
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Wayne State University Law School Professor Peter Henning discusses the Johnson & Johnson California talc-cancer case that will now go before a second jury because the first jury couldn’t agree whether a dying woman was eligible for punitive damages after finding that the company’s talc products caused her illness. The jury did find the companies products caused her cancer and awarded her 12 million dollars. He speaks to Bloomberg’s June Grasso.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
By Bloomberg3.6
360360 ratings
Wayne State University Law School Professor Peter Henning discusses the Johnson & Johnson California talc-cancer case that will now go before a second jury because the first jury couldn’t agree whether a dying woman was eligible for punitive damages after finding that the company’s talc products caused her illness. The jury did find the companies products caused her cancer and awarded her 12 million dollars. He speaks to Bloomberg’s June Grasso.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

1,729 Listeners

4,395 Listeners

411 Listeners

1,172 Listeners

2,181 Listeners

1,982 Listeners

438 Listeners

352 Listeners

1,114 Listeners

970 Listeners

6,304 Listeners

194 Listeners

67 Listeners

30 Listeners

744 Listeners

4 Listeners

154 Listeners

58 Listeners

233 Listeners

230 Listeners

64 Listeners

89 Listeners

149 Listeners

78 Listeners

84 Listeners

397 Listeners

20 Listeners

12 Listeners

8 Listeners

2 Listeners

120 Listeners