The letter proposes that bellwether cases for kidney and testicular cancers come from Pennsylvania, where the contamination is linked to former Naval Air bases near Philadelphia. For thyroid disease and ulcerative colitis cases, AFFF attorneys for victims suggest selecting individuals from Colorado, where contamination is associated with Peterson Air Force Base and Colorado Springs Municipal Airport. This approach aims to simplify the process by focusing on specific sites, thereby easing the burden on the court and parties involved.
The proposal emphasizes that selecting all Group A Tier 2 cases (kidney and testicular cancers) from Pennsylvania and all Group B Tier 2 cases (thyroid disease and ulcerative colitis) from Colorado will significantly reduce the discovery burden. It will also get more AFFF lawsuits to trial faster, which is the goal. It will also support the possibility of multi-plaintiff trials by ensuring common factual and legal issues, simplifying jury instructions, and reducing the risk of jury confusion.
AFFF lawyers highlight the procedural and factual background, noting that extensive Tier 1 discovery has already been completed. The aim here is to accurately represent the overall docket (as long as they are great cases, to be honest), ensuring the bellwether trials produce verdicts that reflect the range of cases in the litigation.
July 10, 2024: AFFF Litigation Clarifications
Let’s make sure everyone understands how this litigation works. Our lawyers represent plaintiffs injured by AFFF, as well as firefighters and others exposed to this chemical. But, unfortunately, this litigation is combined with state and local governments who are litigating to recover extensive costs incurred due to PFAS contamination affecting natural resources, public health, and infrastructure.
For instance, Wisconsin’s 2024-25 budget includes requests for additional staff to develop and implement PFAS-related regulations and standards, reflecting the state’s proactive approach to managing PFAS contamination. Similarly, New York has engaged in significant administrative enforcement, overseeing large-scale cleanup efforts and entering consent orders with site operators, such as Westchester County Airport, to remediate contaminated soils and groundwater. Rhode Island is working on agreements with public water systems to ensure compliance with state PFAS standards, demonstrating the state’s commitment to addressing PFAS pollution.
These legal actions are grounded in claims under consumer protection laws and environmental statutes and demands for civil penalties, restitution, and public nuisance abatement. The lawsuits aim to secure funding for ongoing and future remediation efforts and public health initiatives.
These are important lawsuits. There is no question. It is just unfortunate that they are in the same litigation as individual injury cases because the government water contamination lawsuits suck too much of the energy out of the court.
May 30, 2024: CMO No. 30 Establishes Protocol For Dismissing AFFF Personal Injury Claims
In Case Management Order No. 30, the court establishes a detailed protocol for dismissing personal injury claims that did not make the cut in the AFFF class action lawsuit.
For dismissing entire cases, AFFF attorneys must file a notice of voluntary dismissal for member cases on the lead MDL docket and ensure the filing is spread to the respective member cases. Each notice can list up to 25 member cases and must indicate that dismissals are pursuant to Paragraph 6 of Second Amended CMO 28. Additionally, an extra document listing the cases to be dismissed must be submitted to the Clerk’s office in a specific format.
For plaintiffs who wish to continue pursuing claims outside of the MDL, the Second Amended Case Management Order, issued two weeks ago, provides a path. If the dismissals are done properly, a tolling agreement will be in place. Most firefighting foam lawyers will hold these cases and see how the science plays out because the epidemiology of some of these diseases is still in its infancy.
May 28, 2024: Our Firm Narrows Qualifying Diagnoses
Our firm is now focusing on new cases involving six diseases:
- Ulcerative colitis
- Liver cancer
- Kidney cancer
- Testicular cancer
- Thyroid disease/hypothyroidism
- Thyroid cancer
This is a significant narrowing of the playing field for us, likely eaving out some very deserving cases. So why do it? Because this is litigation, we have to follow the science that is now, not where it might be going.
March 26, 2024: First Round Of Bellwether Trials To Feature Liver And Thyroid Cancer Cases
Although we still don’t have a date set for when they will begin, the first round of bellwether trials in the AFFF MDL will feature liver cancer and thyroid cancer cases. Why? Because these are the 2 injuries that have the strongest causal link to AFFF exposure based on current research.
See our videos for more updates and information about these two types of cases and when we expect a settlement:
January 26, 2024: The Effort to Narrow the Litigation
In our January 2nd update below, we discussed an effort to remove some of these water contamination defendants from this MDL, which we welcome because it would allow greater focus on the AFFF firefighting foam lawsuits. These two pieces of litigation should have never been combined in the first place.
