Category Archives: Legal News

Zoloft (sertraline hydrochloride) Recall Info

drug-recalls

Sourced From Our Friends @ https://www.recallguide.org/drug/zoloft/

Zoloft® is an antidepressant medication classified as a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI), generally prescribed to adults to treat major depression and anxiety disorders and, less commonly, for vascular headaches and premature ejaculation. It is an oral medication originally brought to the market by American pharmaceutical manufacturer Pfizer and is available in 25mg, 50mg, and 100mg capsules.

Side Effects & Adverse Reactions

Common side effects include fatigue, insomnia, nausea, dry mouth, headache, diarrhea, dizziness, weight gain, and sexual dysfunction (difficulty achieving arousal, erection and/or orgasm).

As with all antidepressants, Zoloft carries the FDA’s black box warning due to an increased risk of suicidal thoughts/ideation and actions, especially in children and young adults. (fda.gov)

The use of Zoloft during the first trimester of pregnancy is associated with increased risks of the following birth defects: omphalocele (abdominal wall defects), anal atresia (malformation of the anus/rectum), limb reduction, and septal (heart) defects.(ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)

Like many other antidepressant medications, the discontinuation of regular use of Zoloft can cause numerous unpleasant withdrawal side effects, including flu-like symptoms (nausea, vomiting, sweating, headaches, diarrhea), sleep disturbances (insomnia, nightmares, fatigue), sensory/movement disturbances (vertigo, dizziness, “zap” like electrical sensations in the brain or nerve paths), and mood disturbances (anxiety, dysphoria, agitation). Most cases of these withdrawal symptoms are mild and resolve themselves after 1-4 weeks.

Possible Adverse Interactions

Zoloft should not be taken with, or immediately after stopping use of, monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs), another class of commonly used antidepressants, as this can cause serotonin syndrome or serotonin toxicity, a condition that can be fatal.

It is also contraindicated for use with the antipsychotic medication pimozide (Orap) due to the risk of serious heart problems. The concentrated form also contains an alcohol solution, so it is recommended not to take it with Antabuse, a medication used to treat alcoholism. Grapefruit and grapefruit juice should also be avoided, as it can increase the levels of Zoloft in the body.

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Legal Issues

Pfizer has over 1,000 lawsuits pending against them regarding the use of Zoloft causing birth defects in pregnancy. In June 2015, a jury in Philadelphia, PA sided with the defendant (Pfizer) in a case wherein the plaintiffs alleged that Pfizer did not sufficiently warn patients of the potential for birth defects, finding that the drug’s label adequately warned physicians to weigh and discuss the benefits and risks of use before prescribing it (Robinson v. Wolters Kluwer Health Inc. and Pfizer, Inc.). This is the second such judgment in favor of Pfizer regarding birth defects and use of Zoloft in as many trials. (bloomberg.com)

Zoloft was also the subject of a consumer fraud class action lawsuit that was filed in 2013 in California. The case, Plumlee vs. Pfizer Inc., centered on claims by plaintiff Laura Plumlee that she had taken the drug as prescribed for 3 years with absolutely no effect. The suit alleged that Pfizer deliberately omitted from labeling that there had been studies conducted that found Zoloft to be no more effective than a placebo, and that their marketing and advertising regarding its effectiveness was misleading. The plaintiff’s first claim was dismissed in March 2014, not due to the argument of effectiveness or lack thereof, but due to time-barring. Plumlee had last used Zoloft in 2008, but did not file the lawsuit until 2013. She was given the opportunity to amend her claim and re-file, but the suit was ultimately dismissed with prejudice in September 2014.

FDA Safety Alerts

July, 2006

Food and Drug Administration Labeling Changes indicate several changes but this specific Alert was issued warning of increased risk of Neonatal Persistent Pulmonary Hypertension in mothers taking the drug (fda.gov).

December 14, 2011

The FDA warns of pregnancy risks in SSRI’s in general, including Zoloft. (fda.gov).

July 26, 2011

FDA warns of serious CNS reactions in patients taking the antibiotic linezolid (Zyvox) and certain psychiatric serotonin drugs, including Zoloft. (fda.gov)

Manufacturer Warnings

An undated warning letter from Pfizer alerts healthcare providers to the warnings and label changes regarding detrimental interactions of Zoloft with pimozide (Orap) and MAOIs (fda.gov).

