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Darling Patty, oh no, we are not yet, because trial lawyers are likely to group together to appeal this ruling to the US Department of Justice. As it stands, this is a Catch-22 sweetheart deal between the federal government and corporations, because this prevents anybody from suing manufacturers, and of course, as we understand it, we cannot sue the FDA.

People who have been damaged by faulty medical devices must be provided with some legal method by which they can seek compensation and restitution; otherwise, we are living in the old Soviet Union!!

Love you so....Lea and

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~```

WE LOST

We're done for. This is just what these manufacturer's were hoping for. More than ever now, Buyer beware! I'm speechless, disgusted and angry.

http://www.naturalnews.com/022713.html

Supreme Court Shields Medical Device Manufacturers from Consumer Lawsuits

by Mike (NaturalNews) The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that medical device manufacturers cannot be sued for injuries caused by their products if those products were pre-approved for use by the FDA.The court ruled that Riegel, who was injured in 1996 when a balloon catheter made by Medtronic Inc. burst while being inserted into one of his coronary arteries during an angioplasty, could not sue the company for damages. In doing so, the Supreme Court upheld a ruling by a U.S. appeals court and an earlier ruling by a trial court in New York.I discuss the disastrous consequences of this issue in great detail in a new podcast (#11). Click here to listen: http://www.naturalnews.com/Index-Podcasts.html

Hiding behind a legal technicality

Medtronic, which no longer makes the balloon catheter in question, said that the fault was with the doctor, who used the device contrary to the operating instructions. The company also said that the doctor made an error in using that type of product for a patient in Riegel's condition. But rather than ruling in Medtronic's favor merely for the one specific instance, the court dismissed the case entirely, saying that federal law prohibits suing device manufacturers in state courts if the device was approved as safe by the FDA. The decision is expected to have ramifications for a large number of pending lawsuits against manufacturers of devices such as breast implants, defibrillators, artificial heart pumps and valves, drug-coated stents, spinal cord stimulators, and prosthetic hips and knees.Because there is no federal law that allows consumers to sue medical device manufacturers for damages, state courts have become a common venue for such suits.The legal reasoning behind the court's decision centered on the wording of the 1976 Medical Device Amendments law. The law, which set in place an FDA pre-approval process for medical devices, explicitly prohibited states from putting in place "any requirement" that is "different from, or in addition to" FDA requirements. In an 8-1 majority, the court ruled that allowing citizens to sue device companies in state courts amounts to "a requirement" that undermines the FDA approval process.Writing for the majority, Justice Antonin Scalia wrote that the FDA may approve devices "that present great risks if they nonetheless offer great benefits in light of available alternatives." In other words, there is no requirement that devices actually achieve any reasonable level of safety for all patients. To receive FDA approval and be immunized from lawsuits, medical devices merely have to keep alive slightly more people than they kill.It would be inappropriate to empower juries second-guess these FDA decisions without full access to data about the benefits of technologies, Scalia said. This is the Supreme Court's way of saying that medical device safety is define solely by the FDA, and if the FDA says something is safe, the fact that such devices actually kill people does not in any way disprove the device's safety.A jury "sees only the cost of a more dangerous design, and is not concerned with its benefits; the patient who reaped those benefits are not represented in court," he wrote. This is a clever way of saying that products that kill some consumers -- but not all -- are safe enough to be granted blanket immunity because there are some survivors. It's a ridiculous position, of course, and it's never applied to natural remedies.Note that if an herb kills even ten people in the entire country, the FDA immediately leaps to the conclusion that the herb is "unsafe at any dose." (Google the history of the FDA's ephedra ban for details.) But medical devices and pharmaceuticals are held to an entirely different standard: They must only avoid killing more people than they kill! The fact that some people survived the treatment is apparently sufficient to justify all those who died! This is precisely what Justice Scalia is saying in this decision.

A whisper of sanity from Justice Ginsburg

Dissenting Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg disagreed with the logic that the ability to sue companies constitutes an unfair "requirement.""Congress, in my view, did not intend [for the 1976 law] to effect a radical curtailment of state common-law suits seeking compensation for injuries caused by defectively designed or labeled medical devices," she wrote.The purpose of the law, according to Ginsburg, was to prevent states from imposing confusing additional regulatory processes on top of the new federal standard. Prior to 1976, the absence of a federal regulatory process for medical devices had spurred many states to initiate their own.Senator Kennedy, one of the sponsors of the 1976 law and head of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, agreed with Ginsburg's analysis. "In enacting legislation on medical devices, Congress never intended that FDA approval would give blanket immunity to manufacturers from liability for injuries caused by faulty devices," Kennedy said. "Congress obviously needs to correct the court's decision. Otherwise, FDA approval will become a green light for shoddy practices by manufacturers."The Supreme Court ruling applies only to medical devices pre-approved under the process set in place by the 1976 law, not to devices grandfathered in under a separate process, in which the FDA decides that a product is "substantially equivalent" to one that was already on the market prior to 1976. In 1996, the Supreme Court ruled that manufacturers of those devices can indeed be sued by states.Devices that undergo the FDA pre-approval process, and thus are exempted from lawsuits under the current ruling, tend to be more technologically advanced, expensive and risky than older devices.Under the new ruling, device manufacturers that fail to follow FDA specifications can still be sued in state courts. In addition, lawsuits or prosecutions can be brought against companies for violations of state laws that are the same as federal laws, just not state laws with different requirements.

