He took the cancer from the Johnson&Johnson powder.

A jury of the Court of California has ordered Johnson&Johnson Company to pay $417 million in compensation, as a woman claims she received the Navajo cancer after using the powder-based products of this company. This case was just one of thousands of lawsuits brought across the country, claiming that the company did not ...
A jury of the Court of California has ordered Johnson&Johnson Company to pay $417 million in compensation, as a woman claims she received the Navajo cancer after using the powder-based products of this company.
This case was just one of thousands of lawsuits brought around the country, claiming that the company failed to warn consumers of the risk of cancer from powder to its products.
Eva Echeverria filed the indictment in July last year, a representative of the Los Angeles Supreme Court for AFP said.
Echeverria, 63, contracted the disease after decades of using powder-based dust Johnson & Johnson for female hygiene.