FDA Labeling Changes

September 2014

A labeling adjustment was made to the drug interactions to remove previous additions of QT prolongation, Torsades de Pointes, and ventricular tachycardia – all types of cardiac arrhythmia (irregular heart rhythm) (fda.gov).

February 2013

Diabetes mellitus (scientific name for both Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes) was added to the list of events observed during the post-marketing evaluation of Zoloft. (fda.gov)

December 2012

Contraindications and warnings were added regarding the types of drugs or substances that will interact with use of Zoloft and possibly cause serotonin syndrome, expanding upon the warnings issued in January 2009 (fda.gov).

August 2011

Information was added to the packaging label to advise caution when co-administering Zoloft with drugs that may enhance serotonergic neurotransmission (transmission/absorption of serotonin) due to possibility for interaction. In addition, a precaution was added regarding laboratory testing: patients using Zoloft were reported to have received false positives on urine immunoassay screening tests for benzodiazepines(a class of frequently abused anti-anxiety medications) such as clonazepam (fda.gov).

January 2009

A warning was issued regarding the potential for the potentially fatal complication serotonin syndrome, also known as serotonin storm or serotonin toxicity, or a similar condition called neuroleptic malignant syndrome. Both of these conditions can occur when Zoloft is taken in combination with MAOIs (such as selegiline or phenelzine), or other drugs that alter the neurotransmission of serotonin (fda.gov).

March 2008

Precautions were added to the label making changes to the following subjects: abnormal bleeding as a potential side effect, and interactions with drugs that interfere with the clotting and flow of blood (Non-selective NSAIDs, aspirin, warfarin, etc.) (fda.gov).

Uses

Zoloft® is an antidepressant medication classified as a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI), generally prescribed to adults to treat major depression and anxiety disorders and, less commonly, for vascular headaches and premature ejaculation. It is an oral medication originally brought to the market by American pharmaceutical manufacturer Pfizer and is available in 25mg, 50mg, and 100mg capsules.

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History

Sertraline was the result of many levels of experimentation by Pfizer chemists, beginning in the early 1970’s with the invention of multiple psychoactive compounds that were based on the structures of some of the earliest available antipsychotic medications. These experiments would eventually result in the development of many neurotransmitter reuptake inhibitors, the most potent and selective of which would go on to be tested in vivo (on living organisms, including human trials) and dubbed sertraline. None of the scientists responsible for its creation were anticipating the production of an SSRI type of antidepressant, so the discovery is considered a happy accident.

Zoloft was approved by the FDA on the recommendation of the Psychopharmacological Drugs Advisory Committee in 1991. It was also made available in the United Kingdom the previous year, and in Australia in 1994. It was only approved for prescription to adults over the age of 18 until 2002, when the FDA approved its use in children over age 6 to treat severe cases of obsessive-compulsive disorder. In 2005, the FDA issued a black box warning for all antidepressants, including sertraline, concerning suicidal thoughts and behaviors in children; this warning was amended in 2007 to include the possibility of suicidal tendencies in young adults aged 18 to 24.

The patent for Zoloft expired in the US in 2006, allowing for the availability of sertraline in its generic form. Other brand names for sertraline include Lustral and Asentra. In 2013, it was the most prescribed antidepressant and second-most prescribed psychiatric medication in the United States. (psychentral.com)

For Full Article – https://www.recallguide.org/drug/zoloft/

Jay Z Reportedly Taking Legal Action Against Former Tidal Owners

The lawsuit claims TIDAL’s former owners distorted subscriber numbers.

Ralph Bristout Mar 31, 2016

According to Bloomberg, Jay Z is going after the previous owners of Tidal for claims that he was given inflated subscriber numbers before acquiring the service.

The news was first reported by Norwegian press as the Roc Nation mogul filing a multi-million dollar lawsuit against the former owners of Tidal, which sold the service to him for about $56 million.

