Cell Phone Suit Will Get Its Day in Court

Jan 23 2001, NEW ORLEANS

In ruling that could shake the cell phone industry, a federal judge let stand a lawsuit that says companies are making and selling cell phones with the knowledge that they may be dangerous.

The industry tried to have the lawsuit dismissed on the grounds that Congress has given the Food and Drug Administration the job of overseeing cell phone safety. They argued that any attempts by other entities, including the courts, to regulate cell phones were out of bounds - but it was an argument that failed.

"I think the industry would view this as a significant defeat," said New Orleans attorney Michael Allweiss, who filed the suit on behalf of a Louisiana man. "This allows us to explore, I think, what they've been able to prevent from being explored in the past. It's very meaningful."

Allweiss' lawsuit does not allege that cell phones caused specific health problems in his client. Rather, the lawsuit says that cell phones should have been sold with headsets to reduce users' exposure to radiation, particularly to the brain, and to avoid what the suit says is the very real risk of health problems. The suit asks that cell phone users be reimbursed if they have already purchased headsets. If they haven't, it asks that the cell phone industry supply them to present and future customers. It also requests follow-up medical monitoring and unspecified damages for emotional suffering. If the lawsuit is certified as a class action, it could include every cell phone user in the U.S. - nearly 110 million, by one estimate.

Those are the wider allegations of the lawsuit. But this week's ruling, by U.S. District Court Judge Ivan L. R. Lemelle, focused on the important issue of jurisdiction. The 16 defendants, a who's who of the industry including Nokia and Motorola, argued that Congress gave the FDA the job of overseeing the safety of cell phones so that, for example, 50 states couldn't set 50 different standards. That would be a nightmare for consumers as well as the industry, and that's a good argument for national standards. However, the issue of jurisdiction - "preemption," it's called in these legal circles - is a tricky one. States are allowed wide latitude, generally, in issues such as this as long as they don't set standards that conflict with federal standards.

The catch in this case: Has the FDA indeed issued standards? It has issued statements about cell phones, but mostly what it has done is look at the literature and decide that there isn't enough evidence of health risk to implement a standard. There are emissions standards for microwave ovens but not cell phones. So to make its argument, the industry was forced to contend that in not taking any action, the FDA has acted. "I submit that they took action," said New Orleans attorney Charlie Steen, arguing on behalf of the industry. "They investigated and found no risk."

Lemelle, however, pointed out that the law is clear. Congress said this "preemption" of local authority takes places only when its designated agency - in this case the FDA - has set specific guidelines. In this case, he said, it hasn't. In fact, Lemelle said, the FDA has waffled on the issue, saying that there isn't enough evidence yet to decide on cell phone safety, that maybe people who are concerned should think about using headsets, and that more work needs to be done before the issue of safety is settled.

Dr. George Carlo, author of the new expose, Cell Phones: Invisible Hazards in the Wireless Age, said the preemption strategy will hurt the industry.

"The court in Louisiana has now scratched beneath the surface and found there is nothing of substance to protect consumers," he said. "Preemption is not going to work because the federal agencies are not doing what they should be doing. It's going to backfire on the industry because it's going to be clear that the FDA is not doing it's job."

"This is a big blow to the national litigation strategy of the industry," Carlo said. "This federal preemption argument was emerging as one of the industry's standard responses to all the issues. It's a main line of defense."

Or, rather, it was a main line of defense. After their loss in court, industry lawyers said it's difficult to make an argument for preemption. The real fight, they said, would be when Allweiss tries to establish a link between cell phones and medical problems.

"He knows he's got a tough, tough battle on causation," Steen said of Allweiss. "Is this [ruling] a chink [in the armor]? I don't think so ... it's important because it would have nipped the case in the bud. But these are very difficult to win."

Allweiss said all he wants is a chance to get the cell phone companies into court so that he can try to pin them on what they knew and when they knew it. Among other things, the lawsuit says the companies "know, and have long known of scientific information which indicates ... cell phone users are exposed to the risk of injury and also exposed to potentially very significant long-term health problems."

"I think the industry is indeed vulnerable because what they are doing is not right." Allweiss said.

Also significant: several times, the judge brought up a word that the cell phone industry cannot like hearing: tobacco. The subject of tobacco litigation came up as Lemelle thought out loud about legal precedents, and while he did not say there are any real parallels, the lawyers gathered to defend the industry must have winced. Recalling the early days of the tobacco lawsuits, Lemelle noted that many of the actions were based on misrepresentation. "What evidence do you have of that?" he said to Allweiss.

"That's for another day," Allweiss replied. "The question of whether I can get there is different than the question of whether I will be allowed to get there."

Now, at least, he can give it a try.