Supreme Court's decision will unleash a wave of shoddy medical devices that could kill tens of thousands

Zieve, the lawyer who represented Riegel's family, said that the court's ruling will have a dangerous effect on the quality of medical devices. Because the threat of lawsuits is a primary incentive for manufacturers to make sure their products are as safe as possible, the removal of this threat will lead to more dangerous devices staying on the market."By minimizing the incentive, the Supreme Court's decision poses a risk to the safety of medical devices," she said.This is crucial to understand: When medical device manufacturers are granted blanket immunity that protects them from all lawsuits, they no longer have any reason to make their products safe. They only need to seek FDA approval, not genuine product safety, and FDA approval is a political process, not a scientific one, so achieving such approval for unsafe medical devices is simply a matter of paying off the right people, fudging the right scientific studies, and filling out the paperwork. The FDA grants its approval to deadly products on a regular basis. (Just look at Vioxx, Rezulin, and all the other deadly drugs approved by the FDA...)Remember: The FDA serves the interests of corporations, not the American people. When it comes down to a question of public safety vs. corporate profits, the FDA favors the corporations in nearly every case. Now, with the U.S. Supreme Court handing medical device manufacturers blanket immunity, the American public has absolutely no legal recourse for the harm caused by dangerous medical devices, even if they are defective!

What's next? Immunity for Big Pharma of course

The Bush administration, which supported Medtronic in the current case, has announced its intentions to seek similar lawsuit immunity for drug companies. This would make it impossible for consumers to sue drug companies for the harm caused by pharmaceutical side effects, unleashing a new era of blanket immunity for the very corporations that are now poisoning the American population with dangerous and deadly synthetic chemicals.Drugs are regulated under a different law than medical devices: the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act of 1938. Unlike the 1976 medical device law, the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act does not explicitly prohibit alternate state regulations. But according to the Bush administration, the ban is implicit.The Supreme Court will consider whether to grant this immunity to drug companies on Monday, in the case of Warner-Lambert Co. V. Kent. (See http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/cert/0... ) If the drug companies win this case, it will unleash a chemical holocaust on the American people, where the most dangerous chemicals imaginable are patented, marketed and sold to unsuspecting consumers, with absolutely no legal recourse for those harmed or killed by such products. The American people will find themselves chemically and financially enslaved to the drug companies, poisoned by an evil conspiracy of greed between Big Pharma and the FDA while being stripped of their right to justice thanks to the U.S. Supreme Court.Listen to my podcast (#11) to learn what happens next: http://www.naturalnews.com/Index-Podcasts.htmlHint: The coming collapse of America is accelerating, and the people running this country will not stop until every right is stripped, every person is drugged, every dollar is stolen and every wage earner is forever indebted to a system of disease management that is intentionally designed to prevent health and keep the population in a state of chronic disease (and mental weakness).

The U.S. Supreme Traitors

That the U.S. Supreme Court would take away the rights of consumers to sue medical device manufacturers for the harm caused by their dangerous devices is not even the issue here: It's the fact that the U.S. Supreme Court is WILLING to take away such consumer rights! It means the Constitution is deemed irrelevant, and its last-ditch protectors have now sold out to the corporations. The U.S. Supreme Court is now operating as a band of traitors who have surrendered the future of this nation to the corporations. Today, it's with medical device manufacturers, tomorrow it's with pharmaceuticals, and in another year, it could be for any product or service that is "approved" by a government regulator. Essentially, the U.S. Supreme Court has announced its intent to enslave the U.S. population and grant total power to the corporations and the corrupt, centralized regulators (like the FDA and USDA) influenced by those corporations.You've just lost your country, folks. Good luck trying to get it back. The corruption is now so deep that the U.S. Supreme Court no longer protects the People. The very concept of "We the People" is now history. The new message to the People is simple this: Take your medicine. Don't ask questions. Pay your taxes. Do what you're told, vote for who you're told, and don't demand any more rights.And if you're killed by a medical device, rest in peace with the knowledge that someone else wasn't.

Looking for last minute shopping deals? Find them fast with Search.

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Guest guest

Darling Patty, oh no, we are not yet, because trial lawyers are likely to group together to appeal this ruling to the US Department of Justice. As it stands, this is a Catch-22 sweetheart deal between the federal government and corporations, because this prevents anybody from suing manufacturers, and of course, as we understand it, we cannot sue the FDA.

People who have been damaged by faulty medical devices must be provided with some legal method by which they can seek compensation and restitution; otherwise, we are living in the old Soviet Union!!

