Friday, March 8, 2013

California Jury Awards $8,000,000




Los Angeles Times March 8, 2013.  A Los Angeles jury Friday ordered healthcare giant Johnson & Johnson to pay $8 million in damages to a retired prison guard who said he was injured by the company's defective artificial hip.
But in a victory for the company, the 12-member jury declined to levy any punitive damages, despite being told by the guard's lawyer that J&J's behavior warranted up to $179 million.
This marks the first verdict in more than 8,000 similar suits filed against the world's biggest medical-products maker over this all-metal hip introduced in 2005 by DePuy, the orthopedic division of J&J.
In this case, Loren Kransky, a 65-year-old former prison guard in Montana, claimed that he suffered metal poisoning and other health problems from the company's ASR XL hip implant he received in 2007. The company recalled about 93,000 ASR hips in 2010.
Kransky accused the company of selling a defective design, failing to warn about the risks and overall negligence.
The closely watched trial began Jan. 25, and jury deliberations began March 1.

L. A. Times