Dec 15, 2025
KEY TAKEAWAYS: Los Angeles jury awards $40 million to two women in talc-related cancer case Plaintiffs claimed long-term use of JJ talcum powder caused ovarian cancer Johnson Johnson plans to appeal the verdict and damages award Company stopped selling talc-based baby powder globally in 2023 A Los Angeles jury awarded $40 million on Friday to two women who claimed that talcum powder made by Johnson Johnson caused their ovarian cancer. The giant health care company said it would appeal the jury’s liability verdict and compensatory damages. The verdict is the latest development in a longstanding legal battle over claims that talc in Johnson’s Baby Powder and Shower to Shower body power was connected to ovarian cancer and mesothelioma, a cancer that strikes the lungs and other organs. Johnson Johnson stopped selling powder made with talc worldwide in 2023. In October, another California jury ordered JJ to pay $966 million to the family of a woman who died of mesothelioma, claiming she developed the cancer because the baby powder she used was contaminated with the carcinogen asbestos. In the latest case, the jury awarded $18 million to Monica Kent and $22 million to Deborah Schultz and her husband. “The only thing they did was be loyal to Johnson Johnson as a customer for only 50 years,” said their attorney, Daniel Robinson of the Robinson Calcagnie law firm in Newport Beach, California. “That loyalty was a one-way street.” Erik Haas, JJ’s worldwide vice president of litigation, said in a statement that the company had won “16 of the 17 ovarian cancer cases it previously tried” and expected to do so again upon appealing Friday’s verdict. Haas called the jury’s findings “irreconcilable with the decades of independent scientific evaluations confirming that talc is safe, does not contain asbestos, and does not cause cancer.” Johnson Johnson replaced the talc in its baby powder sold in most of North America with cornstarch in 2020 after sales declined. In April, a U.S. bankruptcy court judge denied JJ’s plan to pay $9 billion to settle ovarian cancer and other gynecological cancer litiation claims based on talc-related products. ...read more read less
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