'Make it Hurt': How TorHoerman Scored Groundbreaking $495M Formula Verdict

'Make it Hurt': How TorHoerman Scored Groundbreaking $495M Formula Verdict

What You Need to Know

The July 26 verdict is the second involving allegations that cow’s milk-based infant formula causes necrotizing enterocolitis, or NEC, in premature babies.
The verdict, in St. Louis was for $95 million in compensatory damages and $400 million in punitive damages.
Other trials are scheduled in Missouri, Illinois, Pennsylvania and Washington, D.C., against Abbott and another manufacturer, Mead Johnson.

Robynn Davis was in the neonatal intensive care unit soon after being born in 2021 when she was given Similac infant formula made by Abbott Laboratories Inc.

That’s when she took a turn for the worse, according to Jake Plattenberger, who represents Robynn’s mother, Margo Gill. And it’s what might have swayed jurors who issued a $495 million verdict on July 26, he said.

“That was an important day, because the jury understood that at this point this was a child medically stable and doing well and trending in the right direction before she received Abbott’s product,” Plattenberger told Law.com.

The verdict, returned by a jury in St. Louis, is the first against Abbott in a case linking necrotizing enterocolitis, or NEC, to cow’s milk-based infant formula designed for premature babies. Sold in hospitals, not in retail stores, the formula is touted as a lifesaving alternative to breast milk, but lawsuits contend that it is linked to NEC, a gastrointestinal illness that sickens or kills premature babies.

Other trials are scheduled in Missouri, Illinois, Pennsylvania and Washington, D.C. Another 400 cases were coordinated in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois before Judge Rebecca Pallmeyer.

See also  How to File a Life Insurance Claim With United American Insurance Company

Plattenberger, of TorHoerman Law in Chicago, led a trial team that included firm founder Tor Hoerman, in Edwardsville, Illinois, and lawyers from two other firms: Jack Garvey, a St. Louis partner at Stranch, Jennings & Garvey and Alan Holcomb at Turnbull, Holcomb & Lemoine in Atlanta.

Abbott, represented by James Hurst of Kirkland & Ellis in Chicago, did not respond to a request for comment. In court, Hurst told jurors that Davis had a “major hypoxic event” when she was born, causing permanent brain injuries. She suffered severe pulmonary hemorrhages and underwent surgery before receiving any of Abbott’s formula, he said.

But that wasn’t a “real picture” of what was going on with Davis in the hospital, Plattenberger told Law.com.

“The defendants did their best to try to paint this picture of this baby in this constant state of crisis and failing health from the time she was born and throughout,” he said. “We felt that wasn’t an accurate picture of what was going on with this child.”