Of course, the defendants object. The defense outlines several reasons for denying the request. First, they mention that outcomes of ongoing settlements with other parties could affect the Sovereigns’ claims. Second, there are already two bellwether processes in progress and a third being developed, which should be prioritized since they involve many cases affecting many people. Third, the Sovereigns are involved in regulatory proceedings and are receiving federal funding for PFAS issues, which could change the nature of their claims. Fourth, the proposed bellwether process is deemed unfair and unworkable, as it selects only a few Sovereigns based on unclear criteria.
Could all of these problems be overcome with a little creative effort? Absolutely.
January 10, 2024: New AFFF Case
A new AFFF lawsuit was filed in Alabama this week. The plaintiff alleges, like every PFAS lawsuit, that he was exposed to per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), including PFOS and PFOA. The plaintiff asserts that exposure to these substances led to the development of testicular cancer. This exposure is claimed to have occurred through contaminated drinking water and environmental pollution in the area where the plaintiff lived.
The plaintiff’s PFAS lawyers filed this lawsuit in state court. 3M has removed the case to federal court, which sends it to the AFFF MDL.
January 2, 2024: Breaking Off AFFF Personal Injury and Water Contamination Cases
The goofy thing about the AFFF class action lawsuit is that personal injury victims are in the same class as municipalities. It was a bad idea from the outset, and firefighting foam victims have paid the price because the toxic water cases have taken center stage.
The Sovereign Committee- a subcommittee of the Plaintiffs’ Executive Committee comprised of 28 U.S. States and Territories – wants to break off their litigation separately from everyone else. These defendants are willing to arrange their part so it does not clash too much with the existing parts for the telomer water provider and injury cases, especially in terms of gathering information or setting important legal deadlines.
The more we can isolate and focus on the AFFF firefighting foam cancer lawsuits, the better.
December 12, 2023: Motion to Formalize Bellwether Discovery Pool
Attorneys in the AFFF case have collectively filed a motion to formalize the Initial Personal Injury Bellwether Discovery Pool. The pool comprises twenty-five plaintiffs, including eight with claims of hypothyroidism/thyroid disease, eight alleging testicular cancer, four asserting cases of ulcerative colitis, and five individuals claiming kidney cancer.
This step is integral to the bellwether discovery process, which is designed to expedite the movement towards AFFF-related personal injury and wrongful death trials. Additionally, the involved parties have agreed to waive their Lexecon rights, as previously explained, but this waiver is specifically for the selected cases and applies only to the individual plaintiffs designated as Personal Injury Tier One Plaintiffs.
December 6, 2023: MDL Judge Takes Stock of Cancer Cases
Judge Gergel has mandated a series of tasks to be completed within 60 days to better understand where the firefighting foam lawsuits are going. These tasks include compiling a list of all plaintiff cases that claim illnesses other than the four already specified, submitting relevant peer-reviewed scientific studies about the association with other diseases, and organizing a ‘science day.’ A ‘science day’ is an event where experts gather to discuss and debate the scientific evidence regarding the alleged connections between various diseases and exposure to AFFF-contaminated water. None of the evidence presented in a science day is binding. But it gives the court a comprehensive understanding of the scientific perspectives on the issue.
December 5, 2023: Bellwether Schedule for Cancer Cases
The AFFF class action MDL judge issued yet another significant case management order this week (CMO #26B). The new order sets out the detailed schedule for how the parties will select a group of AFFF involving personal injury claims for a pool of potential bellwether trial candidates. By December 11, 2023, the parties must submit a list of all plaintiffs with personal injury claims to the court. The court will then use this list to select 28 plaintiffs to include in the bellwether pool. Those cases will then go through case-specific fact discovery.
November 1, 2023: Bellwether Candidate Cases to Be Selected
A list of the AFFF personal injury plaintiffs who will be included in the pool of potential bellwether trial cases is due to be submitted by the end of this month. This group of personal injury plaintiffs will then go through a short fact-discovery process to learn more about their cases. After that is completed, the parties will select a few cases for the initial round of bellwether trials, which could happen late next year.
October 24, 2023: New Study on PFAS and Thyroid Cancer
People who have higher levels of a specific type of PFAS, known as linear perfluorooctanesulfonic acid (PFOS), are more likely to develop thyroid cancer, according to a recent study set to be published in eBioMedicine, a Lancet journal. The study revealed that the risk of thyroid cancer increased by 56% in individuals with higher concentrations of linear PFOS.