Love you so....Lea and

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~```

WE LOST

We're done for. This is just what these manufacturer's were hoping for. More than ever now, Buyer beware! I'm speechless, disgusted and angry.

http://www.naturalnews.com/022713.html

Supreme Court Shields Medical Device Manufacturers from Consumer Lawsuits

by Mike (NaturalNews) The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that medical device manufacturers cannot be sued for injuries caused by their products if those products were pre-approved for use by the FDA.The court ruled that Riegel, who was injured in 1996 when a balloon catheter made by Medtronic Inc. burst while being inserted into one of his coronary arteries during an angioplasty, could not sue the company for damages. In doing so, the Supreme Court upheld a ruling by a U.S. appeals court and an earlier ruling by a trial court in New York.I discuss the disastrous consequences of this issue in great detail in a new podcast (#11). Click here to listen: http://www.naturalnews.com/Index-Podcasts.html

Hiding behind a legal technicality

Medtronic, which no longer makes the balloon catheter in question, said that the fault was with the doctor, who used the device contrary to the operating instructions. The company also said that the doctor made an error in using that type of product for a patient in Riegel's condition. But rather than ruling in Medtronic's favor merely for the one specific instance, the court dismissed the case entirely, saying that federal law prohibits suing device manufacturers in state courts if the device was approved as safe by the FDA. The decision is expected to have ramifications for a large number of pending lawsuits against manufacturers of devices such as breast implants, defibrillators, artificial heart pumps and valves, drug-coated stents, spinal cord stimulators, and prosthetic hips and knees.Because there is no federal law that allows consumers to sue medical device manufacturers for damages, state courts have become a common venue for such suits.The legal reasoning behind the court's decision centered on the wording of the 1976 Medical Device Amendments law. The law, which set in place an FDA pre-approval process for medical devices, explicitly prohibited states from putting in place "any requirement" that is "different from, or in addition to" FDA requirements. In an 8-1 majority, the court ruled that allowing citizens to sue device companies in state courts amounts to "a requirement" that undermines the FDA approval process.Writing for the majority, Justice Antonin Scalia wrote that the FDA may approve devices "that present great risks if they nonetheless offer great benefits in light of available alternatives." In other words, there is no requirement that devices actually achieve any reasonable level of safety for all patients. To receive FDA approval and be immunized from lawsuits, medical devices merely have to keep alive slightly more people than they kill.It would be inappropriate to empower juries second-guess these FDA decisions without full access to data about the benefits of technologies, Scalia said. This is the Supreme Court's way of saying that medical device safety is define solely by the FDA, and if the FDA says something is safe, the fact that such devices actually kill people does not in any way disprove the device's safety.A jury "sees only the cost of a more dangerous design, and is not concerned with its benefits; the patient who reaped those benefits are not represented in court," he wrote. This is a clever way of saying that products that kill some consumers -- but not all -- are safe enough to be granted blanket immunity because there are some survivors. It's a ridiculous position, of course, and it's never applied to natural remedies.Note that if an herb kills even ten people in the entire country, the FDA immediately leaps to the conclusion that the herb is "unsafe at any dose." (Google the history of the FDA's ephedra ban for details.) But medical devices and pharmaceuticals are held to an entirely different standard: They must only avoid killing more people than they kill! The fact that some people survived the treatment is apparently sufficient to justify all those who died! This is precisely what Justice Scalia is saying in this decision.

A whisper of sanity from Justice Ginsburg

Dissenting Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg disagreed with the logic that the ability to sue companies constitutes an unfair "requirement.""Congress, in my view, did not intend [for the 1976 law] to effect a radical curtailment of state common-law suits seeking compensation for injuries caused by defectively designed or labeled medical devices," she wrote.The purpose of the law, according to Ginsburg, was to prevent states from imposing confusing additional regulatory processes on top of the new federal standard. Prior to 1976, the absence of a federal regulatory process for medical devices had spurred many states to initiate their own.Senator Kennedy, one of the sponsors of the 1976 law and head of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, agreed with Ginsburg's analysis. "In enacting legislation on medical devices, Congress never intended that FDA approval would give blanket immunity to manufacturers from liability for injuries caused by faulty devices," Kennedy said. "Congress obviously needs to correct the court's decision. Otherwise, FDA approval will become a green light for shoddy practices by manufacturers."The Supreme Court ruling applies only to medical devices pre-approved under the process set in place by the 1976 law, not to devices grandfathered in under a separate process, in which the FDA decides that a product is "substantially equivalent" to one that was already on the market prior to 1976. In 1996, the Supreme Court ruled that manufacturers of those devices can indeed be sued by states.Devices that undergo the FDA pre-approval process, and thus are exempted from lawsuits under the current ruling, tend to be more technologically advanced, expensive and risky than older devices.Under the new ruling, device manufacturers that fail to follow FDA specifications can still be sued in state courts. In addition, lawsuits or prosecutions can be brought against companies for violations of state laws that are the same as federal laws, just not state laws with different requirements.

