The warning isn't an answer to this:
Third Wave: Plaintiff Successes & Lawsuits by the States
In the 1990s, plaintiffs began to have limited success in tobacco lawsuits, partly because some cigarette company documents were leaked showing the companies were aware of the addictive nature of tobacco. The first big win for plaintiffs in a tobacco lawsuit occurred in February 2000, when a California jury ordered Philip Morris to pay $51.5 million to a California smoker with inoperable lung cancer.
Around this time, more than forty states sued the tobacco companies under state consumer protection and antitrust laws. These states argued that cigarettes contributed to health problems that triggered significant costs for public health systems. In these lawsuits, the tobacco companies could not use the defense that had proven so successful in lawsuits brought by individuals -- that the smoker was aware of the risks and decided to smoke anyway.
In November 1998, the attorneys general of 46 states and four of the largest tobacco companies agreed to settle the state cases. Terms of the settlement are referred to as the Master Settlement Agreement. Highlights include:
Tobacco companies agreed to refrain from engaging in certain advertising practices, particularly ad campaigns that marketed cigarettes towards kids.
Tobacco companies agreed to pay annual sums of money to the states to compensate them for health-care costs related to smoking (a minimum of $206 billion over the first twenty-five years).
The settlement created and funded the National Public Education Foundation, dedicated to reducing youth smoking and preventing diseases associated with smoking.
Tobacco companies dissolved three of the biggest tobacco industry organizations.
That was the third wave. We have moved on since then.
The latest cases say this: This ruling paved the way for over 8,000 smokers and their families to bring individual lawsuits against the tobacco companies. In these lawsuits, plaintiffs need only prove that the individual plaintiff was harmed by an addiction to cigarettes.
These sorts of cases are quite complex legally. A lot of cases involving warnings turn on whether the warning was as prominent as the advertising. In other words, did the person really understand the nature of the warning. It is not usually enough just to say that there was some sort of warning. Certainly here, the warnings on cigarettes cover half the pack and there is no cigarette advertising. There is still alcohol advertising here and the warnings are tiny.
I think there are a lot of people who have been drinking longer than these warnings were in place. The site I took this from says to get in touch and they can get a lawyer to look into it. I think alcohol is in the same situation but not yet developed. Tobacco Litigation: History & Recent Developments | Nolo.com
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