Judge Osteen's Ruling on the Tobacco Industry's EPA Lawsuit: Summary and Practical Implications
Judge Osteen's Ruling on the Tobacco Industry's EPA Lawsuit: Summary and Practical Implications
R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company 7/23/98Court Findings
A Federal Court has ruled that the EPA wrongly classified secondhand smoke as a Group A (known human) carcinogen.
Contrary to statements by the EPA Administrator, the Courts ruling was not merely procedural. Among other things, the Court found (pp. 89-90) that EPA:
- "publicly committed to a conclusion before research had begun"
- "adjusted established procedure and scientific norms to validate the Agencys public conclusion"
- "aggressively utilized the Acts authority to disseminate findings to establish a de facto regulatory scheme intended to restrict Plaintiffs products and to influence public opinion"
- "disregarded information and made findings on selective information"
- "failed to disclose important findings and reasoning"
- "left significant questions without answers"
- "did not disseminate significant epidemiologic information"
- "excluded industry by violating the [Radon] Acts procedural requirements"
- "deviated from its Risk Assessment Guidelines"
The Court noted as "particularly relevant" the fact that the EPAs own internal risk assessment experts had told the Agency that the Risk Assessment did not support a Group A classification (p.64): "EPAs Risk Criteria Office, a group of EPA risk assessment experts, concluded that EPA failed to reasonably explain how all relevant data on ETS, evaluated according to EPA Risk Assessment Guidelines causality criteria, can support a Group A classification."
The Court concluded that: "EPA produced limited evidence, then claimed the weight of the Agencys research evidence demonstrated ETS causes cancer."
Bottom Line
It may be politically correct to attack secondhand smoke, but it is not scientifically correct nor, in the Courts opinion, legally correct.
The Courts ruling clearly confirms that:
- EPA deliberately misled the American public about the science concerning secondhand smoke.
- EPA was guilty of major scientific and procedural errors in preparing its Risk Assessment.
- EPA cherrypicked information, changed the standards of scientific inquiry and tortured the data to reach a predetermined conclusion.
- EPA abused its power and authority in an effort to force regulation on secondhand smoke when the scientific basis for the EPAs claims simply did not exist.
Practical Implications
Background
On July 17, 1998, U.S. District Judge William Osteen (Middle District of North Carolina) issued a summary judgment in the tobacco industrys 1993 challenge to the EPAs report, entitled "Respiratory Health Effects of Passive Smoking: Lung Cancer and Other Disorder."
- The Court vacated (invalidated) every part of the 1993 EPA ETS (Environmental Tobacco Smoke) Risk Assessment dealing with lung cancer (Chapters 1-6 and the Appendices).
- The Court granted the industrys motion to move forward on a supplemental pleading claiming the EPA has had improper influence on various organizations that have the power to regulate or influence regulations concerning cigarette smoking.
The Courts ruling highlighted numerous errors in the scientific process, as well as procedural failings. The Court noted (p. 91):
- "EPAs conduct of the ETS Risk Assessment frustrated the clear Congressional policy underlying the Radon Research Act [the statute EPA cited as authority for its Risk Assessment]."
- "EPA also failed the Acts procedural requirements."
Chapters 7-8 of the Risk Assessment, which deal with effects other than lung cancer, were not challenged by the industry primarily because these chapters did not form the basis for the regulatory efforts to ban smoking that have taken place throughout the country as a result of the EPAs incorrect and now invalid classification of secondhand smoke as a known human carcinogen.
###
***********************
Go To: Tobacco BBS HomePage / Resources Page / Health Page / Documents Page / Culture Page / Activism Page
***********************
END OF DOCUMENT