Guest guest Posted August 23, 2005 Report Share Posted August 23, 2005 Vioxx . MedicalConspiracies@googlegrojurors talk about verdict Aggressive marketing played a role, they say, and one number kept coming up By RUTH RENDON Copyright 2005 Houston Chronicle http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/nation/3318238 JURY QUESTIONS Ten of the 12 jurors had to answer the following questions in order to reach a verdict. The jury's decision was unanimous.: • 1. Was there a defect in the marketing of Vioxx at the time it left the possession of Merck & Co., Inc., that was a producing cause of the death of Bob Ernst? Answer: Yes • 2. Was there a design defect in Vioxx at the time it left the possession of Merck & Co., Inc. that was a producing cause of the death of Bob Ernst? Answer: Yes • 3. Did the negligence, if any, of Merck & Co. Inc., proximately cause the death of Bob Ernst? Answer: Yes -- If jurors answer " yes " to questions No. 1, 2 or 3, then they must answer the following. • 4. What sum of money, if paid now in cash, would fairly and reasonably compensate Carol Ernst for her damages, if any, resulting from the death of Bob Ernst? Answer separately, in dollars and cents, for damages, if any. • a. Pecuniary loss sustained in the past: $100,000 • b. Pecuniary loss that, in reasonable probability, will be sustained in the future: $350,000 • c. Loss of companionship and society sustained in the past: $2 million • d. Loss of companionship and society that, in reasonable probability, will be sustained in the future. $10 million • e. Mental anguish sustained in the past. $2 million • f. Mental anguish that, in reasonable probability, will be sustained in the future: $10 million -- If jurors answer " yes " to questions No. 1, 2 or 3 and have inserted a sum of money in answer to question No. 4, then jurors will answer the following. • 5. Do you find by clear and convincing evidence that the harm to Bob Ernst resulted from malice attributable to Merck & Co., Inc.? Answer: Yes -- If jurors answer " yes " to question No. 5, then they will answer the following question. • 6. What sum of money, if any, should be assessed against Merck & Co. Inc. and awarded to Carol Ernst as exemplary damages for the death of Bob Ernst? $229 million. ANGLETON - Throughout the six-week trial surrounding the once popular painkiller Vioxx, the number $229 million kept being posted on a large projection screen in the courtroom. Plaintiff's attorney Mark Lanier said the number represented the amount of money Merck made by waiting four months to add a precaution in Vioxx's label. Ten of the dozen jurors thought that number would best send a message to Merck & Co., the makers of Vioxx, when issuing punitive damages Friday. The first question jurors had to answer was if there was a defect in the marketing of Vioxx and whether the drug was a producing cause of Robert Ernst's death. The question had a domino effect as jurors found in favor of Ernst's widow, Carol, in answering the other five questions posed to them. A majority of the jurors said Merck's aggressive marketing of Vioxx led to their decision. Juror Derrick Chizer and other jurors said they were surprised that no Merck marketing personnel attended the trial. " Marketing was a big part of the case, " he said. " If you're right, you're going to be there to answer. " A part of the trial centered on Merck's marketing efforts, including spending $1 million for the drug's launch party. Carol Ernst alleged in her lawsuit against Merck that her husband's 2001 death was caused by Vioxx. Robert Ernst took Vioxx every day for almost eight months to treat the pain in his hands. " When you write that figure ($229 million), it means Merck is going to have to get responsible, " said Rhonda Wade, 41, of Clute. " It's not the money, " added Marsha Robbins, 53, of Freeport, who served as the presiding juror. " It's accountability. " Carol Ernst was awarded $253.45 million Friday, including $229 million in punitive damages. " That was a number they kept saying over and over, " juror Stacy Smith, a 21-year-old college student, said. " It was in our mind. When you're sitting there for five weeks and that number kept being repeated, the number stuck in our mind. " Jurors deliberated 10 1/2 hours over two days before reaching a decision. The group began hearing testimony in the case on July 14 in a large courtroom in the Brazoria County Courthouse. Label change ordered During the trial — the country's first of nearly 4,300 lawsuits involving Vioxx — Lanier displayed an internal Merck document that showed the company would make $229 million if the company waited four months to add a precaution to the label. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration and Merck quibbled over the label change between 2000 and 2002. The FDA eventually sent Merck a letter in October 2001 telling the company to change the label. The precaution was to say that a study showed five more people taking Vioxx had cardiac events than those taking another painkiller. The company complied with the FDA's request in February 2003 — four months after the federal agency made the request. Merck has contended that Vioxx had nothing to do with Robert Ernst's death because he died of a heart arrhythmia and took the drug less than eight months. Vioxx is no longer on the market but made up to $2.5 billion a year between 1999 and September 2004. Attorneys visit with jurors After the verdict was read Friday afternoon by state district Judge Ben Hardin, jurors were escorted to a nearby building where attorneys spent time visiting with them. Chizer said the message jurors wanted to send to Merck was for the company to take their responsibility seriously. " Every life counts to us. They should be responsible. If they care, then show it, " said Chizer, 43, of Pearland, who works for the Social Security Administration. Jonathon Skidmore, an attorney for Merck, said the company had acted responsibly by researching the drug prior to approval in clinical trials involving almost 10,000 patients and monitoring the medicine. Two jurors, James Fruidenberg, 46, of Lake Jackson, and Brandon Beaver, 28, of Manvel, were in the minority in Friday's verdict. Under Texas law, only 10 out of the dozen jurors must agree on the verdict and damages in civil cases. " I couldn't convict a reasonable medical company based on probability, " Fruidenberg said. He explained that there was a probability that Vioxx caused Ernst's death but he believed there was a certainty that Ernst had some heart disease. Chronicle reporter Richard Stewart contributed. ruth.rendon Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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