In light of 13 consecutive verdicts against the tobacco industry in Florida since 2009, St. Petersburg Times columnist Robert Trigaux speculates on whether cigarette companies might be ready to start settling the 9,000 cases awaiting trial in the state.
Florida has more tobacco cases than any other state, and Edward Sweda Jr., senior attorney for the Tobacco Products Liability Project, which encourages lawsuits against cigarette makers, says the companies may opt to forgo court battles.
Sweda’s tracked tobacco litigation since his days in law school in 1979. He argues the sheer momentum and volume of these Florida cases with unfavorable verdicts for tobacco will force the industry to settle. If they lose at the appeals level, he says, tobacco companies must actually start paying off the verdicts against them.
And that, argues Sweda, is when it becomes very possible the tobacco industry will start talking settlement.
But one tobacco industry leader scoffed at the idea. Murray Garnick, senior vice president of Altria, the company that owns Philip Morris, has repeatedly said cigarette companies aren’t planning to settle. The companies continue to appeal each ruling against them and point to verdicts in many cases that divide responsibility between the smoker and the tobacco companies as evidence that they still have a case to make, Trigaux says.
Related:Florida Jurors Deal Another Blow to Tobacco Industry
Tobacco Tagged with Another Loss in Florida


Don’t think that tobacco leaders would agree with the fact to close the door to their rich future. There were taken many measures to make the society realize about the danger they are exposed to when smoking, but it seems that they don’t show too many positive results.
The congress act of 1967 for tobacco companies to start putting health warnings on packages didn’t actually begin in 1967 but much later. And the warning was weak compared to the actual dangers of the product. Warning: smoking “may” be harmful to your health, to Warning: smoking is hazardous to your health about 7 years after the first one which didn’t scare people away, which company greed was their only real concern. Spiking cigaretts with nicotine to control the habbits of it’s users is their most unforgivable crime and they should be punished by the same measure of greedy law suites to fit their crimes!