June 29th, 2010

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Supreme Court Allows Nigerian Pfizer Cases To Go On

The Supreme Court on Tuesday declined to review an appeal by Pfizer Inc., paving the way for Nigerian families to pursue lawsuits they filed against the drugmaker for what they argue were inappropriate clinical trials that killed or disabled dozens of children. Pfizer conducted clinical trials for the antibiotic Trovan during a 1996 meningitis epidemic, ... Read more »

Habitat for Humanity Homes May Have Tainted Drywall, Report Finds

A New Orleans chapter of Habitat for Humanity continues to insist that the Chinese drywall it used to build nearly 200 houses for victims of Hurricane Katrina is safe. But residents have had problems with corrosion, electronics failure and health issues they believe are related to their drywall, according to an investigative report published by ... Read more »

Massey Challenges Feds Over Mine Disaster Probe

For the second time in a week, Massey Energy Co. has taken legal action against federal regulators who are investigating the April explosion that killed 29 miners at one of the company’s West Virginia mines. The coal company is appealing a Mine Safety and Health Administration order that restricts what the company can do during ... Read more »

Cell Phone Industry Retaliates After San Francisco Passes Radiation Law

The cell phone industry is striking back after San Francisco last week voted to require cell phone retailers to post the amount of radiation the phones on their shelves emit. The industry is concerned that the landmark requirement will spark fears that cell phone radiation causes cancer, though the word is not mentioned in the ... Read more »

Cockpit Fires Spark Inaction From FAA

For years, federal aviation officials have known that cockpit window heaters in some Boeing planes catch fire, but they have yet to require airlines to resolve the problem, the Associated Press reports. In at least 29 incidents, pilots reported that the heaters burned or smoldered, sometimes even after flight crews had sprayed them with fire ... Read more »

High Court Upholds Tobacco Racketeering Verdict, Denies Appeal for Damages

The Justice Department and top cigarette makers both won something and lost something when the Supreme Court on Monday denied separate appeals in the government’s racketeering case against the tobacco industry. The action left intact a landmark 2006 ruling by federal judge Gladys Kessler that major tobacco companies had engaged in a decades-long conspiracy to ... Read more »