Supreme Court's decision will unleash a wave of shoddy medical devices that could kill tens of thousands

Zieve, the lawyer who represented Riegel's family, said that the court's ruling will have a dangerous effect on the quality of medical devices. Because the threat of lawsuits is a primary incentive for manufacturers to make sure their products are as safe as possible, the removal of this threat will lead to more dangerous devices staying on the market."By minimizing the incentive, the Supreme Court's decision poses a risk to the safety of medical devices," she said.This is crucial to understand: When medical device manufacturers are granted blanket immunity that protects them from all lawsuits, they no longer have any reason to make their products safe. They only need to seek FDA approval, not genuine product safety, and FDA approval is a political process, not a scientific one, so achieving such approval for unsafe medical devices is simply a matter of paying off the right people, fudging the right scientific studies, and filling out the paperwork. The FDA grants its approval to deadly products on a regular basis. (Just look at Vioxx, Rezulin, and all the other deadly drugs approved by the FDA...)Remember: The FDA serves the interests of corporations, not the American people. When it comes down to a question of public safety vs. corporate profits, the FDA favors the corporations in nearly every case. Now, with the U.S. Supreme Court handing medical device manufacturers blanket immunity, the American public has absolutely no legal recourse for the harm caused by dangerous medical devices, even if they are defective!

What's next? Immunity for Big Pharma of course

The Bush administration, which supported Medtronic in the current case, has announced its intentions to seek similar lawsuit immunity for drug companies. This would make it impossible for consumers to sue drug companies for the harm caused by pharmaceutical side effects, unleashing a new era of blanket immunity for the very corporations that are now poisoning the American population with dangerous and deadly synthetic chemicals.Drugs are regulated under a different law than medical devices: the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act of 1938. Unlike the 1976 medical device law, the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act does not explicitly prohibit alternate state regulations. But according to the Bush administration, the ban is implicit.The Supreme Court will consider whether to grant this immunity to drug companies on Monday, in the case of Warner-Lambert Co. V. Kent. (See http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/cert/0... ) If the drug companies win this case, it will unleash a chemical holocaust on the American people, where the most dangerous chemicals imaginable are patented, marketed and sold to unsuspecting consumers, with absolutely no legal recourse for those harmed or killed by such products. The American people will find themselves chemically and financially enslaved to the drug companies, poisoned by an evil conspiracy of greed between Big Pharma and the FDA while being stripped of their right to justice thanks to the U.S. Supreme Court.Listen to my podcast (#11) to learn what happens next: http://www.naturalnews.com/Index-Podcasts.htmlHint: The coming collapse of America is accelerating, and the people running this country will not stop until every right is stripped, every person is drugged, every dollar is stolen and every wage earner is forever indebted to a system of disease management that is intentionally designed to prevent health and keep the population in a state of chronic disease (and mental weakness).

The U.S. Supreme Traitors

That the U.S. Supreme Court would take away the rights of consumers to sue medical device manufacturers for the harm caused by their dangerous devices is not even the issue here: It's the fact that the U.S. Supreme Court is WILLING to take away such consumer rights! It means the Constitution is deemed irrelevant, and its last-ditch protectors have now sold out to the corporations. The U.S. Supreme Court is now operating as a band of traitors who have surrendered the future of this nation to the corporations. Today, it's with medical device manufacturers, tomorrow it's with pharmaceuticals, and in another year, it could be for any product or service that is "approved" by a government regulator. Essentially, the U.S. Supreme Court has announced its intent to enslave the U.S. population and grant total power to the corporations and the corrupt, centralized regulators (like the FDA and USDA) influenced by those corporations.You've just lost your country, folks. Good luck trying to get it back. The corruption is now so deep that the U.S. Supreme Court no longer protects the People. The very concept of "We the People" is now history. The new message to the People is simple this: Take your medicine. Don't ask questions. Pay your taxes. Do what you're told, vote for who you're told, and don't demand any more rights.And if you're killed by a medical device, rest in peace with the knowledge that someone else wasn't.

Looking for last minute shopping deals? Find them fast with Search.

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Guest guest

How can this be? The FDA has already admitted that they do not have

the staff or resources to keep up!!!! If the FDA can get up to speed,

and REALLY monitor food, drugs and advices like they SHOULD be, then

that is one thing, but this is a whole other thing!!! What is wrong

with our country, we are falling apart!

>

> Darling Patty, oh no, we are not yet, because trial lawyers are

likely to group together to appeal this ruling to the US Department

of Justice. As it stands, this is a Catch-22 sweetheart deal between

the federal government and corporations, because this prevents

anybody from suing manufacturers, and of course, as we understand it,

we cannot sue the FDA.

>

> People who have been damaged by faulty medical devices must be

provided with some legal method by which they can seek compensation

and restitution; otherwise, we are living in the old Soviet Union!!

>

> Love you so....Lea and

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~```

> WE LOST

>

>

>

> We're done for. This is just what these manufacturer's were

hoping for. More than ever now, Buyer beware! I'm speechless,

disgusted and angry.

