Minnesota has become the latest state to sue e-cigarette maker Juul Labs, alleging that its deceptive marketing unlawfully aimed at teens has wiped out a decade of gains in fighting youth tobacco use.
Gov. Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison, joined at the Capitol by a dozen Minnesota teens, cast the lawsuit Wednesday as a sequel to the state's landmark $6.5 billion settlement with the tobacco industry 20 years ago.
"There's a new name for Big Tobacco: It's Juul and it's vaping. It's that's simple," Walz said. "But my message to Juul if they're listening today is you can hire your attorneys, you will have your day in court, but we will bring the righteous justice of the state of Minnesota down on Juul."
Minnesota's suit is the latest in a mounting stack of lawsuits, congressional investigations and regulatory efforts targeting San Francisco-based Juul, which has rapidly become the dominant e-cigarette manufacturer in the U.S.
The new lawsuit, filed in Hennepin County District Court, seeks to declare Juul responsible for "creating a public nuisance" in Minnesota and violating the state's consumer protection laws.
Minnesota is also seeking an order permanently barring Juul from marketing to youths and forcing the company to fund clinical vaping cessation programs in Minnesota and a "corrective public education campaign" about the dangers of youth vaping.
Ellison said the state would also be seeking monetary relief "for the great harm and injury" Juul caused in Minnesota. Though he gave no dollar figure, Ellison said he would "not refute" the possibility that the damages and civil penalties could approach the size of the first major tobacco suit filed by Minnesota in 1994.
A spokesperson for Juul said Wednesday that while the company had not yet reviewed the suit, it is committed to working with public health officials and others "to combat underage use and convert adult smokers from combustible cigarettes."