Companies hit with hundreds of Lake County EtO lawsuits cry foul

Companies hit with hundreds of Lake County EtO lawsuits cry foul

Spread the love

A group of big medical device and chemical manufacturing companies are pushing back against attempts by trial lawyers to rope them into another big potential payout in the continuing legal actions over claims ethylene oxide emissions from factories and medical device sterilization plants in Lake County caused cancer.

In motions and briefs filed in November and early December, the companies – including AbbVie, Abbott Laboratories, PPG Industries and BASF Corporation – are accusing plaintiffs’ lawyers of waiting too long or engaging in unfair procedural tactics to tee up hundreds of lawsuits against them.

Earlier this year, many of those same plaintiffs and their lawyers reached settlements to resolve hundreds of legal claims against the current owners and operators of such facilities in Lake County.

Vantage Specialty Chemicals Inc. agreed to settle 440 lawsuits against them, all of which sought to make the company pay for its alleged release of harmful ethylene oxide (EtO) gas into the air over decades of operations at its plant in suburban Gurnee.

According to court orders, the settlement terms are confidential.

That deal, in turn, came about two months after another company, medical device distributor Steris agreed to pay $48 million to end about 275 lawsuits against Steris subsidiary, Isomedix. That company had operated a sterilization plant in Waukegan, which used EtO gas to sterilize a host of essential medical devices and surgical tools.

And medical device manufacturer and distributor Medline also has reached a settlement to resolve hundreds of cases it faces. According to court documents, that settlement, however, remains the subject of litigation between Medline and its insurers over how much of the cost of the settlement will be paid by the insurers.

Those companies were among the first targeted by EtO emissions-related lawsuits. Even though the alleged harm was committed in Lake County, the lawsuits were brought in Cook County Circuit Court.

Plaintiffs’ lawyers behind the lawsuits are led by those from the firm of Edelson P.C., of Chicago and San Francisco.

EtO has also been widely used by companies like Steris, Sterigenics and medical device manufacturer and distributor Medline to sterilize a wide variety of medical devices and tools, including surgical implants like pacemakers and catheters, as well as surgical instruments.

Medical device makers have said EtO is all but essential to ensuring patient safety and preventing deadly infections in patients undergoing surgeries in operating rooms.

Because of its widespread use, EtO is present in the ambient air throughout much of the Chicago region, according to air pollution measurements conducted by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

Companies in the Chicago area and elsewhere, however, have been targeted in recent years by lawsuits from trial lawyers seeking big payouts and relying on government reports indicating long exposure to EtO could increase people’s risk of contracting cancer.

In Illinois, the anti-ETO effort began when activists and trial lawyers targeted sterilization company Sterigenics, which operated a sterilization plant in west suburban Willowbrook.

The activists succeeded in persuading state officials to take action against Sterigenics and rewrite Illinois’ pollution rules to impose severe limits on EtO emissions, ultimately forcing Sterigenics to pull out of Illinois, even though the company had to that point never violated state or federal EtO emissions limits.

Sterigenics ultimately agreed to pay $408 million to settle more than 870 lawsuits on behalf of people who lived in and around Willowbrook.

Those settlements came after two cases against Sterigenics went to trial. In the first trial, a jury ordered Sterigenics to pay a woman $363 million. In the second trial, however, a jury sided with Sterigenics, declaring the company shouldn’t be liable for a different woman’s illness.

Nationally, EtO-related actions have resulted in settlements estimated to be worth more than $700 million collectively, according to some published estimates.

Meanwhile, the separate Lake County-related legal actions have continued in Cook County court.

As they neared settlements with the initial group of Lake County defendants, plaintiffs moved to expand their lawsuits further, targeting the additional companies under claims they should also play for their previous roles in owning and operating the same Lake County facilities.

That maneuver followed the playbook set in the litigation against Sterigenics, where plaintiffs’ lawyers also extracted an additional $48 million settlement from Griffith Foods, an Alsip-based company that had previously owned and operated the Willowbrook sterilization plant ultimately acquired by Sterigenics.

