Zantac Cancer Lawsuit Accuses Pharmaceutical Giants of Racketeering


. By Anne Wallace

Zantac lawsuit “throws the book” at drug industry under federal organized crime statute

 In re: Zantac (Ranitidine) Products Liability Litigation, a class action lawsuit filed in the Southern District of Florida, is mammoth – the most exhaustive yet of all complaints consolidated in the multidistrict litigation (MDL). The 1361-page Zantac cancer lawsuit was filed on behalf of 230 plaintiffs, names 54 drug industry defendants and includes 314 counts under the laws of all 50 states, Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia, as well as federal law.

For the most part, though, it treads familiar legal ground – breach of warranty, products liability, strict liability, unfair trade practices, etc. The accusations concerning the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) are new, however.

Now we’re talking about organized crime.

                                                                     

The basic story


In a nutshell, the lawsuit alleges that, in one way or another, the drug manufacturers, distributors, retailers and re-packagers knew about the dangers of Zantac and other drugs containing ranitidine and had a duty to investigate more fully. They failed to use good manufacturing, shipping and storage practices. Further, they made misrepresentations in their marketing materials that concealed the risk that the drugs might contain the carcinogen Nitrosodimethylamine (“NDMA”). They did this to protect their profits.

In 2019 several independent pharmaceutical laboratories discovered the link between ranitidine and NDMA, and that ranitidine can break down into NDMA, particularly in the stomach. In 2020, shortly after the information was disclosed to the public, the FDA called for the withdrawal of all ranitidine-containing products in the United States.

Sadly, however, Zantac and similar heartburn drugs had already been on the market for nearly thirty years. During that time, the failures, misrepresentations and omissions piled up, and countless consumers were harmed.

The RICO counts in the Complaint add another dimension to the basic story. They get to the profit motive behind the years of deception and tell the tale of a deliberate criminal enterprise. To quote from the Complaint , the defendants’ purpose “was to conceal or downplay the safety risks of Zantac. The motivation was simple: to increase Defendants’ revenues and profits and minimize their losses from the manufacture and sale of Zantac. As a direct and proximate result of their fraudulent scheme and common course of conduct, RICO Defendants were able to extract billions of dollars from Plaintiffs.”

RICO basics


The federal RICO law, passed in 1970, became a key tool in mob prosecutions. Prior to passage of the law, prosecutors could only try mob-related crimes individually, which hampered their efforts to shut down entire criminal organizations. Images of “Sammy the bull” or “tall Paul” may come to mind.

The law has both civil and criminal components, however, and it is the civil aspect that looms large in In re: Zantac, especially because plaintiffs may receive treble damages.

To succeed in a civil RICO lawsuit, an injured person must show:

How the criminal enterprise allegedly worked


The Complaint alleges that each defendant participated in and exerted control over the criminal enterprise in eleven ways. These include: These are the same basic facts that figure in state law product liability cases. They are simply re-framed in the context of an organized crime statute.

Will the RICO angle work? It’s intriguing and, whatever the outcome, it’s important to recognize some clever and aggressive lawyering by plaintiffs’ counsel. If it does work, RICO could become a powerful tool for consumers to pursue defective drug and other product liability lawsuits.


ZANTAC HEARTBURN MEDICATION Legal Help

If you or a loved one have suffered losses in this case, please click the link below and your complaint will be sent to a drugs & medical lawyer who may evaluate your ZANTAC HEARTBURN MEDICATION claim at no cost or obligation.

READ MORE ZANTAC HEARTBURN MEDICATION LEGAL NEWS