Citing Cringe-Invoking Testimony, Louisiana Judge Orders New Mesothelioma Trial

Vita Chenet’s family was close to getting justice following her 2019 mesothelioma death when something unexpected occurred: An expert witness providing testimony for the defendant, Colgate-Palmolive, introduced new information that confused the jury and led to them deciding in favor of the talc company. Calling what the witness had done “entirely improper,” the judge ordered a new trial.

judge decision

Expert Witness Improperly Offers Alternative Theory for Mesothelioma Death

The mesothelioma trial, which was heard in Louisiana’s Orleans Parish Civil District, saw Colgate-Palmolive accused of negligence in failing to warn of asbestos in its Cashmere Bouquet talcum powder product. The jury had heard significant testimony about the victim’s lifelong use of the product and the connection between it and her asbestos-related disease when experienced expert witness Dr. Richard Attanoos was called to the stand.

Dr. Attanoos is a pathologist who has been called on for expert witness testimony by mesothelioma defendants for years. For this trial, he answered a question from Ms. Chenet’s family’s attorney by introducing entirely new information that the judge agreed had confused the jury and was inappropriate: He spoke of his certainty that the woman’s father had died of an asbestos-related disease following having worked in contaminated shipyards during World War II, suggesting that it was secondary childhood exposure to asbestos that was responsible for her death.

Unexpected Testimony Leads to Order for Retrial

Though Colgate-Palmolive had countered the family’s claim by suggesting that the mesothelioma diagnosis was a result of having grown up in the shipyard’s asbestos-contaminated shipyard, no mention had been made of her father’s death before the pathologist volunteered the information. Following this, the jury decided in favor of the talc company, and the victim’s family argued that a new trial was needed because the witness had sabotaged the trial by introducing information that had confused the jury. Judge Kern Reese agreed.

In handing down his decision, the judge said that the unsolicited testimony in the mesothelioma trial had shocked him enough to make him cringe and had left him “unequivocally floored.” He described it as having been “unsolicited, it was a new opinion, it was never previously disclosed in any expert report or deposition.”  He ordered that a new trial be held.

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Paul Danziger

Paul Danziger

Reviewer and Editor

Paul Danziger grew up in Houston, Texas and earned a law degree from Northwestern University School of Law in Chicago. For over 25 years years he has focused on representing mesothelioma cancer victims and others hurt by asbestos exposure. Paul and his law firm have represented thousands of people diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestosis, and lung cancer, recovering significant compensation for injured clients. Every client is extremely important to Paul and he will take every call from clients who want to speak with him. Paul and his law firm handle mesothelioma cases throughout the United States.

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