“It became clear after taking control of TIDAL and conducting our own audit that the total number of subscribers was actually well below the 540,000 reported to us by the prior owners,” said Tidal representatives in an emailed statement to Bloomberg. Before the deal, the streaming service was owned by the Norwegian media company Schibsted ASA.

The statement continues, stating, “As a result we have now served legal notice to parties involved in the sale.” It’s been reported that TIDAL wants about $15 million back.

Meanwhile, Schibsted defended the sale, telling Norway’s BreakIt News, as relayed by USA Today, “We want to point out that it was a publicly traded company that was acquired, with what it means by the transparency of financial reporting. Otherwise we have no comments.”

The lawsuit comes just a few days after Tidal revealed that its service has now gained more than 3 million subscribers worldwide, thanks to exclusives like Kanye West’s The Life of Pablo.

Sourced From – https://revolt.tv/stories/2016/03/31/jay-reportedly-taking-legal-action-tidal-owners-6253597a67

ConAgra must pay $108.9 million in lawsuit over fatal 2009 blast; verdict likely a Nebraska record

The Slim Jim plant in Garner, North Carolina, after the explosion on June 9, 2009. Four people died as a result of the explosion, which was caused by a natural gas leak during water heater installation.

POSTED: FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 2016 1:50 PM | UPDATED: 12:13 AM, SUN MAR 27, 2016.

ConAgra Foods, the Fortune 500 company that is moving its headquarters from Omaha to Chicago, has been found liable for $108.9 million in a civil lawsuit that looks to be the largest of its kind in Nebraska history.

The case is related to damages and injuries stemming from a fatal explosion at a Slim Jim plant in North Carolina in 2009. ConAgra told The World-Herald that it plans to appeal.

The company was found Friday to be “negligent” in the explosion and the resulting injuries by a civil lawsuit jury in Douglas County District Court.

Nebraska courts don’t keep formal records of the jury verdicts leading to the largest monetary damages. Recent large ones have included the $43.8 million verdict last year in Douglas County Court in a dispute between rival software firms. The Fraser Stryker law firm of Omaha said at the time that it believed the total to be the largest in state history.

Lawyers in the courtroom moments after the ConAgra verdict said they thought it was the largest, but none wished to say so formally.

The ConAgra lawsuit had its genesis in payments made to the injured after the 2009 explosion, which happened during a water heater installation at the giant food-processing plant in Garner, North Carolina. Four people died, and many were injured. California-based Jacobs Engineering, which had a contract to perform services at the plant, in later years paid about $108 million to settle lawsuits that said it was at fault.

Later, Jacobs decided to sue ConAgra to recoup the money, saying it had no role in the explosion. The Douglas County jury agreed Friday, finding Jacobs not negligent.

“We are grateful for the court’s and the jury’s time and dedication to this case, and that our client Jacobs Engineering was vindicated after seven years,” said Gil Keteltas, Jacobs’ lead trial lawyer with the Baker Hostetler firm of Washington, D.C.

While sizable, the $108.9 million is a fraction of ConAgra’s $16 billion in revenue last year from sales of products such as Slim Jims, Chef Boyardee pasta and Alexia frozen side dishes.

The jury award comes amid rough sledding in Omaha for ConAgra. The company said last year that it plans to move the headquarters, in Omaha since the 1920s, to Chicago sometime this year. The company also eliminated 1,500 U.S. jobs and has embarked on a plan to save $300 million annually via a cost-cutting plan.

ConAgra spokesman Dan Hare said Friday that, “While we respect the jury’s decision, we have several strong grounds for appeal, which we plan to pursue.”

Assisting in securing the verdict were Baker Hostetler’s Bob Abrams, and Ed Tricker and others with the Lincoln firm Woods & Aitken.

“It was a Herculean task,” Douglas County District Judge Gary Randall said from the bench, describing of the work of the 12-person jury, whom he thanked for sitting through weeks of detailed and sometimes tedious arguments about the fine points of contract law.

The dispute emerged after the explosion, caused by a natural gas leak during water heater installation. The jury found that it was 70 percent ConAgra’s fault and 30 percent the fault of another contractor that will not have to pay any of the $108.9 million because the jury found that ConAgra controlled the actions of that contractor.

