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In 2018, 3M agreed to pay $9 million to the U.S. Justice Department to settle allegations that it sold the earplugs to the military without disclosing the defect, with no determination of liability.
3M has started sending payments as part of its previously announced $6 billion settlement to resolve almost 300,000 lawsuits alleging that the manufacturing company supplied faulty combat earplugs ...
Beyond the earplug litigation, 3M in June agreed to pay at least $10.3 billion to settle lawsuits over contamination of many U.S. public drinking water systems with potentially harmful compounds ...
The CAEv2 was a double ended earplug that 3M claimed would offer ... 3M settled close to 260,000 lawsuits in August 2023 by agreeing to pay $6 billion to current and ...
3M has agreed to pay $6 billion to resolve roughly 300,000 lawsuits alleging that the manufacturing company supplied faulty combat earplugs to the military that resulted in significant injuries ...
In the first off-label promotion case ever litigated in a whistleblower suit under the False Claims Act, the settlement was announced after eight years of litigation in May 2004. Warner-Lambert agreed to pay $430 million to resolve all civil and criminal liability, with $24.64 million going to Franklin for his participation in the lawsuit. [2]
The initial $253 million, part of a larger $6 billion settlement from 3M will go to more than 250,000 active service members and veterans. The initial $253 million, part of a larger $6 billion ...
1950s According to the 2016 lawsuit brought against 3M by Lake Elmo, Minnesota, 3M had "disposed of PFCs and PFC-containing waste at a facility it owned and operated in Oakdale, Minnesota (the "Oakdale Facilities")" during the 1950s. [18] [19] 1951 "The DuPont chemical plant in Washington, West Virginia, began using PFOA in its manufacturing ...