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Bushs gift to big tobacco
By Joseph Kay and Jeff Lincoln
13 June 2005
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As the US government civil racketeering suit against the tobacco
industry came to an end last week, the Justice Department undercut
its own case and gave a free gift to the giant cigarette makers.
Under pressure from high-ranking Bush administration officials,
government lawyers argued that the tobacco companies should pay
a fine that is a fraction of the amount called for by the governments
own witnesses.
On June 7, the government announced that it was requesting
that the industry be forced to pay only $10 billion over five
years to fund a smoking cessation program. The program would be
designed to help addicted smokers quit. A government witness had
previously testified that a program to target all existing smokers
in the US, estimated at about 45 million people, would require
funding of $130 billion over 25 years. It had been widely expected
that the Justice Department would follow the testimony of its
own witness in making its request before the court.
The governments decision this week was so obviously motivated
by political considerations that it elicited a comment from Judge
Gladys Kessler, of the US District Court for the District of Columbia,
who suggested that perhaps there are some additional influences
being brought to bear on the governments position in this
case. It is no secret that these additional influences
were top officials of the Bush administration itself.
The move is the latest in a series of attempts by the Bush
administration and the Republican right to scuttle a case that
was begun in 1999, before Bush came to office. Whether the case
is now decided by Judge Kessler, or there is a last-minute settlement
between the two sides, the resulting cost to the tobacco giants
will be minuscule compared to the amount the government had originally
sought.
The governments case against the six largest American
tobacco companiesincluding Philip Morris and RJ Reynoldshas
been based on the Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations
(RICO) Act. The 1970 law, which was originally created to prosecute
mobsters, makes normal business a crime if it is part of an illegal
conspiracy.
Documents filed by Justice Department lawyers contend that
the companies agreed in 1953 to a long-term public relations
campaign to counter the growing evidence linking smoking as a
cause of serious diseases. For the past 50 years, the companies
have allegedly conspired to keep customers from realizing the
full danger of smoking and have engaged in illegal activities
designed to encourage young people to start smoking. Smoking-related
diseases kill an estimated 400,000 people a year. (See Government case alleges criminal conspiracy
of US drug giants)
According to a Los Angeles Times article of June 10,
People close to the situation, speaking on condition of
anonymity, said [Sharon] Eubanks [head of the governments
legal team] and others on the trial team had staunchly opposed
the shift from a proposed 25-year cessation program...but were
overruled.
The main source of the pressure has reportedly been Assistant
Attorney General Robert McCallum, the third-ranking official in
the Justice Department. McCallums involvement in the case
constitutes a direct conflict of interest. Before joining the
Justice Department in 2001, he worked as a partner at Alston &
Bird, an Atlanta-based law firm that has done some work for RJ
Reynolds.
The Times cites an inside source as saying there has
long been this sense that the administration was never going
to let the industry take the kind of hit that might result from
an unfettered ability to prosecute the case. It think its
really clear from the circumstances that what happened here in
the last few days is not based on the legal merits.
Separate reports have also indicated that Justice Department
officials placed pressure on other government witnesses to moderate
their testimony. The Washington Post wrote on June 9, Matt
Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, said [Eubanks]
called him May 9 to say her superiors wanted him to scale back
the recommendations he had made in written testimony. They sought
to remove his suggestions for a ban on tobacco company methods
for marketing to young people before Myers took the stand. Myers
said he refused to do so. A second witness, scientific expert
Michael Eriksen, also departed from recommendations in his earlier
written testimony, court documents show. Eriksen declined to comment,
but four separate sources familiar with the case said Justice
Department lawyers had asked him to do so.
The government witness who recommended a $130 billion fine
to fund cessation programs was Michael Fiore, a medical professor
who once chaired the subcommittee on tobacco cessation at the
Department of Health and Human Services Interagency Committee
on Smoking and Health. It is unclear whether or not Fiore was
pressured to reduce his recommendation prior to his testimony
to fall in line with what the government was preparing to request.
These revelations and the government decision are hardly surprising,
as the Bush administration and the Republican Party have long
viewed the tobacco case with hostility. Since the mid-1990s, the
tobacco industry has given the overwhelming majority of its campaign
contributions to Republicans. The industry has furiously opposed
Clinton-era restrictions such as those regulating advertisements
directed at minors.
Shortly after it was filed in 1999, the Republican-dominated
House of Representatives sought unsuccessfully to block funding
for the case. When the Bush administration took over the White
House there was broad speculation that it would drop the suit.
