Defense fired back in their opening statement in Chanin v. Desert Shadow Endoscopy Center. The plaintiffs alleged that drug companies Baxter and Teva supplied propofol containers that were defective because they were too large, thus encouraging the kind of multi-dose "double-dipping" that could foreseeably result in the spread of blood-born pathogens, such as the Hepatitis C infection that plaintiff Henry Chanin contracted at Desert Shadow Endoscopy.
msch
Recent Posts
Topics: Toxic Torts, Products Liability, Endoscopy Center Cases, Pharmaceutical
Opening statements have begun in CVN's live webcast of Chanin v. Desert Shadow Endoscopy.
Topics: Products Liability, Endoscopy Center Cases, Pharmaceutical
On direct examination, Sharon Putney testified that her mother, Margot Putney, tried to tell Sharon "Happy Birthday" nine days before her mother's death, but she "couldn't get the words out."
Topics: Toxic Torts, Products Liability, Tobacco Litigation, Putney v. R.J. Reynolds
CVN is pleased this week to be covering a tobacco trial (Putney v. RJ Reynolds) and an asbestos trial (Evans v. AW Chesterton).
Topics: Announcements
The jury in Putney v. R.J. Reynolds deliberated only briefly before determining that Margot Pitney died of lung cancer, rather than thyroid cancer, as the defense had suggested.
Topics: Toxic Torts, Products Liability, Tobacco Litigation, Putney v. R.J. Reynolds