September 18, 2023: Bellwether Trial Cases Named
Judge Gergel let the parties know last week that four water utility lawsuits from towns in California, New Jersey, New York, and South Dakota will form the pool for upcoming bellwether cases. Claims against 3M, DuPont, and Chemours are on hold as the settlement with those defendants goes through the approval process. But companies such as Tyco and Chemguard have not settled, and plaintiff lawyers will now lock in on those cases.
What about the AFFF personal injury and wrongful death lawsuits? We should have – hopefully this month – a bellwether trial schedule for those cases. If you want defendants to make reasonable AFFF foam settlement offers, you need to have trial dates to apply pressure. So a bellwether trial schedule will be a huge step toward settlement. AFFF attorneys have been debating the range of cancers that should be covered in the bellwethers.
These trials will be incredibly important because bellwether trials serve as a barometer, providing insight into potential outcomes for similar cases, which in turn helps inform and potentially streamline settlement negotiations.
September 14, 2023: Bellwether Schedule in Telomer AFFF Cases
Yesterday, the Judge in the AFFF class action entered a new Case Management Order setting a schedule for a new round of bellwether trials involving Telomer water contamination cases. These cases were not included in the recent water provider settlement because Telomer-based firefighting foam is chemically different than other types of AFFF. The defendants claim that Telomer AFFF does not contain the harmful PFAS. The new CMO set a presumptive trial date for the first Telomer AFFF bellwether trial for August 23, 2024. What remains unclear is how this might impact the bellwether trial schedule in the individual AFFF occupational exposure cases.
August 21, 2023: Testicular Cancer
The latest AFFF lawsuit update is a new study in Environmental Health Perspectives underscores that testicular cancer is a potential risk of AFFF exposure. There is no question the testicular cancer claims are strong.
August 16, 2023: Insurance Coverage Battle
Four insurance companies have asked that Tyco’s insurance coverage claims be dismissed for the MDL class action. Tyco is contesting the dismissal, claiming its fight for insurance coverage for AFFF lawsuits should be fought in the MDL. Tyco insists the MDL is the correct and most appropriate place to litigate these claims.
Ironically, we are rooting for Tyco on this one. More insurance coverage will facilitate AFFF settlements.
July 17, 2023: Highest Monthly Volume for MDL
Nearly 500 new AFFF firefighting foam cases were transferred into the class action MDL over the last 30 days. That is the highest monthly volume of new cases since the MDL began over five years ago. There is no way to determine how many of these new cases are water contamination cases filed by local governments versus cancer cases filed by individuals with occupational exposure. There are now 5,227 pending cases in the MDL, but the recent settlement of the water contamination cases will eventually reduce that number.
July 1, 2023: MDL Continues to Grow
Over the last month, two hundred ninety-eight more cases were added to the AFFF firefighting foam class action MDL. The total number of cases in the MDL is now 4,793. It was recently announced, however, that the defendants have reached a global settlement arrangement to resolve all of the water contamination cases, so a large chunk of these pending cases will be getting dismissed eventually.
The good news is that moving on from the municipality claims, at least most of the lawsuits, will facilitate settlements for individual military and firefighter claims for many reasons. First, the settlement amounts seem smaller after throwing billions of dollars around. But these defendants also want to get these claims off their books, and more individual AFFF settlements will do that.
June 2, 2023: DuPont and Others Settle Some Water Contamination Claims
The Chemours Company, DuPont de Nemours, and Corteva have agreed in principle to resolve all PFAS-related drinking water claims from a defined class of public water systems catering to most of the U.S. population. The companies will set up a settlement fund worth $1.185 billion, with Chemours contributing 50% and DuPont and Corteva splitting the remaining half. The settlement, awaiting final approval from the District Court for the District of South Carolina, excludes specific water systems.
Rumor has it this is just the beginning, and a $10 billion-plus settlement with 3M is also in the works. This would be the best thing to happen to victims bringing individual AFFF cancer lawsuits if we can clear out the drinking water lawsuits from the MDL.
May 23, 2023: EPA Limits for PFAS Allowed Into Evidence
The Environmental Protection Agency’s proposed drinking water standards for PFOA and PFOS, two types of PFAS, have been allowed as evidence in the first AFFF lawsuit heading for trial.
The defendants argued against including the EPA’s proposed limits, claiming they could change before being finalized and do not reflect the knowledge at the time of manufacture.
