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March 2007

Up in Smoke

The goal was “to bring this industry to its knees.”

That’s what Texas Attorney General Dan Morales said on March 28, 1996, as he an­nounced filing the first-ever federal civil racketeering lawsuit against the major tobacco companies.

“The purpose of this lawsuit is to change how this industry does business,” said Morales, who was the seventh state attorney general to sue the cigarette makers for smoking-related health care costs. “We are going to stop them from selling their deadly product to minors. We are going to force them to manufacture a safer product.”

In a little more than a year, 30 more states had filed similar lawsuits. The monetary claims topped $100 billion. Hun­dreds of lawyers were employed by both sides.

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In This Issue

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Feature Section
  • Fantasy Life, Real Law

    Beathan Vale was concerned about his lo­cal court system, which had only one judge.

  • A Tangled Trail of Discovery

    As a computer forensic examiner, Craig Ball has a speech he likes to give to the owners of the computers he intends to search. In it, he’s trying to dissuade them from deleting or destroying files.

  • The D.C. Power Web

    With a new Democratic-controlled Congress warming up to exercise its investigative and oversight authority, the revolving door of lawyers moving between Washington’s K Street and Capitol Hill—and back again—is spinning fast.

ABA Connection
  • Battling Bribery Abroad

    When Alexandra A. Wrage traveled to Dubai a little more than two years ago, only about 20 people showed up for her class on compliance with the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

The National Pulse
Supreme Court Report
McElhaney on Litigation
Corner Office
Solo Network
Tech Audit
Your ABA
President's Message
Obiter Dicta
Precedents


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