>

> http://www.naturalnews.com/022713.html

>

> Supreme Court Shields Medical Device Manufacturers from

Consumer Lawsuits

> by Mike

>

> (NaturalNews) The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that medical

device manufacturers cannot be sued for injuries caused by their

products if those products were pre-approved for use by the FDA.

>

> The court ruled that Riegel, who was injured in 1996

when a balloon catheter made by Medtronic Inc. burst while being

inserted into one of his coronary arteries during an angioplasty,

could not sue the company for damages. In doing so, the Supreme Court

upheld a ruling by a U.S. appeals court and an earlier ruling by a

trial court in New York.

>

> I discuss the disastrous consequences of this issue in great

detail in a new podcast (#11). Click here to listen:

http://www.naturalnews.com/Index-Podcasts.html

>

>

> Hiding behind a legal technicality

> Medtronic, which no longer makes the balloon catheter in

question, said that the fault was with the doctor, who used the

device contrary to the operating instructions. The company also said

that the doctor made an error in using that type of product for a

patient in Riegel's condition. But rather than ruling in Medtronic's

favor merely for the one specific instance, the court dismissed the

case entirely, saying that federal law prohibits suing device

manufacturers in state courts if the device was approved as safe by

the FDA. The decision is expected to have ramifications for a large

number of pending lawsuits against manufacturers of devices such as

breast implants, defibrillators, artificial heart pumps and valves,

drug-coated stents, spinal cord stimulators, and prosthetic hips and

knees.

>

> Because there is no federal law that allows consumers to sue

medical device manufacturers for damages, state courts have become a

common venue for such suits.

>

> The legal reasoning behind the court's decision centered on the

wording of the 1976 Medical Device Amendments law. The law, which set

in place an FDA pre-approval process for medical devices, explicitly

prohibited states from putting in place " any requirement " that

is " different from, or in addition to " FDA requirements. In an 8-1

majority, the court ruled that allowing citizens to sue device

companies in state courts amounts to " a requirement " that undermines

the FDA approval process.

>

> Writing for the majority, Justice Antonin Scalia wrote that the

FDA may approve devices " that present great risks if they nonetheless

offer great benefits in light of available alternatives. " In other

words, there is no requirement that devices actually achieve any

reasonable level of safety for all patients. To receive FDA approval

and be immunized from lawsuits, medical devices merely have to keep

alive slightly more people than they kill.

>

> It would be inappropriate to empower juries second-guess these

FDA decisions without full access to data about the benefits of

technologies, Scalia said. This is the Supreme Court's way of saying

that medical device safety is define solely by the FDA, and if the

FDA says something is safe, the fact that such devices actually kill

people does not in any way disprove the device's safety.

>

> A jury " sees only the cost of a more dangerous design, and is

not concerned with its benefits; the patient who reaped those

benefits are not represented in court, " he wrote. This is a clever

way of saying that products that kill some consumers -- but not all --

are safe enough to be granted blanket immunity because there are

some survivors. It's a ridiculous position, of course, and it's never

applied to natural remedies.

>

> Note that if an herb kills even ten people in the entire

country, the FDA immediately leaps to the conclusion that the herb

is " unsafe at any dose. " (Google the history of the FDA's ephedra ban

for details.) But medical devices and pharmaceuticals are held to an

entirely different standard: They must only avoid killing more people

than they kill! The fact that some people survived the treatment is

apparently sufficient to justify all those who died! This is

precisely what Justice Scalia is saying in this decision.

>

> A whisper of sanity from Justice Ginsburg

> Dissenting Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg disagreed with the logic

that the ability to sue companies constitutes an unfair " requirement. "

>

> " Congress, in my view, did not intend [for the 1976 law] to

effect a radical curtailment of state common-law suits seeking

compensation for injuries caused by defectively designed or labeled

medical devices, " she wrote.

>

> The purpose of the law, according to Ginsburg, was to prevent

states from imposing confusing additional regulatory processes on top

of the new federal standard. Prior to 1976, the absence of a federal

regulatory process for medical devices had spurred many states to

initiate their own.

>

> Senator Kennedy, one of the sponsors of the 1976 law and

head of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, agreed

with Ginsburg's analysis. " In enacting legislation on medical

devices, Congress never intended that FDA approval would give blanket

immunity to manufacturers from liability for injuries caused by

faulty devices, " Kennedy said. " Congress obviously needs to correct

the court's decision. Otherwise, FDA approval will become a green

light for shoddy practices by manufacturers. "

>

> The Supreme Court ruling applies only to medical devices pre-

approved under the process set in place by the 1976 law, not to

devices grandfathered in under a separate process, in which the FDA

decides that a product is " substantially equivalent " to one that was

already on the market prior to 1976. In 1996, the Supreme Court ruled

that manufacturers of those devices can indeed be sued by states.

>

> Devices that undergo the FDA pre-approval process, and thus are

exempted from lawsuits under the current ruling, tend to be more

technologically advanced, expensive and risky than older devices.