However, in Lake County, the additional defendants say the plaintiffs and their lawyers shouldn’t be allowed to pursue them.

In motions to dismiss and other filings, the companies largely assert the plaintiffs’ lawyers had known for years of their involvement in the various Lake County facilities, yet chose to wait until the closing days of 2024 to target them with lawsuits.

AbbVie and Abbott Labs, for instance, noted in their filings that they believe 167 of 210 lawsuits in which they were named as defendants should be tossed because the plaintiffs waited more than two years, at least, to sue the companies, exceeding the statute of limitations. Under that provision, such plaintiffs are generally required to bring their lawsuit within two years of learning that their harm – in this case, cancer or other illnesses – could be traced back to EtO emissions from facilities owned or operated by the companies.

The lawsuits have specifically taken aim at AbbVie and Abbott Labs for emissions from their North Chicago facility, which ceased EtO emissions in the late 1990s.

“When they filed their complaints, Plaintiffs alleged they had been harmed by purported EtO releases from two facilities — Gurnee and Waukegan,” the companies wrote. “AbbVie and Abbott are associated with a different facility (North Chicago) in a different area (approximately 4.8 miles from the Gurnee facility and 2.6 miles from the Waukegan facility) with vastly different alleged emission levels…

“Plaintiffs’ initial complaints gave no indication they planned to target the North Chicago Facility, or that it emitted EtO and caused their alleged ailments. AbbVie and Abbott, therefore, had no reason to believe that Plaintiffs mistakenly omitted them from their original complaint, and there was no basis for AbbVie and Abbott to assume they would have been named absent a mistake by Plaintiffs,” the two companies wrote in their motion to dismiss, filed Nov. 20.

Likewise, PPG Industries asserts plaintiffs knew or should have known years ago of that company’s prior involvement in the Gurnee facility. PPG noted it last owned the plant 25 years ago.

Yet, PPG said the plaintiffs waited until 2024 to attempt to bring them into the litigation.

PPG and BASF Corporation further assert the plaintiffs shouldn’t be allowed to target them with strict liability claims under a legal exception for “ultrahazardous activity.”

The companies noted that other Cook County judges explicitly rejected such claims against Sterigenics in the EtO emissions litigation against that company. The companies noted the judges specifically ruled that EtO use is widespread and common and is useful for a range of legitimate societal and economic purposes. As such, the judges ruled that the use of EtO in industrial and sterilization facilities cannot be considered “ultrahazardous.”

“Although Plaintiffs have been litigating these claims against the Other Defendants for nearly five years, their allegations against BASF are no more than a conclusory afterthought, tacked onto their existing claims with no facts specific to BASF,” BASF wrote in a brief filed Dec. 3 in support of its motion to dismiss. “The Illinois fact-pleading standard requires more from Plaintiffs than simply replacing Vantage with BASF.”

Plaintiffs have said the companies’ arguments should be rejected, in part because they should have known of the risk of litigation, based on the well-publicized lawsuits against the initial Lake County defendants.

And plaintiffs said they did not obtain certain key state regulatory filings and reports needed to substantiate their claims against the companies until 2023, which would place their claims within the two-year limit.

In a separate filing, AbbVie and Abbott Labs have also asked the Cook County court to transfer the action to Lake County court.

Cook County Circuit Judge Kathy Flanagan has not yet ruled on the various motions.

AbbVie and Abbott Labs are represented by attorneys from the firms of Latham & Watkins and Winston & Strawn, both of Chicago.

PPG is represented by attorneys from the firm of K&L Gates, of Chicago and Pittsburgh.

