Skip to main content

J&J Talc Unit Second Bankruptcy Must Be Dismissed, Cancer Victims' Lawyers Say

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

Johnson & Johnson’s second attempt to resolve talc lawsuits in bankruptcy should be dismissed as an unprecedented fraud designed to deny plaintiffs just compensation, lawyers representing cancer victims argued in a Monday court filing, Reuters reported. The attorneys contend J&J defied a January appeals court rejection of its first attempt to settle the litigation, noting that a J&J subsidiary refiled for chapter 11 about two hours after a court dismissed its first bankruptcy. The lawyers blasted the move as the "largest intentional fraudulent transfer in United States history." Johnson & Johnson is offering to settle all claims for $8.9 billion, up from its original offer of $2 billion. Monday's legal broadside challenged the company’s latest gambit as an unlawful abuse of the chapter 11 system, echoing earlier objections to its first effort to resolve the lawsuits. In October 2021, J&J executed a controversial legal maneuver known as a Texas two-step. The tactic involved dividing its consumer business in two and then offloading tens of thousands of talc lawsuits onto a newly created subsidiary, which almost immediately filed for chapter 11. The goal: to halt the avalanche of lawsuits and force plaintiffs into a global settlement in bankruptcy court. The plaintiffs allege J&J's talc-based Baby Powder and similar cosmetic products caused ovarian cancer and mesothelioma. The company maintains its talc products are safe.