Judge substantially reduced the jury's original $289 million award
EXCERPT: His attorney disagreed with the judge's settlement reduction, but Johnson will accept the lower amount in hopes of achieving "a final resolution within his lifetime," spokeswoman Robin McCall told The Associated Press.
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Groundskeeper accepts reduced $78 million in Monsanto cancer suit
Emily Sullivan
NPR, November 1, 2018
https://www.npr.org/2018/11/01/662812333/groundskeeper-accepts-reduced-78-million-in-monsanto-cancer-suit
The groundskeeper who won a massive civil suit against Bayer's Monsanto claiming that the weedkiller Roundup caused his cancer has agreed to accept $78 million, after a judge substantially reduced the jury's original $289 million award.
Dewayne "Lee" Johnson, a Northern Californian groundskeeper and pest-control manager, was 42 when he developed a strange rash that would lead to a diagnosis of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in August 2014.
His groundskeeper duties included mixing and spraying hundreds of gallons of Roundup, the company's glyphosate-containing weedkiller product, court records say.
Johnson — now near death according to his doctors — sued Monsanto in June, testifying that the herbicide likely caused his cancer. In August, jurors unanimously agreed and awarded him a total of $289 million, with $250 million in punitive damages and $39.25 million in compensatory damages.
In October, San Francisco Superior Court Judge Suzanne Bolanos slashed the punitive damages when she ruled the ratio between the compensatory damages and the punitive damages must be 1 to 1, reducing them from $250 million to $39.25 million.
"In enforcing due process limits, the Court does not sit as a replacement for a jury but only as a check on arbitrary awards," she wrote.
Johnson could have demanded a new trial instead of accepting the $78 million.
His attorney disagreed with the judge's settlement reduction, but Johnson will accept the lower amount in hopes of achieving "a final resolution within his lifetime," spokeswoman Robin McCall told The Associated Press.
German multinational Bayer acquired Monsanto in June. NPR sent an email requesting comment to Christi Dixon, the head of Global Public Relations with Bayer's Crop Science Division, but did not immediately receive a reply.
However, in a statement after the August verdict, Monsanto Vice President Scott Partridge said that the company is "sympathetic to Mr. Johnson and his family," adding that the jury's decision "does not change the fact that more than 800 scientific studies and reviews ... support the fact that glyphosate does not cause cancer, and did not cause Mr. Johnson's cancer."
Glyphosate is one of the most widely used herbicides in the U.S., according to the National Pesticide Information Center, which also says the herbicide has "carcinogenic potential."
According to Reuters, Bayer faces about 8,000 more lawsuits on the herbicide.