Tonight I wont talk about poor Jonbenet Ramsey.....we
don't know enough yet to effectively comment on anything.....we can hope this is the right guy.......and if it is not then it sounds to me like he needs to be stoped anyway so it is a good thing we got him..........although if he is the guy can you remember how we treated her mother.......The Big guy will look after her and little Jon for Dad and us all........
one thing I can
say something about though is Tobacco...... I know....what has that got to do with anything?...well......let me be the first to tell you.......
Yes children.....if you didn't already know ranxid is
officially among the quitters......and in tribute to my own success I post this
article for all smokers and quitters alike......lets go reclaim our souls from
the glass jars they are being kept in down at the tobacco
factory........
Big Tobacco lied but need not pay, judge rules
Industry must make 'corrective statements' but cannot be further penalizedWASHINGTON - Cigarette makers escaped major financial penalties Thursday, even though a federal judge found them liable for violating racketeering laws in a decades-long conspiracy to hide the dangers of smoking.
U.S. District Judge Gladys Kessler ruled that a group of tobacco companies had broken the law, but could not be forced to pay monetary penalties such as funding a large anti-smoking campaign, as the government had sought.
“Cigarette smoking causes disease, suffering, and death. Despite internal recognition of this fact, defendants have publicly denied, distorted, and minimized the hazards of smoking for decades,” she said in the 1,653-page opinion.Kessler said the companies suppressed research, destroyed documents and manipulated nicotine levels to perpetuate addiction, but an appeals court ruling prevented her from slapping the companies with costly remedies.
She did impose some remedies, including ordering the companies to make “corrective” public statements about the health effects and addictiveness of smoking, and banning them from describing cigarettes in ways that convey health claims such as “low tar” and “light.”
Targeted in the 1999 lawsuit were Altria Group Inc. and its Philip Morris USA unit; Loews Corp.’s Lorillard Tobacco unit; Vector Group Ltd.’s Liggett Group; Reynolds American Inc.’s R.J. Reynolds Tobacco unit and British American Tobacco Plc unit British American Tobacco Investments Ltd.
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MORE ON THE TOBACCO RULING
• Judge: Big Tobacco lied for decades
• Ruling sends tobacco stocks up
• Sound off: What's your take on the decision?
• Live Vote: Do you agree with the ruling?
• Read the full text of the opinion (.pdf file)
• MSN Health guide to stop smokingAs public health groups expressed disappointment in the outcome, tobacco stocks rose. Altria gained over 3 percent in extended trading after the ruling, Reynolds rose over 2 percent, Carolina Group, a tracking stock for Lorillard, was up over 1 percent.
“Although they lost, they won. It’s a victory for the tobacco companies,” said Tim Ghriskey, chief investment officer at Solaris Asset Management.
A spokesman for Reynolds Tobacco said the company was disappointed that Kessler ruled in favor of the government, but "certainly we’re pleased that the court did not award unjustified and extraordinary expensive monetary penalties."
The ruling was also seen as the last major hurdle to be cleared before Altria decides when it will spin off its Kraft Foods Inc. business.
Kessler ordered each company to post on its Web site all documents it submitted to prosecutors in the case and transcripts of letters and depositions of former employees about the health impacts of cigarette smoking or research. The material must remain on their Web sites until 2016.
The corrective statements would have to appear on Web sites, in full-page advertisements in major newspapers, on three major television networks and on cigarette packaging.
Little regard for sufferingShe also ruled that the tobacco companies will have to pay for the government’s court costs. Current figures are not available, but the government has previously said it spent more than $130 million on the case.
The companies pursued profits “with little, if any, regard for individual illness and suffering, soaring health costs, or the integrity of the legal system,” Kessler said.
Kessler exempted Liggett from the remedies, saying the company “does not have a reasonable likelihood of future (racketeering) violations” because it withdrew from the conspiracy in the mid-1990s.
The judge said she was barred from imposing stricter penalties against the tobacco companies by a February 2005 ruling of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.
That opinion, written by appellate Judge David Sentelle, barred the government from seeking $280 billion in past industry profits, depriving the government of its biggest potential weapon in the case.
Lawyers for the Justice Department eventually asked the judge to instead require tobacco companies to fund a 10-year, $14 billion anti-smoking program.
But in Thursday’s opinion, Kessler said that remedy was also out of step with the appeals court ruling, which dictated that civil racketeering remedies focus on the prevention of future misconduct, not punishment of past misdeeds.
Public health groups applauded Kessler for holding the tobacco companies liable but expressed disappointment in the remedies .
“It’s ... worthy of a life sentence but instead they got a slap on the wrist,” Cass Wheeler, the chief executive of the American Heart Association, said in a statement.
The Justice Department applauded Kessler’s finding of liability, and while disappointed with the remedies, was hopeful they could have “a significant, positive impact on the health of the American public.”
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KEY TOBACCO RULINGS
A federal district court judge ruled on Thursday that cigarette makers conspired for years to hide smoking dangers but declined to impose major monetary penalties.
The decision came in the government’s 1999 lawsuit against Altria Group Inc. and its Philip Morris USA unit; Loews Corp.’s Lorillard Tobacco unit, which has a tracking stock, Carolina Group; Vector Group Ltd.’s Liggett Group; Reynolds American Inc.’s R.J. Reynolds Tobacco unit and British American Tobacco Plc unit British American Tobacco Investments Ltd.
Other key rulings involving the tobacco industry include the following:
— July 2006: Florida Supreme Court refused to reinstate a $145 billion punitive damages award against major cigarette makers found liable for selling a dangerous product. It ruled that the punitive award was “clearly excessive” and said it would “result in an unlawful crippling of the defendant companies.”
— May 2006: Illinois Supreme Court said it would not reconsider its earlier reversal of a $10.1 billion damage award against Philip Morris USA over the marketing of “light” cigarettes. The court in December ordered a lower court to dismiss a class-action case in which the company was accused of defrauding customers into thinking “light” cigarettes were safer than regular ones.
— February 2005: U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit barred the government from seeking $280 billion in past industry profits in the racketeering case decided on Thursday. The appeals court decision deprived the government of its biggest potential weapon. The court said any remedies must focus on the prevention of future misconduct, not punishment of past misdeeds.I hope this lasts for me....I am tired of 32 years of servitude to the tobacco companies...........the horror to my own health and the health of those around me
Thursday, August 17
The cigarette post
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