Tuesday, November 3, 2020 - 3M is one of the most successful companies and largest military defense contractors, however, they may have gotten too big. The company failed to inform the US Military of what they knew about their earplugs being defective and not providing the level of protection to soldiers as they had advertised. As a result, over 800,000 military veterans now suffer from a debilitating form of hearing loss or tinnitus, the constant maddening ringing in the ears. Military veterans that have returned home from foreign service with hearing loss have reported being unable to assimilate back into civilian life, being unable to hold a job, and unable to enjoy a normal relationship with their spouses and children. Hundreds of thousands of servicemen and women have hired Army Earplug Lawyers and have filed suit against 3M for failing to warn them of the dangers of the misfitted earplugs. Military disability payments total in the billions of dollars each year to hearing-impaired veterans and 3M may be held accountable. There are no statistics available but it is thought that the defective combat army earplug directly added to the number of casualties the US military suffered in the war. The army earplug hearing loss trial will be the largest mass tort action in recent legal history surpassing the numbers of asbestos miners and tobacco users. Army Earplug lawsuit attorneys offer a free consultation with no obligation to file a claim.
Prospect.org reports that 3M may have committed fraud by failing to inform the US military or individuals that their earplugs were defective. They write, "Hundreds of thousands of troops suffered hearing loss from 3M's faulty battlefield earplugs. They allege that the company and its private equity-fueled acquisition falsified data and knowingly hid evidence. According to Prospect, Elliott Berger, a division scientist at 3M, falsified crucial test data while working at Aearo Inc. "Each pair of earplugs was faulty, due to a mechanical flaw discovered in 2000 by Berger and another lab scientist, Ronald Kieper, and subsequently hidden," Prospect reports. "From 1999 to 2009 Aearo supplied more than 5.2 million pairs of CAEs to the military, and, by 2007, almost 52 percent of combat soldiers had at least moderately severe hearing loss. The number of military disability payments went up 300%." When Aearo scientists were advised that the CAEs had the design flaw of being too short to fit some ear canals and would allow loud noise to enter the company failed to redesign the product. Instead, engineers told executives that the phalanges on the earplug only needed to be reversed by the soldier while using the earplugs in the field. The new instructions on how to use the earplugs never made it to the military. Shortly after 3M purchases Aearo and the military contracts that went along with the company, 3M leveraged its monopoly in the military earplug market by raising the cost of the earplugs 75%, from $5 to $8 per pair, earning millions more in revenue for the company.
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Filing a lawsuit will allow you to hold 3M accountable for damage it has caused you or a loved one, while also providing real compensation for your medical expenses, suffering and loss. Contact us today for a free consultation.