After less than one full day of deliberation, a jury in Columbus, Ohio, found DuPont liable for $1.6 million in a personal injury claim over C8 contamination.











A JURY HAS FOUND DUPONT liable for negligence in the case of Carla Bartlett, taking less than a day to award $1.6 million to the Ohio woman who developed kidney cancer after drinking water contaminated with a chemical formerly used to make Teflon. The jury declined to give Bartlett punitive damages in the federal case. Instead, the award included $1.1 million for negligence as well as $500,000 for emotional distress.
“This is brilliant,” one of Bartlett’s attorneys, Mike Papantonio, said of the verdict. “It’s exactly what we wanted.” Papantonio emphasized that Bartlett’s case, the first of more than 3,500 personal injury and wrongful death suits filed on behalf of people in West Virginia and Ohio who were exposed to C8, had been chosen by DuPont as the first to be tried and involved less egregious injuries than many others yet to be heard.
“They picked this case with the idea that it was the most winnable. Strategically they never dreamed we’d win this case,” said Papantonio, who predicts that other C8 suits in the pipeline will result in punitive damages. “Really, it’s just a matter of time.”
In a statement, DuPont said it expected to appeal the verdict and emphasized that “safety and environmental stewardship are core values at DuPont.”
CARLA BARTLETT LIVED much of her life in Coolville, Ohio, a tiny town a few miles across the Ohio River from a DuPont plant in Parkersburg, West Virginia. After years of drinking water that had been contaminated with C8, Bartlett, who is now 51, was diagnosed with a tumor on her kidney in 1997 and underwent a painful surgery that involved removing part of one of her ribs along with the tumor.
Bartlett’s attorneys argued that while she and tens of thousands of people living near Parkersburg, West Virginia, were drinking water contaminated with C8, DuPont was actively working to ensure they didn’t “connect the dots” about the chemical. One DuPont PowerPoint presented by Papantonio described the company’s strategy of keeping sensitive information from government agencies, community organizations, and “disgruntled employees.”
DuPont’s lawyers, for their part, denied any responsibility for Bartlett’s illness. “Nobody at DuPont expected that Mrs. Bartlett or anyone else in the community would be hurt,” said Damond Mace, who emphasized that the company couldn’t have predicted that scientists would find a probable link between C8 and kidney cancer, as they did in 2012.
Bartlett’s attorneys responded with voluminous internal communications showing the company did in fact foresee the damage they would later inflict. In one DuPont document, a summary of a 1984 meeting about C8, a DuPont employee concluded that “we are already liable for the past 32 years of operation.”
The presentation of historical documents was designed to convince the jury that the company acted irresponsibly, even given the information that was available before Bartlett’s diagnosis. Bartlett’s lawyers laid out a clear timeline that began in the 1950s, when DuPont first learned of the chemical’s potential toxicity. By 1966, some DuPont employees realized that C8 was seeping into groundwater. By 1980, after the company instituted regular testing of its own employees, DuPont had evidence that C8 was present in workers’ blood — and within two more years there was evidence that the contamination persisted in human tissues. By 1984, according to testimony, DuPont’s own testing had established that C8 had leaked into local drinking water. In 1989, DuPont knew that C8 caused testicular tumors in rats — and even classified C8 as a possible carcinogen. But rather than reporting these developments, Mike Papantonio told the jury, “They hid this information from the public for at least 16 years.”
The company could have easily disposed of its C8 waste differently, Bartlett’s attorneys argued. As evidence, they produced a 1985 memo and a manufacturer’s information sheet from 3M, the company that sold C8 to DuPont until 2000, both of which clearly stated that the chemical should have been either incinerated or placed in a landfill designed for hazardous waste. Bartlett’s lawyers also revealed documents showing that DuPont did in fact follow 3M’s directive in its facilities in Japan, China, and the Netherlands, where it burned C8 waste.
In Parkersburg, however, DuPont chose to pump C8 through its smokestacks, bury it in unlined landfills, and dump up to 50,000 pounds a year directly into the Ohio River. The attorneys also presented evidence that switching to incineration would have cost the Parkersburg plant less than .2 percent of its annual operating costs. “The only reason they didn’t do it was because they wanted to save money,” Papantonio told the jury. Later, he added: “We wouldn’t be here today if it were incinerated.”
