Lawyers Ready Suit Over Soda; Case Being Built Linking Obesity To Sale in Schools
The Washington Post
December 2, 2005


The fight against sugary soft drinks is beginning to foam over.

A coalition of lawyers who have actively and successfully sued tobacco companies says it is close to filing a class-action lawsuit against soft-drink makers for selling sugared sodas in schools. The lawyers, who have been trying to develop a case against the soft-drink makers for more than two years, say a lawsuit could be filed within the next few weeks, probably in Massachusetts, which has one of the nation's most plaintiff-friendly consumer-protection laws.

As news reports of the pending lawsuit proliferate, the beverage industry is shoring up its defenses. Yesterday, the American Beverage Association released a study that showed a 24 percent drop in purchases of full-calorie carbonated soft drinks at schools from 2002 to 2004. In 2004, the study showed, high-schoolers drank the equivalent of one 12-ounce can of such soda a week, while younger students drank less.

Leading the litigation effort is Richard A. Daynard, an associate dean at Northeastern University School of Law in Boston, who is also president of the Tobacco Control Resource Center and chairman of the Tobacco Products Liability Project, both of which have provided legal support to attorneys suing tobacco companies. Daynard was involved in many of the state cases against the tobacco firms that led to the landmark $246 billion settlement in 1998.

 

 

 

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