It's hard to think of anything more reckless than adding a deadly
carcinogen to a product that already causes
cancer—and then bragging about the health benefits. Yet that's precisely what Lorillard Tobacco did 60 years ago when it introduced
Kent cigarettes, whose patented 'Micronite" filter contained a particularly virulent form of
asbestos.
Smokers puffed their way through 13 billion Kents between March 1952 and May 1956, when Lorillard changed the filter design. Six decades later, the legal fallout continues—just last month, a
Florida jury awarded
more than $3.5 million in damages to a former Kent smoker stricken with
mesothelioma, an extremely rare and deadly asbestos-related cancer that typically shows up decades after the initial exposures.

Lorillard and
Hollingsworth & Vose, the company that supplied the asbestos filter material, face numerous claims from mesothelioma sufferers, both
factory workers who produced the cigarettes or filter material and former smokers who say they inhaled the microscopic fibers. (The companies insist that hardly any fibers escaped.) There's been a burst of new lawsuits in the last few years, according to
SEC filings, possibly because a mesothelioma patient these days is almost certain to be asked by his doctor or lawyer, "Did you happen to smoke Kents in the 1950s?"
While there's no official count, records and interviews suggest that mesothelioma claims since the 1980s number in the low hundreds at least.
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