“Bad Acts” Describes Tobacco Industry Interference in DOJ Case

A soon-to-be-published new book tells the hidden story of how the Bush Administration intervened to protect Big Tobacco from the 1999 U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) lawsuit filed under President Clinton. The book is authored by Sharon Eubanks, the DOJ attorney who headed up the team that won the multi-billion dollar Racketeer Influenced Corrupt Organization (RICO) case against the industry, and Stanton Glantz, head of the University of California San Francisco’s Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education. “Bad Acts” tells what happened behind-the-scenes — the politics, the litigation, the behavior of the tobacco industry and its lawyers as the Bush Administration worked to gut the case just as the DOJ’s team was approaching victory. The book is currently in production and will ship in mid-May. It can be ordered in hardback at $28.50 from the American Public Health Association. (The price is lower if you are an APHA member). To see a description and pre-order the book, click here.

  1 comment for ““Bad Acts” Describes Tobacco Industry Interference in DOJ Case

  1. End the dirty tactics of the tobacco industry!

    The BIG Truth: Big Tobacco sells a product that kills half of its consumers worldwide, at nearly 6 million people a year.

    The BIGGER Truth: Big Tobacco undermines public health policies through strategis that circumvent the law.

    The BIGGEST Truth: While smoking is a choice, information is a right, and in this case, what you do not know is already killing you.

    You may like, visit and share our Facebook page and site:

    https://www.facebook.com/TimesUpTobacco

    http://www.timesuptobacco.com

    You are also encouraged to join our Time’s Up Tobacco video making contest, “May Ibubuga Ka Ba?” (For inquiries, look up the links above)

    Please and thank you!

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