>

> Under the new ruling, device manufacturers that fail to follow

FDA specifications can still be sued in state courts. In addition,

lawsuits or prosecutions can be brought against companies for

violations of state laws that are the same as federal laws, just not

state laws with different requirements.

>

> Supreme Court's decision will unleash a wave of shoddy medical

devices that could kill tens of thousands

> Zieve, the lawyer who represented Riegel's family, said

that the court's ruling will have a dangerous effect on the quality

of medical devices. Because the threat of lawsuits is a primary

incentive for manufacturers to make sure their products are as safe

as possible, the removal of this threat will lead to more dangerous

devices staying on the market.

>

> " By minimizing the incentive, the Supreme Court's decision

poses a risk to the safety of medical devices, " she said.

>

> This is crucial to understand: When medical device

manufacturers are granted blanket immunity that protects them from

all lawsuits, they no longer have any reason to make their products

safe. They only need to seek FDA approval, not genuine product

safety, and FDA approval is a political process, not a scientific

one, so achieving such approval for unsafe medical devices is simply

a matter of paying off the right people, fudging the right scientific

studies, and filling out the paperwork. The FDA grants its approval

to deadly products on a regular basis. (Just look at Vioxx, Rezulin,

and all the other deadly drugs approved by the FDA...)

>

> Remember: The FDA serves the interests of corporations, not the

American people. When it comes down to a question of public safety

vs. corporate profits, the FDA favors the corporations in nearly

every case. Now, with the U.S. Supreme Court handing medical device

manufacturers blanket immunity, the American public has absolutely no

legal recourse for the harm caused by dangerous medical devices, even

if they are defective!

>

>

> What's next? Immunity for Big Pharma of course

> The Bush administration, which supported Medtronic in the

current case, has announced its intentions to seek similar lawsuit

immunity for drug companies. This would make it impossible for

consumers to sue drug companies for the harm caused by pharmaceutical

side effects, unleashing a new era of blanket immunity for the very

corporations that are now poisoning the American population with

dangerous and deadly synthetic chemicals.

>

> Drugs are regulated under a different law than medical devices:

the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act of 1938. Unlike the 1976 medical

device law, the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act does not explicitly

prohibit alternate state regulations. But according to the Bush

administration, the ban is implicit.

>

> The Supreme Court will consider whether to grant this immunity

to drug companies on Monday, in the case of Warner-Lambert Co. V.

Kent. (See http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/cert/0... ) If the drug

companies win this case, it will unleash a chemical holocaust on the

American people, where the most dangerous chemicals imaginable are

patented, marketed and sold to unsuspecting consumers, with

absolutely no legal recourse for those harmed or killed by such

products. The American people will find themselves chemically and

financially enslaved to the drug companies, poisoned by an evil

conspiracy of greed between Big Pharma and the FDA while being

stripped of their right to justice thanks to the U.S. Supreme Court.

>

> Listen to my podcast (#11) to learn what happens next:

http://www.naturalnews.com/Index-Podcasts.html

>

> Hint: The coming collapse of America is accelerating, and the

people running this country will not stop until every right is

stripped, every person is drugged, every dollar is stolen and every

wage earner is forever indebted to a system of disease management

that is intentionally designed to prevent health and keep the

population in a state of chronic disease (and mental weakness).

>

>

> The U.S. Supreme Traitors

> That the U.S. Supreme Court would take away the rights of

consumers to sue medical device manufacturers for the harm caused by

their dangerous devices is not even the issue here: It's the fact

that the U.S. Supreme Court is WILLING to take away such consumer

rights! It means the Constitution is deemed irrelevant, and its last-

ditch protectors have now sold out to the corporations. The U.S.

Supreme Court is now operating as a band of traitors who have

surrendered the future of this nation to the corporations. Today,

it's with medical device manufacturers, tomorrow it's with

pharmaceuticals, and in another year, it could be for any product or

service that is " approved " by a government regulator.

>

> Essentially, the U.S. Supreme Court has announced its intent to

enslave the U.S. population and grant total power to the corporations

and the corrupt, centralized regulators (like the FDA and USDA)

influenced by those corporations.

>

> You've just lost your country, folks. Good luck trying to get

it back. The corruption is now so deep that the U.S. Supreme Court no

longer protects the People. The very concept of " We the People " is

now history. The new message to the People is simple this: Take your

medicine. Don't ask questions. Pay your taxes. Do what you're told,

vote for who you're told, and don't demand any more rights.

>

> And if you're killed by a medical device, rest in peace with

the knowledge that someone else wasn't.

>

>

> --------------------------------------------------------------------

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How can this be? The FDA has already admitted that they do not have

the staff or resources to keep up!!!! If the FDA can get up to speed,

and REALLY monitor food, drugs and advices like they SHOULD be, then

that is one thing, but this is a whole other thing!!! What is wrong

with our country, we are falling apart!

>

> Darling Patty, oh no, we are not yet, because trial lawyers are

likely to group together to appeal this ruling to the US Department

of Justice. As it stands, this is a Catch-22 sweetheart deal between

the federal government and corporations, because this prevents

anybody from suing manufacturers, and of course, as we understand it,

we cannot sue the FDA.

