The Delaware Gazette

Tobacco firms sue FDA over new graphic warnings

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Four of the five largest U.S. tobacco com­pa­nies sued the fed­eral gov­ern­ment Tues­day over new graphic cig­a­rette labels that include the sewn-up corpse of a smoker and a pic­ture of dis­eased lungs, say­ing the warn­ings vio­late their free speech rights and will cost mil­lions of dol­lars to print. The com­pa­nies, led by R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Loril­lard Tobacco Co., said the warn­ings no longer sim­ply con­vey facts to allow peo­ple to make a deci­sion whether to smoke. They instead force them to put gov­ern­ment anti-smoking advo­cacy more promi­nently on their packs than their own brands, the com­pa­nies say. They want a judge to stop the labels.

FDA issues graphic cigarette labels

DG229582_web_FDA-Cigarette-Labels_Mack-3

RICHMOND, Va. — Rot­ting teeth. Dis­eased lungs. A corpse of a smoker. Nine new warn­ing labels fea­tur­ing graphic images that con­vey the dan­gers of smok­ing will be required by the Food and Drug Admin­is­tra­tion to be on U.S. cig­a­rette packs by 2012.

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