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Justice Department settles with tobacco companies on database

Wednesday, December 14, 2011
(Updated 2:49 pm)

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — The nation's two biggest tobacco companies, Philip Morris USA Inc. and R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., have agreed to pay $6.25 million to support the country's largest online collection of internal tobacco industry documents, the Justice Department announced Wednesday.

The settlement resolves a dispute over an online document database ordered in 2006 by the U.S. District Court in Washington in a long-standing case against the industry. The judge ruled the companies had suppressed documents in an effort to deceive people about the health effects of smoking and nicotine addiction, as well as marketing to youth and changes to cigarette designs to increase addiction.

Over the next four years, the company will pay to fund, and enhance access to, the Legacy Tobacco Documents Library, an online database of more than 13 million internal tobacco company documents run by University of California, San Francisco. The database, which contains documents mostly revealed during lawsuits against the companies, went online in 2000. Hard copies are also stored in an archive known as the Minnesota Depository.

The settlement must still be approved by the court.

"This agreement helps make sure that these documents will be accessible to researchers, journalists, students, lawyers, the government and the public at large — anyone who is interested in learning more about the defendants' efforts to mislead consumers about the effects of smoking," Tony West, assistant attorney general for the civil division of the Department of Justice, said in a statement.

Representatives for Richmond, Va.-based Altria Group Inc., parent of Marlboro maker Philip Morris USA; and Reynolds American Inc., the Winston-Salem, N.C.-based owner of R.J. Reynolds, maker of Camel and Pall Mall cigarettes, did not immediately provide comment on the settlement Wednesday.

In the 2006 ruling, U.S. District Judge Gladys Kessler found the companies masked the dangers of smoking. In addition to the document database, she has said she wants the industry to pay for various types of ads, both broadcast and print, but she has not said what the statements should say, where they must be placed or for how long.

The government's proposed corrective ads would cover the addictiveness of nicotine, the lack of health benefits from "low tar," ''ultra-light" and "mild" cigarettes and the dangers of secondhand smoke. The companies have argued that the statements are inflammatory, inaccurate and "designed solely to shame and humiliate" the companies.

The court is considering delaying that decision while other courts decide newer cases challenging new tobacco marketing restrictions and graphic cigarette warning labels the government has proposed.

Comments

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whyus

December 14, 2011 - 3:18 pm EST

No wonder with continuous government intrusion on the tobacco industry in the US that a large percentage of tobacco sales with these large companies are done overseas now. Guess who will be complaining if the jobs are moved there?

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