articles.latimes.com/1996-07-19/business/fi-25629_1_tobacco-lawyers
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One comment to “Tobacco Lawyers Grill Whistle-Blower Over Diary”

  1. Just the Facts

    Where are the other comments? I want to see why the CEOs weren’t charged with perjury.

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