Jacobs was another contractor on the Slim Jim site, performing a variety of services for ConAgra. Because of that, it became the target of lawsuits by the injured, lawsuits that Jacobs wound up settling for about $108 million. Companies sometimes pay settlements to avoid the expense of defending lawsuits in court, whether they engaged in disputed conduct or not.

In the Douglas County case, Jacobs, a engineering firm with about $12 billion in annual revenue, said it deserved its money back. Jacobs said it had no role in the explosion.

After the explosion, ConAgra shut the Slim Jim plant and donated the land to the North Carolina town, along with $3 million for a community center.

Contact the writer: 402-444-3197, russell.hubbard@owh.com

Complete coverage: ConAgra moving headquarters to Chicago

Correction: ConAgra is liable for $108 million in damages sought by Jacobs Engineering; an earlier version of this story misstated the amount for which the jury found ConAgra liable.

Sourced From – http://www.omaha.com/money/conagra-liable-for-million-after-fatal-explosion-likely-the-largest/article_81f336ce-f2ba-11e5-840e-f3bca4f3f045.html

The Mafia Runs Guns for ISIS in Europe

The mobsters have the weapons, and they’re making a killing selling them off to Islamic radicals.

CASTEL VOLTURNO, Italy — By the time Aziz Ehsan, a 46-year-old Iraqi, was arrested near Naples on Tuesday, local anti-mafia police had already been trailing him for days to determine just why he was in the heartland of the Camorra crime syndicate’s territory. He was well known by both the French and Belgian secret services, which list him as a suspected ISIS contact. The Neapolitan cops were also aware of an international arrest warrant for him in Switzerland, where he was wanted in connection with a variety of offenses, including forgery, assault, and possession of illegal weapons.

He was apparently just the type of person Italian authorities thought might provide a valuable clue as they work to piece together the details of the complex relationshipbetween Jihadist fighters and Italy’s various mobs.

But when the attacks took place in Brussels, the authorities decided it was time to move in and get him. He was arrested as he slept in a car with Italian license plates registered to a deceased man on Tuesday and is awaiting extradition to Switzerland, France, or Belgium.

He claimed that he was in the area to scout out luxury hotels for rich Iraqi tourists, but the police didn’t buy it; he appeared to have been living in the car for days. They also pointed to an absence of notebooks, a laptop, or tablet—items you’d think to bring on a research trip. His no-frills, no contract “burner” cellphone, like the kind favored by Western jihadis, was another sign that Ehsan wasn’t in the region to see which five-star hotels offered the best glass of Limoncello.

“We executed a European arrest warrant near Naples and arrested an Iraqi citizen known to the Belgian and French secret service,” Italy’s interior minister Angelino Alfano declared after his arrest. “He was in contact with terrorists.”

Ehsan’s presence in Italy very likely posed no imminent threat to anyone in this country, but it may be extremely significant in Europe’s losing battle against ISIS-motivated terrorism. Authorities now want to know if Ehsan was here on business, especially if he was working with the Camorra to secure false documents or illegal arms—both big moneymakers for the Neapolitan clans.

Since the Charlie Hebdo attacks in Paris in January 2015, Italian anti-mafia and anti-terrorism officials have been unraveling long-standing connections between Jihadi fighters and the Camorra in Naples. They have also uncovered ties to the Sicilian Cosa Nostra Mafia and the Calabrese ‘Ndrangheta gang, tracing weapons being trafficked in from the former Yugoslavia and several African nations which allegedly arrive easily in Neapolitan ports.

Italian anti-mafia police have made three major arrests in the last 12 months, during which they have confiscated major weapons arsenals that included Kalashnikov rifles, submachine guns, body armor, and hundreds of rounds of ammunition that were ready to be sold to terrorist connections. They even found a price list for a wide variety of weapons available for prices ranging from €250 to €3,000 that was printed in Arabic, French, and Italian.

“Naples has been, for many years, a central logistics base for the Middle East. The Camorra is also active in the world of Jihadist terrorism that passes through Naples,” Franco Roberti, a prominent anti-mafia prosecutor, told The Daily Beast before the Brussels attacks. “Naples lends itself to this type of activity. In the past there have been contacts between Jihadi militants and the Camorra clans.”

