- Tentative pact would end years of litigation over product
- Deal would resolve liability 3M tried to curb with bankruptcy
The settlement would avert a potentially much larger liability that 3M sought to curb through a controversial bankruptcy case that ultimately collapsed. The sum is about half the roughly $10 billion some financial analysts predicted 3M could end up paying over allegations that the earplugs didn’t adequately protect the hearing of service members.
Traders welcomed the resolution. 3M shares were up 5.8% at $104.66 at 9:45 a.m. in New York.
“Sounds like 3M negotiated a pretty good deal for itself, given this litigation has been weighing on them for the better part of a decade,” said
A 3M representative said the company doesn’t comment on rumor or speculation.
Analysts at
Costly Verdicts
The accord would end a torrent of litigation facing the St. Paul, Minnesota, company even as it faces thousands of other lawsuits over
In the most recent trial, a Florida jury ordered the manufacturer in 2022 to pay US Army veteran James Beal
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The hundreds of thousands of lawsuits have been consolidated in a multi-district litigation before a federal judge in Florida for pretrial information exchanges and test trials, according to federal court records. In the suits, current and former service members allege 3M knew its earplugs were too short to work effectively and that it failed to warn the US government or users, or to take steps to fix the product.
Under the terms of the settlement, the maker of popular consumer products such as Scotch tape and Post-it notes would pay out the money over five years, said the people, who requested anonymity because they weren’t authorized to speak publicly about the accord. They said 3M’s board still must sign off on the deal.
Bankruptcy Strategy
3M had sought to limit its liability by having its
In June a bankruptcy judge threw out Aearo’s case, finding that 3M wasn’t in the kind of financial trouble that warranted using the bankruptcy system to manage litigation. Aearo has appealed the ruling. A similar move by
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As 3M’s bankruptcy strategy languished, lawyers for the company and the service members pursued a settlement in mediation required by the judge overseeing the earplug litigation, US District Judge
According to the lawsuits, the earplugs were defective over a 12-year period starting in 2003. In 2012, there were 971,990 tinnitus claims lodged with the US Veterans Administration, government records show. Experts estimate such claims are rising 15% annually.
The earplug accord isn’t 3M’s first. In 2018, after a whistleblower lawsuit, the company agreed to pay $9.1 million to settle civil allegations by the US Justice Department that it failed to disclose defects it knew about to the military.
As for the forever-chemicals litigation, 3M has
The earplugs case is In Re 3M Products Liability Litigation, 19-md-2885, US District Court, Northern District of Florida (Pensacola).
(Updates with share price in third paragraph.)
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To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Peter Jeffrey, Frank Connelly
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