ARGUABLY THE MOST MOVING testimony came from Bartlett herself, a mother of two who described her daily routine of drinking iced tea that she unwittingly made with contaminated water, the physical pain of her ordeal, and her fear of a recurrence. Bartlett cried while on the stand and traced a huge line across her body where she has a scar from her surgery, saying, “It’s very big, and it’s very ugly.”
But it was testimony from two of DuPont’s own witnesses, who admitted to having high levels of C8 in their own bodies, that may have been even more damaging. Anthony Playtis, who was occupational health coordinator at the DuPont plant in Parkersburg, said that in 1994 C8 was measured in his blood at 400 parts per billion (ppb), a level that is roughly 100 times the national average. The retired DuPont worker went on to dismiss the notion that the measurement was cause for concern. “I knew there were a lot of other people who had much higher levels, and so I didn’t think mine was anything to worry about,” he said. Also, Playtis noted, “Everything is toxic.”
As part of a group of DuPont employees who measured C8 levels in local drinking water, Playtis took a sample from his home in 1988 that measured 2.2 ppb — more than double the safe level the company had set internally. But neither he nor anyone else at DuPont reported the elevated C8 readings to the public or to regulators until 1999. During those years, local children were splashing in backyard pools and community members were watering their vegetable gardens with the stuff.
Another former DuPont employee, Paul Bossert, who served as plant manager in Parkersburg from 2000 to 2005, made a point of mentioning that he drank the plant’s water, which had elevated levels of C8, and acknowledged that the chemical had been measured in his own blood at 85 ppb. Upon cross-examination, however, Bossert admitted that he had high cholesterol and a potentially cancerous “spot” on his kidney. Both conditions are among the six approved by a panel of scientists as grounds for personal injury cases such as Bartlett’s.
The jury didn’t have to make a decision about whether Bossert’s health conditions were caused by C8, but they did have to try to determine if the chemical caused Bartlett’s cancer, and they were given specific instructions about how to do so. According to the terms of a 2005 class-action settlement over the contamination that spawned these cases, they had to accept as fact that drinking C8 for at least a year at the level of .05 ppb or above, as Bartlett did, can cause cancer.
Although DuPont’s attorneys were not permitted to dispute the fact that C8 can cause cancer, they did question whether it had caused Carla Bartlett’s particular illness. “Just because C-8 is capable of causing cancer does not mean that it did cause Mrs. Bartlett’s kidney cancer,” DuPont attorney Damond Mace said. Instead, he argued that Bartlett’s cancer that was caused by her obesity.
The $1.6 million verdict is only one of several problems now facing DuPont. Since March the company’s stock is down more than 30 percent, and on Monday CEO Ellen Kullman announced she was stepping down, leaving DuPont without a succession plan.
Some observers who are familiar with the company’s long history in Parkersburg believe Kullman’s departure is tied to C8. Jeffrey Dugas, campaign manager of Keep Your Promises DuPont, a local nonprofit devoted to holding the company accountable, said the company’s mishandling of the chemical — the contamination, the cover-up, and now the bruising legal fight that just concluded in Columbus — hasn’t served anyone well.
“This whole process of trying to wiggle out of its responsibilities has hurt everyone involved,” said Dugas. “The latest victim is Ellen Kullman. But mid-Ohio residents have been suffering for over a decade.”
As the first of six bellwether cases, Bartlett’s verdict is seen as an important predictor of the thousands of C8 claims that may yet come to trial. The next case, in which the plaintiff has ulcerative colitis, is scheduled to be heard in Columbus in late November. The future of Chemours, the chemical company that was recently spun off from DuPont, may also hinge on the outcome of these trials.
With C8 present in water far beyond the Ohio Valley, where Bartlett and other plaintiffs in the current crop of plaintiffs were contaminated, the implications of the Bartlett case may be far wider. Papantonio, who tried some of the first asbestos cases, sees that litigation, which has cost industry more than $50 billion to date, as a possible model.
“This is starting out just like those cases,” said Papantonio. “If I was in charge of this company, I’d be worried.”

After less than one full day of deliberation, a jury in Columbus, Ohio, found DuPont liable for $1.6 million in a personal injury claim over C8 contamination.











I wonder if vinyl chloride monomer is used as a feedstock in any HCFC’s?