He says that Italy’s mafia-fighting forces have “thwarted plots and synergies” between the terrorists and the mobsters. What’s not known, of course, is how many plots they’ve missed.

It is certainly a well-known fact that the Camorra runs a highly successful enterprise in the lawless Neapolitan hinterland running drugs, illegal arms and forged documents that make it especially easy for anyone entering Europe illegally to pass through even the tightest borders. It is just as well-known that the main client base has never been strictly Italian.

“We have evidence that groups of the Camorra are implicated in an exchange of weapons for drugs with terrorist groups,” Pierluigi Vigna, Italy’s national anti-mafia prosecutor, said before he passed away in 2012.

Vigna’s words were quoted in a variety of Wikileaks cables that imply that the United States government has been well aware of the terrorist-mafia connection for some time. “Criminal interaction between Italian organized crime and Islamic extremist groups provides potential terrorists with access to funding and logistical support from criminal organizations with established smuggling routes and an entrenched presence in the United States,” according to one cable on Italy penned by the FBI.

Investigators say logistics help in moving Jihadi fighters through Europe is one of the hardest rackets to crack. Last summer, Salah Abdeslam, who, until last week, was the most wanted man in Europe for his role in the deadly terrorist attacks in Paris, traveled freely through Italy with the help of a network of what could be referred to as mafia-sponsored terrorism travel agents.

Authorities in Italy say he boarded a ferry in Bari headed for Greece last August, and that he used a pre-paid Italian debit card until the Paris attacks. Authorities say he used his real name tied to fake Italian documents in both instances.

The idea of Europe’s most wanted man running free is concerning enough. But what is at least as worrying is that the weapons being trafficked into Italy will end up being used in European capitals. Michele del Prete, an Italian counter-terrorism official who has been focusing on the links between organized crime and violent jihadists, warns that the two forces of evil have found a comfortable partnership. “It is established and proven that the lawless climate in Naples has often created favorable conditions for logistical support, exchange of weapons, and false documents,” he said. “There are specialized groups we have tracked in various municipalities and prefectures that we know are facilitating terrorism.”

Investigator Roberti takes it a step further. “Campania, especially the province of Caserta and Castel Volturno, is one of the main gateways into Europe for those who want to become a terrorist,” he said. “It has been demonstrated by numerous investigations. On this now, there are no doubts.”

Read Full Article – http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2016/03/24/inside-the-mafia-isis-connection.html

Vincent Cassel says Italian dubbers have a ‘mafia-like’ hold on film industry

The French actor Vincent Cassel has labelled the powerful Italian voiceover industry a “mafia”, claiming it is impossible to see foreign films in their original language in Italy.

Cassel, whose new movie Un moment d’égarement (One Wild Moment) debuts in Italian cinemas on 24 March, is upset that the local dub of the Jean-François Richet-directed comedy loses nuances in the Parisian and Corsican accents spoken by its French characters.

“In Italy it is difficult to see a film in the original language, because the voice actors here are a mafia,” he told the Independent. “There’s film dubbing in France, too, but the dubbers don’t have so much power that they run the show. There are the creators and the dubbers. The dubbers stick to the voiceovers. When there’s a dubbers’ strike, the cinemas don’t close.”

Cassel’s comments have caused a storm in Italy, which has long preferred dubbed versions of foreign movies, resulting in an entire industry of voiceover artists. Many have become stars in their own right: when Claudio Capone, the man who was the Italian voice of John Travolta, died in 2008, tributes poured in.

In 2014, a 15-day strike by the country’s dubbers meant several US TV shows were broadcast in their original language with Italian subtitles, drawing complaints. In 1998, dozens of Hollywood films had their Italian releases delayed due to industrial action.

Roberto Pedicini, a famous Italian voiceover artist, who has dubbed Cassel in the past, said the practice improved the popularity of foreign films. “It would be nice to see every film in its original language. The problem is that we’d have to learn really diverse languages, given that the most awarded films at festivals are Asian or from the Middle East,” he told the Adnkronos news agency. “And subtitles are often misleading or compromised.”

Read Full Article – http://www.theguardian.com/film/2016/mar/23/vincent-cassel-criticises-italian-dubbers-one-wild-moment