A Civics Lesson for Big Tobacco
The jury thought the size of the verdict "would put the companies on notice -- not just the tobacco companies, all companies -- concerning fraud or misrepresentation of the American public
(Wake up Dow, Monsanto, Union Carbide and the rest of the poison producers. YOU ARE NEXT!)
A Civics Lesson For Big Tobacco
By Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
And the nation should be saying to the Engle jury,
"Thank you. Thank you for making the system work. Thank you for delivering
a civics lesson to us all "
Lesson No. 1: Lives should matter more than profits.
"For them -- Big Tobacco -- this trial was about
money," jury foreman Leighton Finegan, an assistant principal at a
Miami-Dade elementary school, told reporters. "For us, it was about
people's lives."
Finegan denounced Philip Morris attorney Dan Webb for
saying a large punitives award would be "a death warrant" for the
industry. "He ignored the death warrant on the millions of lives of people
[the tobacco industry] lied about," Finegan said.
Lesson No. 2: Corporations that engage in fraud and deceit,
with deadly consequences, should be held accountable.
"We want this message loud and clear: We will not
tolerate fraud and misrepresentation," Finegan said. "They belittled
or denied causation of the health effects of smoking and addiction, and had the
gall to challenge public health authorities."
Lesson No. 3: Punitive damages are a form of punishment --
they have to be sufficiently large to make defendants take notice.
"We had a sense of mission," Finegan said to
journalists. "And we did not want to ignore the tremendous devastation that
the product has caused. The number had to match that. It had to be
significant."
Lesson No. 4: The importance of punitive damages is their
very uncertainty -- they make it harder for corporations to calculate their
liability and engage in "rational" decisions to harm the public.
The jury thought the size of the verdict "would put
the companies on notice -- not just the tobacco companies, all companies --
concerning fraud or misrepresentation of the American public," Finegan
said.
These basic lessons have been obscured by a nimble public
relations effort by Big Tobacco, and its proxies, to spin media coverage and
public interpretation of the verdict.
The jury's award would throw the industry into bankruptcy,
the tobacco lawyers tell the media. But a tobacco firm memorandum that we
obtained candidly acknowledges that the verdict will not bankrupt the industry,
and that Florida law requires the judge to lower the award if necessary to avoid
such an outcome.
The leading independent expert on tobacco pricing, MIT's
Jeffrey Harris, points out that with substantial increases in price, Big Tobacco
can increase its revenues by tens of billions of dollars a year. The industry is
reluctant to raise cigarette prices to revenue-maximizing levels because it
knows this will deter future smokers and diminish the overall number of smokers
-- and thereby the industry's political influence.
The decision is certain to be overturned, say the tobacco
industry analysts on Wall Street, who have managed to convince investors not to
abandon tobacco stocks. Anything is possible on appeal, of course, but the
Florida Supreme Court has already declined to hear a challenge to the industry's
central bone of contention (that Florida smokers should not be joined in a
class, and instead should bring their cases on an individual basis). And why is
it that the media turns to tobacco industry analysts -- who are heavily invested
in tobacco stocks and have recently evolved into industry spokespeople -- for
litigation predictions?
Most dangerous is the line, subtly supported by the tobacco
industry, that public policy should be made in Congress, not in the courts.
Public policy is, and should be, made both in the
legislative and judicial branches. In the case of tobacco, the
nicotine-money-addicted Congress has failed for decades to do its job. We should
celebrate that the Engle jury has done its job. Higher prices from the large
award will cut smoking rates dramatically, and over the years save hundreds of
thousands of lives. And the threat of future verdicts will prod the industry to
engage in less severe misconduct.
That is not to say that regulation isn't important. But
just as litigation is no substitute for regulation, regulation is no substitute
for litigation.
In the coming months, the industry and its allies will
almost surely propose a new legislative deal to trade regulatory concessions for
litigation protections and immunities.
The rejection of such an offer in 1997-1998 made possible
the Engle verdict, and the offer should be dismissed again, this time out of
hand. That is another of the civic lessons to be drawn from the Engle jury.
As the tobacco control movement looks ahead, blocking
another tobacco industry immunity proposal and focusing on the international
operations of Big Tobacco will be two of the primary challenges ahead.
Russell Mokhiber is editor of the
Washington, D.C.-based Corporate Crime Reporter. Robert Weissman is editor of
the Washington, D.C.-based Multinational Monitor and co-director of Essential
Action, a corporate accountability group. Mokhiber and Weissman are co-authors
of Corporate Predators: The Hunt for MegaProfits and the Attack on Democracy
(Monroe, Maine: Common Courage Press, 1999, http://www.corporatepredators.org)
(c) Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
_______________________________________________
Focus on the
Corporation is a weekly column written by Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman.
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