I wonder if any of those HCFC’s are used as blowing agents?
I wonder if these blowing agents ever have any VCM carryover above limits in products people are exposed to on a daily basis?
I honestly don’t know but it concerns me.
Just asking.
If you want to know what is exiting a process sewer at 100’s of locations along the Gulf, Atlantic and Pacific, ignore the analysis provided by the company and collect a few oysters that live at the mouth of the sewer and analyze the toxin accumulation profile in their tissue and you will need to look no further.
Oysters are nothing but little filters. What toxins specifically bio-accumulate must be considered obviously as I am sure they all don’t.
But those creatures and what they contain should provide some good data…
that is if anyone is interested.
This is just my uneducated, personal opinion.
Some decades ago, research I was part of depended on a fresh supplies of barnacles provided by Woods Hole, MA. Over a short period of about eight years, the live specimens became oily,puny, and the supply unreliable. Barnacles are of course filter feeders as well.
Your analogy to asbestos litigation should be measured by this source:
http://www.asbestoslitigationwatch.org
Personal injury litigation in these United States is and has been a scandal since tort law replaced contract law.
A further comment: Dysfunctional tort litigation is a crazy answer to dysfunctional health insurance.
Tort litigation is a response to the dysfunctional failure of government to regulate industry and the inability of industry to regulate itself.
Try
Marcia Angell, Science on Trial—The Clash of Medical Evidence and the Law in the Breast Implant Case (New York & London: W.W. Norton, 1997),
My father told me he worked for Uncle Dupie in the 50’s.
One day my Dad was on the dock of a DuPont facility when the waste barge was loading drums of toxic waste (sodium cyanide I believe – although not 100% sure). They would take the drums out to the federal waste dumping grounds in the Gulf of Mexico and toss them off the side and return and load more drums. As far as I understand this was perfectly legal back then prior to them “getting responsible”.
On the day my dad was watching them load he saw one of the guys carrying a rifle. My dad asked, “what do you have the rifle for?”
The barge worker replied…
“quite often the drums want to float and don’t want to sink, so we help them along”.
This is the mentality you are dealing with.
For those who like Joe Biden and think he will make a good president…
“what is his relationship with the DuPont family and company?”
Also, if we are to believe various Freons caused ozone depletion (F-22, etc., not sure that claim is still viable?), what about those of our fellow citizens who have developed melanoma, carcinoma’s, etc.?
DuPont denied (as is my understanding) for years that Freons destroyed ozone, then admitted Freons destroy ozone (one they had secured the Freon replacements so they could step right in with the answer and keep the supply and money going).
It seems to me, as a neophyte observer, there is a good case to be made here that they are also responsible by their own admission to giving millions skin cancer and causing thousands upon thousands of deaths.
By their own admission… in my humble, uneducated opinion.
Just asking?
I can’t address Parkersburg specifically, but companies are allowed through EPA and State permits to dump waste into water bodies all over the country to this very day if the toxins are under certain limits.
The polluters would say, “yes we do, but we are careful and do not dump any toxins above the legal limit. Gross volumes of toxins are disposed of responsibly in other manners and not to water ways. We also must have monitoring of what goes into the water ways. We sample the stream going out, analyze, and report our results to the government. Obviously, we can’t dump toxins into these bodies in gross amounts.”
All I can say is, analysis takes place for 24 hours on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday (as an example), all agreements with EPA are different.
And lastly I will say and is my question (as I certainly do not know), what is going out of the Process Sewer on Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday and Sunday?
You do the math.
My husband and I live in Columbus and, by the most interesting of happenstances, found ourselves dining tonight next to two women who’d been in town for the past month working 20 hour days on this case. They were so excited to hear that we were familiar with the story from Ms. Lerner’s pieces here on The Intercept and were effusive in their praise for her stories.
We spent almost three hours talking with them about the intricacies of the case, their close relationship with Ms. Bartlett, the toll taken by her health battles and the many ups and downs they’d been through in their work to bring her justice. It was truly inspiring to note that, while they are exhausted from this incredible victory, they are ready to go back to war again this coming winter to work just as hard for the next victim, and the ones after that.
These ladies were awesome and they were very humble to be part of the work they’d done with Mr. Papantonio, and happy that they were able to help bring justice to these people who’d been harmed. We are planning on staying in touch and taking them out to dinner when they get back in town to continue their hard work.
