The latest trials over allegedly defective 3M earplugs ended with one victory for military plaintiffs and one for the Maplewood-based company.
A federal jury in Tallahassee on Monday awarded a 47-year-old U.S. Army sergeant $13 million in damages for hearing loss and tinnitus associated with his use of 3M earplugs. So far, it's the largest award against 3M in the massive earplug litigation.
Late Friday, a federal jury in Pensacola rejected claims by a Tennessee U.S. Army veteran that his hearing loss and tinnitus were caused by 3M earplugs.
After seven bellwether trials, plaintiffs have scored four victories, winning monetary damages totaling $30 million. Three juries have rejected all claims against 3M.
The trials are part of what appears to be the largest U.S. mass tort ever, involving legal claims against 3M from more than 250,000 veterans and military personnel. Plaintiffs say the earplugs were knowingly defective, and that 3M failed to properly warn them about the alleged flaws.
3M, which stopped selling Combat Arms CAEv2 earplugs in 2015, has maintained the product was sound.
In Monday's verdict, Guillermo Camarillorazo was awarded $816,395 in compensatory damages and $12.2 million in punitive damages. Camarillorazo, an active-duty soldier, joined the Army in 2001 and has been deployed multiple times in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The Camarillorazo jury "found beyond a reasonable doubt that the company engaged in intentional, punitive conduct," plaintiffs' attorneys said in a press statement. "Sergeant Guillermo [Camarillorazo] is now the sixth servicemember who has successfully held 3M accountable for putting profits over the safety of those who served our nation."