MORE ON HEALTH ISSUES
[
Click HERE for main Health page]
Latest Health News

2004
ReCellular to provide cell-phone recycling in Latin America
Mobile phones could hurt sperm count
Nextel develops free text-based AMBER Alert offering

2003
US tower firm fined over safety violations

Recycled components used in cell phone accessories
Nokia mobile phones explode
Cell-using teens heading for early senility - report
US FCC To Probe Role Of Masts in bird deaths
Bogus AntiRadiation Sellers Busted
No cell phones sticker now trademarked
Woman suffers facial burns from cell phone
Now you can dump your wife by SMS
Israeli Software Enables Deaf to Use Cell Phones
FCC orders mobile phones to be hearing aidcompatible
Prosecution for cell phone radiation blockers
Vodafone to publish base station emissions
Camera cellphones banned from Oz locker rooms
Canadian network to show off intrinsically-safe mobile phone
Vodafone promotes cell phone for the blind
Recycled components used in cell phone accessories
No rise in cancer since cellphones launched - New Zealand Report
Cellphones safe for humans - French Report
Cellphones could be harmful - US Goverment
Do cell phones kill?



2002
Japanese mobile phone firms to study health risks
US Attorneys Petition to Include Phone Study as Evidence in Lawsuit
Antiradiation Levis jeans fuel cellphone debate
Cellphones don't cause cancer, at least in rats
China radiation law could fry mobile industry
US Charges Fraud over 'Safety' Shields

Phone Radiation Labeling Program Launched
Sending cellphones where the sun don't shine
UK govt to start mobile phone health risk inquiry

Mobile Phones May Do Harm by Speeding Up Brain

Cellphone Health Risk Needs More Research
German Radiation Expert Warns on Cellphones
Ericsson denies cancer shield report
Handset Radiation Focus Of US Probe
New Class Action Lawsuits Target Cellphone Industry

Scientists invent material to block phone radiation

SABS To Monitor Effects Of Phone Radiation

Cell Phone Suit 'Will Get Its Day in Court'
German Study Links Cell Phones And Eye Cancer
US Study Discounts Cancer-Cellular Phone Use
Radiation From Mobile Phones Amplified In Cells - report
Memphis to ban teen car phone use
US Bid To Help Hearing Impaired Mobile Users
UK to Fund Research Into Mobile Phones 

US Investigating Cell Phone Health Risks
Australians Urged to recycle their old phones
UK Schools warned over mobile phones
US man in $800m suit - says phone caused cancer
Cellphone researcher's call: Be cautious
Latest report on cellular base station antenna radiation
UK Study Finds No Raised Danger From Mobile Phone Masts
Moulder et al: Cell Phones and Cancer: A Connection?

Health Focus
:: GSM Phones A-Z SAR Levels
:: Top 10 SAR GSM Phones
:: Lowest 10 SAR GSM Phones
:: US-Phones (Analogue+Digital) SAR Levels
:: SAR Levels with Handsfree Kits
:: Radiation Levels of Mobile Base Stations
:: Mobile Manufacturers Forum - MMF (SAR Database)
:: Base station: Health and Safety Brochure (PDF - 490 KB)
 
In some countries, public authorities or the operators themselves have established public databases that provide information regarding the location of base stations within the local community. We will update this information as more public databases become available online.
 

Recent Academic Papers On Mobile Phones and Radiation Issues:

Mobile Phone Exposure Causes Brain Damage in Rats - originally from online peer reviewed health journal
Nerve Cell Damage in Mammalian Brain after Exposure to Microwaves from GSM Mobile Phones
Commentary: Cellular Telephones and Brain Cancer: Current Research
Prevalence of Headache among Handheld Cellular Telephone Users in Singapore: A Community Study
Mobile Telephone Health Concerns Registry (MTHCR)
Current Mobile Phone Health News with more links
A CBS 2 Special Assignment: Dialing Up Danger - A CBS 2 Special Assignment
George Carlo's health registry opens amid criticism
Viewpoint - TNO Report on GSM and UMTS exposures - October 2003 (PDF)
Mobile Phones and Base Stations: Health Policy Update -September 2003 - (PDF)
Health and Safety Fact Sheets - 3G, Bluetooth, TETRA, GSM Pro etc - September 2003
Viewpoint - Mobile Phones and Petrol Station Safety - September 2003 (PDF)
Mobile Phones and Base Stations: Health Policy Update - April 2003 - (PDF)
Flash presentation on 'How Networks Operate' - April 2003 (Requires Flash Player)
Viewpoint - Paris Charter - March 2003 (PDF)
MMF sponsored Seminar: "Mechanisms for Interactions of RF Energy with Biological Systems".
 

Search For More Info




 
  http://www.cellular.co.za


 

ii


Get FREE updates on the latest ringtones,
logos, alerts, mobile news, & free downloads.
Join our newsletter now