March 15th, 2010

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Police Once Owned Guns Used in Pentagon, Courthouse Shootings

Guns used in two high-profile shootings were once owned by Memphis law enforcement officials, according to an investigation by the Associated Press. One gun, used in the March 4 shooting at the Pentagon by a mentally ill man, was seized by the Memphis police in 2005 and later traded to a gun dealer. From there, ... Read more »

Starbucks and Guns: Open Danger, Concealed Danger

As thousands of concerned citizens continue to sign the Brady Campaign’s petition calling on Starbucks to change its policy allowing customers with guns into its stores (as of this writing, up to 33,000 and counting), there have been two particularly revealing responses to the controversy: one from Starbucks and the other from leading “gun rights” supporters.

Study: Cigarette Ads Target Teenage Girls

Despite a 1998 agreement by tobacco companies not to target young people, some ads continue to lure teenagers to smoke, according to a study published today in the journal Pediatrics. The study said an advertising campaign for Camel No. 9 cigarettes appealed directly to young girls, possibly in violation of the 1998 legal settlement with ... Read more »

Organ Transplant Program Raises Ethics Concerns

In a controversial departure from the way organ donations are performed, a pilot program at two Pittsburgh hospitals allows emergency room doctors to take organs from patients just two minutes after their hearts stop beating, The Washington Post reports. Previously, the procedure, known as donation after cardiac death, was only done on patients who died ... Read more »

Court: Vaccine Preservative Does Not Cause Autism

The vaccine preservative thimerosal does not cause autism, the U.S. Court of Federal Claims ruled Friday. Thimerosal contains mercury, which can affect children’s brain development. But  vaccines containing the preservative have tiny amounts of the heavy metal, and many studies have found no evidence that autism is more common among kids who have received vaccines preserved with ... Read more »

Toyota Update: Lawyer Wars, Brake Override Consideration, Prius Test

Here’s the latest news on the Toyota safety investigations. From the Wall Street Journal: Increasing scrutiny of Toyota’s response to safety issues has led to a small of army of plaintiff’s lawyers lining up to file suits.  A March 25 hearing in federal court in San Diego is expected to lead to the consolidation of ... Read more »

FDA Reviewing Testing of Medical Devices

The Food and Drug Administration is reviewing its practice of allowing third-party testing of new medical devices by companies hired by device makers. The review follows reports of more than 300 cases of radiation overdose from CT scanners at four hospitals. According to FDA data reviewed by the Wall Street Journal, in the year ending Sept. 30, 2008, more ... Read more »

Regulators Cited Human Error for Acceleration Deaths in Other Cars

More fatalities attributed to sudden acceleration occurred in vehicles made by companies other than Toyota, according to a review of federal records since 1980 by Bloomberg news. According to statistics compiled by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 59 of the 110 deaths attributed to sudden acceleration occurred in vehicles other than Toyotas. While Toyota ... Read more »

String of Safety Violations Found at UCLA

UCLA officials failed to report a serious lab accident to state regulators a year before a research assistant died of burns in a similar accident, according to records released Friday. The Los Angeles Times reports that state safety inspectors have fined the university $67,700 for safety violations since the fatal accident. UCLA disputed the recent ... Read more »

Jury Awards $17.5 Million Against RJR to Smoker’s Widow

Tobacco company R.J. Reynolds was ordered to pay $17.5 million in damages to a Gainesville, Fla., woman whose husband died of lung cancer in 1995 after 38 years of smoking, The Gainesville Sun reports. A lawyer for RJR argued the deceased was responsible for choosing to smoke for 38 years and that cigarettes weren’t proven ... Read more »