In 2001, John Ashcroft, then the new attorney general, was forced
to retreat from moves to settle the case amidst a public outcry.
Previously, while a member of the Senate, Ashcroft was a public
opponent of the case, stating in a letter to a constituent that
he was concerned that the DOJ lawsuit could set an unwise
precedent leading to the federal government filing lawsuits against
other legal industries.
The case did not actually come to trial until five years after
it was filed. Then in February 2005, the tobacco companies won
a key appeal that had been filed in the District of Columbia District
Court of Appeals. The Appeals Court overruled Judge Kessler, who
had agreed with the government lawyers that the tobacco companies
could be forced under RICO to forfeit, or disgorge,
$280 billion in past profits, profits that had been earned as
a result of allegedly illegal activity.
Writing the majority decision for the Appeals Court was none
other than Judge David Sentelle, a close ally of the Republican
right. Sentelle ruled that under RICO, the prescribed punishment
must be forward-looking, that is, it must be directed
at preventing future abuse rather than enacting punishment for
past crimes. According to the courts opinion, giving up
profits is a quintessentially backward-looking remedy focused
on remedying the effects of past conduct.
Sentelle has long-standing ties with the Republican right and
played a key role in the impeachment drive against Bill Clinton.
He was chosen by Supreme Court Justice William Rehnquist to head
a three-judge panel to select a new independent counsel for the
Clinton investigation, despite Sentelles ties to those who
were organizing the impeachment. Sentelle used his position to
intervene in the Whitewater investigation by replacing special
prosecutor Robert Fiske with a figure far more closely identified
with the right wing of the Republican PartyKenneth Starr.
(See Kenneth
Starr and his accomplices: new aspects of the impeachment drive)
The DC Appeals Courts decision was a major blow to the
government case. This meant that it was completely in line with
the aims of the Bush administration, which was seeking to find
a way to undermine the case without dropping it outright. The
decision eliminated the largest threat to the tobacco industry.
Unable to force the companies to relinquish past profits, the
government lawyers focused on efforts to force them to pay for
cessation programs.
Now the Bush administration has used the Sentelle decision
to cut the amount it is asking to fund the cessation programs.
According to the government, the Appeals Court opinion implies
that the government cannot force the companies to pay for cessation
programs targeting all smokers. It can only have them pay for
programs that target new smokers, for otherwise the programs would
be backward-looking. This explains the sudden drop
from $180 billion to cover all smokers to $10 billion to cover
only the estimated 1.3 million smokers who will become addicted
during the year following the end of the case.
Thus, according to McCallum, the judges ruled against
us, and there is nothing the government can do in the matter.
In fact, the Justice Department decision is an extraordinary concession
of legal ground to the tobacco companies. The Appeals Court decision,
itself highly suspect on legal grounds, said nothing about the
funding of cessation programs designed to help people who were
the victims of tobacco company fraud.
While there remains the possibility of a settlement between
the government and the industry based on the very low government
request, the tobacco companies have sensed the strength of their
position and have responded accordingly. Not only are they aware
that the government is fighting against its own case, they also
know that any decision by Judge Kessler can be appealed to a very
sympathetic DC District Court of Appeals, whose newest member
is Janice Rogers Brown, an extreme right-wing opponent of all
constraints on big business.
Ted Wells, a lawyer for Philip Morris, responded by declaring
of the governments decision: Its outrageous.
Its ridiculous. This was a $280 billion case that became
a $130 billion case that became a $10 billion case that will eventually
become a zero billion dollar case. That is, the tobacco
companies hope that by maintaining pressure they can get away
without paying a cent.
Throughout this whole sordid process, the Bush administration
has revealed once again that it is a government completely beholden
to big business. At no other time in American history has there
been a government so openly contemptuous of public health and
social interests.
While there have been calls from the Democratic Party for an
investigation into the governments handling of the casecalls
that reflect certain regional and tactical divisions within the
American ruling eliteone can say with certainty that they
will not be pursued. The Democratic Party has been complicit in
each of the flagrant handouts to corporate America implemented
during Bushs termthe tax breaks for the rich and for
corporations, the class action reform bill, the bankruptcy reform
bill and many others.
The administration can proceed in such an extraordinarily brazen
manner only because of the absence of any real opposition from
within the political establishment and the general silence of
the media. Aside from a few articles in a handful of newspapers,
the mass media has refused to provide any serious coverage of
the tobacco case.
See Also:
Government case exposed conspiracy of
US tobacco giants
[13 June 2005]
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