So, from Brenda, Karla and myself, many thanks to Sharon and The Intercept for your great in-depth journalism on this story. I hope we see more on it when the cases resume later this year.
Your fortuitous visit with the victorious will add to and compliment the synergy as the cases continue. What an exceptionally uplifting interaction for you and your husband, and the two women involved with the case, to have, by happenstance, fallen into.
Readin’ this, Monsanto, Bayer, Sygenta, BASF, Clorox, ConAgra Et Al?
As shown in this article, Monsanto also has a long history of covering up issues that arise from its product line:
http://viableopposition.blogspot.ca/2015/05/monsantos-past-and-our-food-supply.html
This is one company that has a heritage that should not be forgotten.
Without knowing anything else about it, it sounds like they spun off Chemours to shield themselves. If the lawsuits get traction they’ll probably declare it bankrupt to try to stop the plaintiffs from collecting any of the money, and that will be a whole extra set of lawsuits, and in the meantime hopefully the plaintiffs will die. Ain’t capitalism and the legal system grand.
Great reporting and thorough work like yours provides a primary tool to the key to success for those fighting against injustice. A bright light at the end of a very dark toxic tunnel? I hope so for our friends of Parkersburg, West Virginia and Ohio that are fighting for the justice they deserve. Lisa R., from the DuPont toxic plume neighborhood in Pompton Lakes, NJ.
“DUPONT FOUND LIABLE IN TEFLON TOXIN TRIAL”
.. and no congressmen running around apologising to Dupont yet?
Great news! And great journalism!And Congratulations to Ms. Bartlett. As for this statement from those scumbags at Dupont…
quote“…safety and environmental stewardship are core values at DuPont.”unquote
yeah, well the day pigs fly I’ll believe you. Meanwhile, eat shit and die.
Excellent series of articles. Great journalism.
Thanks.
To Ms. Lerner: thank you for your brilliant reporting of this sickening story.
To David Waldman: thank you for making me aware of Ms. Lerners work.
To the plaintiffs lawyers: I am so proud of you for fighting the good fight, and having the tenacity and perseverance to prevailing in a legal system where the playing field is hardly level.
Superb reporting, thanks.
Great news for the World!
Read your three articles leading up to this trial.Enjoyed immensely.Happy about the first trial results.Thanks.
Gonna have to drink your own drainage, Uncle Dupie. Glad I’ve lived long enough to see the delay. If there is a way, the profession will find a hole to squeak through, and call it liberty, mind you. Then name a college after him.
Why do these stories always stop at the people in charge of the day to day operations of transnational corporations? Sure, they are no doubt guilty of numerous crimes – but what about the real criminals?? – the ones who demand ever grater profits and NO EXCUSES!!
The DuPont family has profited in billions of dollars from this racketeering by a transnational corporation it owns and is ultimately responsible for. But no where in this article or anywhere else is anyone calling for them to forfeit their illegal wealth.
Until the oligarchs who’s transnational corporations are engaged in racketeering and fraud are held liable and have their fortunes confiscated for the same reason drug kingpins are striped of their fortunes, they will continue to engage in fraud and racketeering.
It’s quite simple, really: the original and still important purpose of incorporating is to shield the stockholders from the liabilities of the company. Financial, of course, but also other kinds of legal liabilities. If the law was changed to hold DuPont family liable for the environmental damages caused by the corporation, then all the shareholders would be liable. That might even include you, if you own an index fund, for instance.
It is also probably true that the DuPonts have not been in control of the day to day operations of the company that bears their name for quite some time. No member of the family currently serves as an executive or sits on the board. So how, exactly, are they liable?
The more interesting question is why the executives of US corporations cannot be held responsible for the criminal acts committed during their stewardship. That is what I would be asking my Congressman if I had one.
” important purpose of incorporating is to shield the stockholders from the liabilities of the company.”
Slight, though in my mind a significant, change.
Instead of using the word “stockholders”, technically it should be stakeholders, which would include anyone or anything that owns any part of the corporation.
I believe it seems to harm the people’s argument when one believes, wrongly so, that only the stockholders are “protected”, depending on how the corporation was formed.
Couldn’t happen to a better company. Congratulations on an impressive victory and I hope Mrs. Bartlett is able to live to enjoy some of that compensation although how $ can compensate for life and health is a mystery to me.