The judge denied their motion, allowing the evidence as it sheds light on the toxicity of PFAS and supports the plaintiff’s damages claim on removing PFAS from its water supplies. You can expect the defendants to appeal on this issue if there is a significant verdict in this first bellwether AFFF trial. But this information does provide important context for the jury, and an appeal on this evidentiary issue is unlikely to be successful.
May 16, 2023: Bellwether Pool for Firefighter Cases
Phase 1 of the bellwether trials in the MDL will feature three water provider cases (the first being the City of Stuart). Phase 2, however, will feature three personal injury cases. The AFFF MDL class action judge instructed the parties to identify a second bellwether pool. This pool will focus on injury claims asserting that the toxic firefighting foam contaminated drinking water in certain areas. The parties must select the cases by July 28, 2023, and present a joint list of selected or proposed cases to the court by August 11, 2023.
The judge wants to select 28 personal injury claims for the second bellwether pool from plaintiffs who argue they were exposed to AFFF through contaminated drinking water instead of direct contact. The cases will comprise eight claims each of kidney cancer, testicular cancer, and thyroid disease, along with four claims of ulcerative colitis.
The pool will only include victims alleging exposure to polluted water near Peterson Air Force Base, Colorado Springs Municipal Airport, Willow Grove Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base, and the Naval Air Warfare Center in Warminster.
May 12, 2023: Preview of Pivotal First Bellwether Trial
In the latest MDL 2873 update, the highly anticipated first bellwether trial in the PFAS/firefighting foam class action MDL will be in the municipal water contamination case of the City of Stuart v. 3M Co., et al. Stuart is a mid-sized beach town on Florida’s Atlantic coast, about 20 miles north of West Palm Beach.
The Stuart City Water Authority brought the lawsuit against a large group of companies that manufactured AFFF firefighting foam containing PFAS. The City claims that PFAS heavily contaminated its municipal water supply from these AFFF products. The defendants, however, insist that there is no credible evidence to prove that the PFAS that contaminated Stuart’s water supply came from their products. The City is seeking damages to compensate for the millions it spent to alleviate the contamination.
The outcome of this initial trial is expected to have a massive impact on the future of this litigation. For more info about the City of Stuart case, see our in-depth case summary: Pivotal First AFFF Bellwether Trial.
May 9, 2023: Defense Motion for Summary Judgment Denied
3M Co., E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., and Tyco Fire Products LP tried to get out of the upcoming bellwether AFFF trial. No dice. These and other companies could not evade a Florida city’s allegations of damages resulting from PFAS contamination in its waterways.
Federal Judge Richard Mark Gergel shot down their joint Motion for Summary Judgment, allowing the City of Stuart’s bid for compensation for the damages associated get AFFF its treatment system operation and maintenance to proceed. In his Order and Memorandum Opinion, the judge ruled that this Florida city is not bringing speculative claims, and a jury should decide if there should be compensation and what that compensation should be. However, the defendants won summary judgment on the city’s private nuisance complaint.
May 2, 2023: New Study on PFAS in Firefighting Gear
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) studied PFAS in firefighters’ gear, testing 20 textiles used to manufacture the gear.
The results, published yesterday, revealed the presence of between one and 17 PFAS in each textile, with higher concentrations found in the outer layers. This information will help companies produce safer gear and contribute to understanding if PFAS from the gear enters firefighters’ bodies, increasing their risk of cancer.
The study aims to provide answers to firefighters and their families and gather information for improving personal protective equipment. Firefighters across the US have filed lawsuits against manufacturers of PFAS and firefighter gear, alleging the chemicals have caused or increased the risk of cancer and other diseases.
March 7, 2023: New AFFF Lawsuit
A new AFFF firefighter lawsuit was filed this week. The plaintiffs in Keelan v. 3M are a husband and wife from Denver, Colorado. The 72-year-old plaintiff was exposed to fluorochemical products while working as a firefighter in Denver. He was diagnosed with prostate cancer, leading to personal injuries, pain, and emotional distress. Sheila Keelan is James Keelan’s spouse, and as a result of her husband’s exposure, she suffered and will continue to suffer the loss of consortium, society, affection, assistance, and conjugal fellowship, affecting their marital relationship.
The plaintiffs are filing this firefighter foam lawsuit in compliance with Case Management Order No. 3, designating the United States District Court for the District of Colorado as the “home venue” where they would have filed the suit. The events giving rise to the claim occurred in Colorado. Their lawyers request that the case be immediately transferred to federal court in Colorado, a request that is unlikely to be granted.