BASF is represented by attorneys from the firm of DLA Piper LLP (US), of Chicago and San Francisco.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Will County Board Graphic.04

Will County Animal Protection Services Advises Against Multi-Campus Shelter Model

Will County Public Health & Safety Committee Meeting | April 2, 2026 Article Summary: Following a request for research, the Will County Animal Protection Services administrator reported that Will County...
Will County Board Graphic.02

Executive Committee Advances $15,000 Strategic Plan Initiative

Will County Board Executive Committee Meeting | April 9, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Board Executive Committee unanimously approved a $15,000 agreement with Leap HR Consulting to develop the...
Rich States Poor States: Tax policy largely determines states’ economic competitiveness

Rich States Poor States: Tax policy largely determines states’ economic competitiveness

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square No matter what a state offers in terms of natural beauty, work and social opportunities, tax and economic policy — as unglamorous as they sound...
Will County P&Z Logo Planning Zoning

P&Z Commission Overrides Staff Denials, Rescuing Special Use Permits for Joliet Wedding Venue and Romeoville Barge Terminal

Will County Planning and Zoning Commission Meeting | April 7, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Planning and Zoning Commission voted to overturn administrative denials for two delayed commercial projects—a...
Will County P&Z Logo Planning Zoning

Will County P&Z Commission Grants Extensions for Joliet Township Solar Farm Ground Cover

Will County Planning and Zoning Commission Meeting | April 7, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Planning and Zoning Commission unanimously granted a final deadline extension for a commercial solar...
Will County P&Z Logo Planning Zoning.2

P&Z Approves Lockport Bounce House Business Expansion

Will County Planning and Zoning Commission Meeting | April 7, 2026 The commission unanimously approved Zoning Case #ZC-25-137 for Victor H. Lule Huerta, owner of 3262 S. State Street in...
78 pro-life orgs ask DOJ to stop undermining state laws by favoring aborting drug industry

78 pro-life orgs ask DOJ to stop undermining state laws by favoring aborting drug industry

By Tate MillerThe Center Square Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America led 77 of its pro-life organization colleagues in sending the acting U.S. attorney general a letter asking the Department of...
Illinois Quick Hits: Two of ComEd four released; new trial expected

Illinois Quick Hits: Two of ComEd four released; new trial expected

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A U.S. appellate court has ordered two defendants in the ComEd Four case to be released pending...
Will County Finance Logo

Will County Treasurer Seeks Policy on Cash Payments as U.S. Mint Discontinues the Penny

Briefs: Will County Board Finance Committee Meeting | April 7, 2026 Article Summary: With the U.S. Mint ceasing production of the penny, the Will County Treasurer's Office is asking the...
—Photo by Glenn P. Knoblock

Lend a hand this spring at Volunteer Morning programs

Volunteers are being sought for spring programs that help spruce up the preserves by removing invasive species, controlling brush and planting native plants. Here are the spring Volunteer Morning programs....
Will County Board Graphic.03

Proposed State Legislation Sparks Debate Over Will County Veterans Assistance Commission Budget Control

Will County Board Legislative Committee Meeting | April 7, 2026 Article Summary: State legislation aimed at granting county boards ultimate approval power over Veterans Assistance Commission (VAC) budgets sparked debate...
Beecher Baseball Bobcats

Clifton Central Powers Past Beecher 11-8 in High-Scoring Conference Matchup

A combined eight-run outburst across the fourth and fifth innings propelled the Clifton Central varsity baseball team to an 11-8 home conference victory over Beecher on Tuesday afternoon. Both lineups...
Chicago suit vs oil cos. may yet survive SCOTUS ruling, judge hints

Chicago suit vs oil cos. may yet survive SCOTUS ruling, judge hints

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square Even as the Supreme Court considers a Colorado case that oil companies believe will decide if city and state governments can sue...
Two of ComEd Four released. new trial pending

Two of ComEd Four released. new trial pending

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A U.S. appellate court has ordered two defendants in the ComEd Four case to be released pending...
GOP candidate Bailey urges Trump to apologize to pope; bishop calls for dialogue

GOP candidate Bailey urges Trump to apologize to pope; bishop calls for dialogue

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – After President Donald Trump refused to apologize for his social media criticism of Pope Leo XIV, a...