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Juul will pay $462 million to 6 states in underage vaping settlement
The deal will also put strict restrictions on how the company can market its products.
Sean Buckley04.12.2023Juul will pay $1.2 billion to settle multiple youth-vaping lawsuits
Juul will pay approximately $1.2 billion to settle around 10,000 lawsuits, including 8,500 personal injury cases.
Mariella Moon12.10.2022Juul asks appeals court to block the US ban on its vaping products
The FDA this week ordered the company to stop selling its e-cigarettes and pods.
Kris Holt06.24.2022FDA bans sales of Juul vape products in the US
The company did not provide "the data needed to determine relevant health risks," the FDA said.
Kris Holt06.23.2022Juul's e-cigarettes could be banned from sale in the US
The FDA is set to announce the move imminently, according to The Wall Street Journal.
Kris Holt06.22.2022Flavored e-cigarettes are exempt from the FDA's proposed menthol ban
The FDA has proposed a ban on menthol cigarettes that doesn't cover e-cigs, but could shape policy for the technology.
Jon Fingas04.28.2022Juul will pay $22.5 million to settle a Washington state lawsuit
AG Bob Ferguson accused the company of marketing its products to minors.
Kris Holt04.14.2022Coalition of 31 states calls on FDA to regulate flavored e-cigarettes
New York and 30 other states and territories have urged the FDA regulate e-cigarette flavors and marketing aimed at kids.
Jon Fingas08.18.2021Juul will pay $40 million to settle a vaping lawsuit in North Carolina
Several other states have sued the company, alleging that it marketed products to teens.
Kris Holt06.28.2021PAX skirts Apple's vape app ban with a web version
Apple may have banned vape software from the App Store, but PAX is betting a web app will be enough for some smokers.
Jon Fingas06.01.2020FTC sues to unwind Marlboro owner's $12.8 billion Juul investment
While e-cigarettes may have been quickly replaced in headlines by a new threat to public health, it appears the government has not forgotten about vaping. However, this time the news isn't about banning flavored pods or raising the legal age, instead the FTC is suing to unwind Altria's $12.8 billion investment in vaping giant Juul. While the folks at Altria might be having similar thoughts after lawsuits and regulation cut the value of that stake to around $4.2 billion in January, the feds take issue with the way the two companies "turned from competitors to collaborators by eliminating competition and sharing in Juul's profits." At the time the investment even upset people within Juul, due to the suddenly hypocritical stance of claiming to be a way to help people quit smoking despite having a major investor that's a tobacco giant (Altria owns brands like Marlboro and Virginia Slims). According to the FTC, the partnership came about after Altria agreed not to compete with the upstart in exchange for getting that big stake. In a statement, Altria VP Murray Garnick said "We believe that our investment in JUUL does not harm competition and that the FTC misunderstood the facts. We are disappointed with the FTC's decision, believe we have a strong defense and will vigorously defend our investment."
Richard Lawler04.02.2020Marlboro owner's stake in Juul is worth a third of its original value
When cigarette giant Altria invested $12.8 billion into Juul, it probably thought this was a brilliant move that gave it a stake in the future as conventional smoking continued to decline. It's probably having second thoughts in 2020, however. The company wrote off another $4.1 billion of the investment's value in the fourth quarter due to the onslaught of lawsuits over allegedly deceptive and teen-oriented marketing. Combined with an earlier $4.5 billion write-off, Altria's Juul stake is now worth $4.2 billion -- just under a third of its original value.
Jon Fingas01.30.2020FDA bans production, sale of fruit- and mint-flavored vape pods
Today, the FDA officially banned most fruit- and mint-flavored, cartridge-based vaping products. The new rules are yet another attempt to curb teen vaping. Companies that manufacture, sell and distribute such products have 30 days to comply.
Christine Fisher01.02.2020CDC: Vitamin E acetate is 'closely associated’ with vaping lung injuries
For months, the CDC has warned people against vaping until it could determine the cause of a mysterious vaping-related lung injury. Now, the CDC confirms speculation that vitamin E acetate is "closely associated" with EVALI, or e-cigarette, or vaping, product use-associated lung injury.
Christine Fisher12.20.2019Congress is raising the minimum smoking and vaping age to 21
Congress just raised the legal age to smoke or vape to 21, BuzzFeed News reports. The law will go into effect sometime next year, and it will cover all nicotine products.
Christine Fisher12.19.2019Facebook, Instagram ban influencers from promoting guns and vaping
Facebook and Instagram already ban ads for guns and e-cigarettes, but now they're shutting down a loophole that let merchants pitch the products regardless. The social networks have announced that they're banning "branded content" (read: influencer posting) that promotes weapons, tobacco and vaping. You'll also see "special restrictions" on posts that market products like alcohol and diet supplements.
Jon Fingas12.18.2019NYC city council votes to ban non-tobacco flavored e-cigarettes
New York City is set to become the largest city in the US to ban non-tobacco flavored e-cigarettes. The city council voted 42-2 to ban them, and Mayor Bill de Blasio will sign the bill or let it pass into law, according to his deputy press secretary.
Kris Holt11.26.2019NY Attorney General sues Juul for deceptive marketing
Yesterday, California filed a lawsuit against e-cigarette company Juul for allegedly targeting underage Californians with its marketing and sales practices. Today, New York Attorney General Letitia James announced a similar lawsuit against Juul "for deceptive and misleading marketing of its e-cigarettes, which contributed to the ongoing youth vaping epidemic in New York State."
Christine Fisher11.19.2019California is suing Juul for allegedly targeting minors
California is suing e-cigarette maker Juul. The lawsuit alleges that Juul targeted underage Californians with its marketing and sales practices, failed to warn consumers of their exposure to chemicals linked to cancer and birth defects, failed to properly verify the age of its customers and violated the privacy rights of minors by retaining their email addresses even when they failed age verification. Attorney General Xavier Becerra, Los Angeles District Attorney Jackie Lacey and the County of Los Angeles announced the lawsuit today.
Christine Fisher11.18.2019Apple bans vaping apps from the App Store
Vaping apps are no longer allowed in Apple's walled garden. In a statement given to Axios, the company confirmed that its App Store guidelines now ban software that encourages or helps people to vape. Any application that served such a person should no longer be available for download. If you already have a vaping app installed, however, you won't lost access and should be able to download it again on new devices, according to Axios.
Nick Summers11.15.2019