January 12, 2023: AFFF Risks to Firefighters: A New Study
According to a new study in the journal Occupational Medicine, the cancer death rate among firefighters is 60% higher than in the general population. The study found that the mortality rates among firefighters for certain types of cancer were even higher.
For example, the prostate cancer mortality rate was 400% higher, and the rate for leukemia was 300% higher compared to non-firefighters. The study further confirms that chronic exposure to chemicals in AFFF causes cancer. If it is not AFFF causing these higher incidences of cancer, what is it?
January 3, 2023: Motions in First AFFF Lawsuit to Go to Trial
The first bellwether trial in the AFFF class action MDL will be in May 2023 in the case of the City of Stuart v. 3M Co., et al..
Last month, three defendants filed summary judgment motions in that case, hoping to avoid trial. Chemguard, Inc., BASF, and Tyco filed virtually identical motions arguing that they should be dismissed based on a lack of evidence showing that their specific AFFF products were a source of water contamination in Stuart, Florida. The motions point to a lack of testimony by the plaintiffs’ fact or expert witnesses linking the defendants’ products to the water.
December 23, 2022: 100 More Firefighting Foam Lawsuits Added to Class Action
Over the last 30 days, 100 new AFFF firefighting foam lawsuits were added to the class action MDL, bringing the total number of pending cases in the AFFF class action up to 3,399.
The first bellwether trial is still set for June 2023, but it is in a municipal water contamination case, not a personal injury case.
November 17, 2022: AFFF Lawsuit Update: Small Growth in Class Action
The AFFF class action MDL grew steadily over the last month. The MDL added 111 new cases over the previous month. This brings the total of pending AFFF lawsuits to 3,299.
For context, 2,100 firefighting foam lawsuits were pending the MDL at the beginning of the year. This means AFFF has been one of the fastest-growing mass torts in 2022.
These cases are a mix of individual personal injury cases brought by former firefighters and veterans with cancer and municipal water contamination lawsuits brought by local water authorities. So far, most of the attention in this class action has been focused on municipal water contamination cases.
November 4, 2022 AFFF Lawsuit Update: AFFF Settlement Efforts
The AFFF class action lawsuit judge has recently appointed a mediator to work with the parties in a series of settlement mediation sessions. These settlement talks will occur before the first bellwether test trial is set for next year.
Layn Phillips, a retired judge, will serve as the mediator. Phillips faces a difficult task since the AFFF class action MDL involves both claims by firefighters alleging that AFFF products caused their cancer and also claims by municipalities claiming that AFFF contaminated their water systems.
A global AFFF settlement will be complex because of the diverse defendants and plaintiffs. But the defendants may be eager to offer settlement compensation to plaintiffs in hopes of resolving some of the AFFF lawsuits.
The first bellwether trial is set for June 2023.
September 24, 2022 AFFF Lawsuit Update: 3M’s Big Defense Rejected by Class Action Judge
In a huge win, the firefighting foam class action judge has rejected 3M’s government contractor defense. 3M had filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that it should be immune from liability for injuries related to its firefighting foam products based on the application of the “government contractor” defense.
The MDL Judge held that the defense was not applicable because there was evidence that 3M was aware of some potential hazards associated with its AFFF products, but failed to warn the government about them.
This is a major win for AFFF victims because the summary judgment motion would have eliminated many of the claims in the firefighting foam class action lawsuit. 3M made a similar government contractor argument in the earplugs litigation with the same result.
September 13, 2022: Fire Foam Lawsuit Trial Date Selected
In the new Case Management Order issued on Monday, the judge in the AFFF firefighting foam multidistrict litigation indicated that the first bellwether test trial case would be selected in December 2022. So it is progress, albeit slow progress. The Order also advised that once the first bellwether case was selected, the trial will be set for April 2023. Our lawyers’ experience is that trial dates drive settlement talks. An even bigger driver for getting reasonable settlement amounts is getting a favorable outcome in the opening bellwether trial. That would be a considerable step toward negotiating a global settlement deal.
August 10, 2022: Firefighting Foam Class Action Update
From June 15, 2022, to July 15, 2022, 115 new AFFF firefighting foam lawsuits were transferred into the AFFF class action lawsuit. This brings the number of active AFFF lawsuits in the MDL to 2,700. Many of the newly filed AFFF cases are brought by plaintiffs who lived on or near military bases where firefighting foam was used. These plaintiffs claim that the use of AFFF caused PFAS to contaminate the water supply, causing them to suffer adverse health consequences.