>

> People who have been damaged by faulty medical devices must be

provided with some legal method by which they can seek compensation

and restitution; otherwise, we are living in the old Soviet Union!!

>

> Love you so....Lea and

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~```

> WE LOST

>

>

>

> We're done for. This is just what these manufacturer's were

hoping for. More than ever now, Buyer beware! I'm speechless,

disgusted and angry.

>

> http://www.naturalnews.com/022713.html

>

> Supreme Court Shields Medical Device Manufacturers from

Consumer Lawsuits

> by Mike

>

> (NaturalNews) The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that medical

device manufacturers cannot be sued for injuries caused by their

products if those products were pre-approved for use by the FDA.

>

> The court ruled that Riegel, who was injured in 1996

when a balloon catheter made by Medtronic Inc. burst while being

inserted into one of his coronary arteries during an angioplasty,

could not sue the company for damages. In doing so, the Supreme Court

upheld a ruling by a U.S. appeals court and an earlier ruling by a

trial court in New York.

>

> I discuss the disastrous consequences of this issue in great

detail in a new podcast (#11). Click here to listen:

http://www.naturalnews.com/Index-Podcasts.html

>

>

> Hiding behind a legal technicality

> Medtronic, which no longer makes the balloon catheter in

question, said that the fault was with the doctor, who used the

device contrary to the operating instructions. The company also said

that the doctor made an error in using that type of product for a

patient in Riegel's condition. But rather than ruling in Medtronic's

favor merely for the one specific instance, the court dismissed the

case entirely, saying that federal law prohibits suing device

manufacturers in state courts if the device was approved as safe by

the FDA. The decision is expected to have ramifications for a large

number of pending lawsuits against manufacturers of devices such as

breast implants, defibrillators, artificial heart pumps and valves,

drug-coated stents, spinal cord stimulators, and prosthetic hips and

knees.

>

> Because there is no federal law that allows consumers to sue

medical device manufacturers for damages, state courts have become a

common venue for such suits.

>

> The legal reasoning behind the court's decision centered on the

wording of the 1976 Medical Device Amendments law. The law, which set

in place an FDA pre-approval process for medical devices, explicitly

prohibited states from putting in place " any requirement " that

is " different from, or in addition to " FDA requirements. In an 8-1

majority, the court ruled that allowing citizens to sue device

companies in state courts amounts to " a requirement " that undermines

the FDA approval process.

>

> Writing for the majority, Justice Antonin Scalia wrote that the

FDA may approve devices " that present great risks if they nonetheless

offer great benefits in light of available alternatives. " In other

words, there is no requirement that devices actually achieve any

reasonable level of safety for all patients. To receive FDA approval

and be immunized from lawsuits, medical devices merely have to keep

alive slightly more people than they kill.

>

> It would be inappropriate to empower juries second-guess these

FDA decisions without full access to data about the benefits of

technologies, Scalia said. This is the Supreme Court's way of saying

that medical device safety is define solely by the FDA, and if the

FDA says something is safe, the fact that such devices actually kill

people does not in any way disprove the device's safety.

>

> A jury " sees only the cost of a more dangerous design, and is

not concerned with its benefits; the patient who reaped those

benefits are not represented in court, " he wrote. This is a clever

way of saying that products that kill some consumers -- but not all --

are safe enough to be granted blanket immunity because there are

some survivors. It's a ridiculous position, of course, and it's never

applied to natural remedies.

>

> Note that if an herb kills even ten people in the entire

country, the FDA immediately leaps to the conclusion that the herb

is " unsafe at any dose. " (Google the history of the FDA's ephedra ban

for details.) But medical devices and pharmaceuticals are held to an

entirely different standard: They must only avoid killing more people

than they kill! The fact that some people survived the treatment is

apparently sufficient to justify all those who died! This is

precisely what Justice Scalia is saying in this decision.

>

> A whisper of sanity from Justice Ginsburg

> Dissenting Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg disagreed with the logic

that the ability to sue companies constitutes an unfair " requirement. "

>

> " Congress, in my view, did not intend [for the 1976 law] to

effect a radical curtailment of state common-law suits seeking

compensation for injuries caused by defectively designed or labeled

medical devices, " she wrote.

>

> The purpose of the law, according to Ginsburg, was to prevent

states from imposing confusing additional regulatory processes on top

of the new federal standard. Prior to 1976, the absence of a federal

regulatory process for medical devices had spurred many states to

initiate their own.

>

> Senator Kennedy, one of the sponsors of the 1976 law and

head of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, agreed

with Ginsburg's analysis. " In enacting legislation on medical

devices, Congress never intended that FDA approval would give blanket

immunity to manufacturers from liability for injuries caused by

faulty devices, " Kennedy said. " Congress obviously needs to correct

the court's decision. Otherwise, FDA approval will become a green

light for shoddy practices by manufacturers. "

>

> The Supreme Court ruling applies only to medical devices pre-

approved under the process set in place by the 1976 law, not to

devices grandfathered in under a separate process, in which the FDA

decides that a product is " substantially equivalent " to one that was

already on the market prior to 1976. In 1996, the Supreme Court ruled

that manufacturers of those devices can indeed be sued by states.

