A federal jury rejected a man’s claims that formaldehyde leaking from the trailer he lived in for two years after Hurricane Katrina caused him to develop a throat tumor. The decision was the second win for trailer manufacturers in cases filed after government tests found that temporary housing for hurricane victims emitted high levels of formaldehyde.
From Courthouse News Service:
The jury found that the trailer in which 39-year-old Lyndon Wright lived was not “unreasonably dangerous” in construction or design. And it found that Shaw Environmental of Baton Rouge was not negligent in installing the trailer.
The trailer companies were contracted by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, but FEMA was not a defendant in the trial.