July 6, 2022 Update: New Study on Harm of Firefighting Foam
A new study in the medical journal Hypertension underscores the breadth of the harm these chemicals can cause. The authors of this study found a 42% to 47% increased risk of hypertension in women exposed to PFAS.
This study provides more evidence of PFAS chemicals’ link to cardiovascular disease risk. The participant in this study with the highest PFAS concentration in their system had a 71% increased chance of hypertension. This study was done on 1,058 women, 470 of whom were diagnosed with hypertension between 1999 and 2017.
June 16, 2022: AFFF Lawsuit Update
Ninety-two new firefighting foam lawsuits have been transferred into the AFFF class action MDL in the last month, bringing the total number of pending AFFF lawsuits up to 2,586. A little over half of these new were filed by individuals claiming that their exposure to firefighting foam caused them to develop cancer. The remainder of the new cases were brought by local municipalities for alleged contamination of the local water supply.
June 7, 2022: Motion to Compel AFFF Documents
The AFFF class action lawsuit plaintiffs are asking the court to compel defendants DuPont and Chemours Co. to produce thousands of documents that have been withheld on privilege grounds.
The nearly 40,000 documents at issue include internal communications and correspondence between DuPont and Chemours relating to the controversial corporate spin-off by which DuPont created Chemours. The defendants have claimed attorney-client privilege and common interest to shield these communications from discovery.
In their motion, however, the plaintiffs assert that there was no “common interest” between the two companies because DuPont and Chemours were counterparties with adverse interests in the spin-off. The plaintiffs also contend that the spin-off was a fraudulent transfer (by which DuPont dumped off liabilities) and, therefore, the crime-fraud exception prohibits using privilege protection.
Just last week, the defendants filed their response in opposition to the motion to compel, and the matter will likely be decided before the end of this summer.
May 6, 2022: New Study on Risks of Firefighting Foam:
A new study published this week by researchers from the Maine Medical Center Research Institute found that PFAS, the toxic “forever chemicals” found in AFFF firefighting foam, pose a previously unknown health risk. The study found that exposure to PFAS can cause reduced bone mineral density in adolescent boys, leading to bone fractures and a host of other orthopedic problems. The study is further evidence of the dangers of PFAS and firefighting foam.
April 14, 2022: Government Contractor Defense
One bottleneck in the AFFF lawsuit is the briefing protocol for the government contractor defense being asserted by numerous defendants. The defense, which has already flopped for 3M in the earplug litigation, is being asserted by so many defendants that it is hard for the firefighting foam MDL judge to hear from everyone separately. So both sides have submitted proposals for handling briefs on the issue. The court’s expressed goal was to receive a “single omnibus brief” on the issue, but neither of the proposals submitted so far come close to that goal. These are just the typical complications of MDL class action litigation.
[Update: This defense is ultimately rejected by the court. See above.]
March 17, 2022: AFFF Lawsuit Medical Evidence Update
On March 3, 2022, the Plaintiffs’ Scientific Committee submitted a letter to the judge in the AFFF MDL, attaching two documents that they identify as “significant new scientific” evidence of the link between the chemicals in AFFF and cancer. The first was a notice from the California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA) identifying the chemical in AFFF as a known carcinogen.
The second document was a draft EPA finding that similarly identifies PFOA as a “likely” human carcinogen. Although defense counsel submitted their letter on March 15 disputing the significance of both documents, the link between PFOA and cancer is gaining momentum.
February 9, 2022: AFFF Lawsuit Update
The defense attorneys have filed a motion for partial summary judgment in an AFFF class action lawsuit based on a government contractor immunity argument. Our lawyers expect a ruling on that motion sometime near the end of March. Meanwhile, the next status conference is set for February 25.
January 19, 2022: AFFF Litigation Growth Update
There are now nearly 2,034 plaintiffs in the MDL class action lawsuit that houses all federal court cases in South Carolina.
December 17, 2021: AFFF Lawsuit Discovery Update
The recently amended schedule for preparatory discovery in the opening round of bellwether trials in the MDL AFFF class action lawsuit is set to begin in January 2023.
Under the new schedule, fact discovery in the pool of bellwether candidate firefighting foam lawsuits must be completed by February 21, 2022. The parties will have until June 30, 2022, to complete expert discovery in these cases. The new deadline for pretrial Daubert challenges and motions for summary judgment is July 18, 2022.