>

> Devices that undergo the FDA pre-approval process, and thus are

exempted from lawsuits under the current ruling, tend to be more

technologically advanced, expensive and risky than older devices.

>

> Under the new ruling, device manufacturers that fail to follow

FDA specifications can still be sued in state courts. In addition,

lawsuits or prosecutions can be brought against companies for

violations of state laws that are the same as federal laws, just not

state laws with different requirements.

>

> Supreme Court's decision will unleash a wave of shoddy medical

devices that could kill tens of thousands

> Zieve, the lawyer who represented Riegel's family, said

that the court's ruling will have a dangerous effect on the quality

of medical devices. Because the threat of lawsuits is a primary

incentive for manufacturers to make sure their products are as safe

as possible, the removal of this threat will lead to more dangerous

devices staying on the market.

>

> " By minimizing the incentive, the Supreme Court's decision

poses a risk to the safety of medical devices, " she said.

>

> This is crucial to understand: When medical device

manufacturers are granted blanket immunity that protects them from

all lawsuits, they no longer have any reason to make their products

safe. They only need to seek FDA approval, not genuine product

safety, and FDA approval is a political process, not a scientific

one, so achieving such approval for unsafe medical devices is simply

a matter of paying off the right people, fudging the right scientific

studies, and filling out the paperwork. The FDA grants its approval

to deadly products on a regular basis. (Just look at Vioxx, Rezulin,

and all the other deadly drugs approved by the FDA...)

>

> Remember: The FDA serves the interests of corporations, not the

American people. When it comes down to a question of public safety

vs. corporate profits, the FDA favors the corporations in nearly

every case. Now, with the U.S. Supreme Court handing medical device

manufacturers blanket immunity, the American public has absolutely no

legal recourse for the harm caused by dangerous medical devices, even

if they are defective!

>

>

> What's next? Immunity for Big Pharma of course

> The Bush administration, which supported Medtronic in the

current case, has announced its intentions to seek similar lawsuit

immunity for drug companies. This would make it impossible for

consumers to sue drug companies for the harm caused by pharmaceutical

side effects, unleashing a new era of blanket immunity for the very

corporations that are now poisoning the American population with

dangerous and deadly synthetic chemicals.

>

> Drugs are regulated under a different law than medical devices:

the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act of 1938. Unlike the 1976 medical

device law, the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act does not explicitly

prohibit alternate state regulations. But according to the Bush

administration, the ban is implicit.

>

> The Supreme Court will consider whether to grant this immunity

to drug companies on Monday, in the case of Warner-Lambert Co. V.

Kent. (See http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/cert/0... ) If the drug

companies win this case, it will unleash a chemical holocaust on the

American people, where the most dangerous chemicals imaginable are

patented, marketed and sold to unsuspecting consumers, with

absolutely no legal recourse for those harmed or killed by such

products. The American people will find themselves chemically and

financially enslaved to the drug companies, poisoned by an evil

conspiracy of greed between Big Pharma and the FDA while being

stripped of their right to justice thanks to the U.S. Supreme Court.

>

> Listen to my podcast (#11) to learn what happens next:

http://www.naturalnews.com/Index-Podcasts.html

>

> Hint: The coming collapse of America is accelerating, and the

people running this country will not stop until every right is

stripped, every person is drugged, every dollar is stolen and every

wage earner is forever indebted to a system of disease management

that is intentionally designed to prevent health and keep the

population in a state of chronic disease (and mental weakness).

>

>

> The U.S. Supreme Traitors

> That the U.S. Supreme Court would take away the rights of

consumers to sue medical device manufacturers for the harm caused by

their dangerous devices is not even the issue here: It's the fact

that the U.S. Supreme Court is WILLING to take away such consumer

rights! It means the Constitution is deemed irrelevant, and its last-

ditch protectors have now sold out to the corporations. The U.S.

Supreme Court is now operating as a band of traitors who have

surrendered the future of this nation to the corporations. Today,

it's with medical device manufacturers, tomorrow it's with

pharmaceuticals, and in another year, it could be for any product or

service that is " approved " by a government regulator.

>

> Essentially, the U.S. Supreme Court has announced its intent to

enslave the U.S. population and grant total power to the corporations

and the corrupt, centralized regulators (like the FDA and USDA)

influenced by those corporations.

>

> You've just lost your country, folks. Good luck trying to get

it back. The corruption is now so deep that the U.S. Supreme Court no

longer protects the People. The very concept of " We the People " is

now history. The new message to the People is simple this: Take your

medicine. Don't ask questions. Pay your taxes. Do what you're told,

vote for who you're told, and don't demand any more rights.

>

> And if you're killed by a medical device, rest in peace with

the knowledge that someone else wasn't.

>

>

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