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Victory for the lawyers who took on the big US tobacco companies and won has whet their appetite for more. Now they are challenging the food industry.

About ten years ago, Don Barrett and his colleagues forced the tobacco companies to admit they knew cigarettes were addictive and pay the medical costs of victims. The settlement cost the industry $200bn.

Now he is among more than a dozen lawyers who have filed cases against some of the US food industry's biggest players.

Mr Barrett's case is that companies are misrepresenting their products, promoting them as "natural" or "healthy", when in fact, he says, they are no such thing.

In an interview with the BBC's Susan Watts, he says: "People assume that if a product is legal to sell, then these people are telling the truth about this product... that's what they thought about cigarettes."

The lawyer's mission is to make companies stick to the letter of existing laws which, he says, regulators have been too weak to enforce. He says that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has merely been writing warning letters.

Around two thirds of Americans over the age of 20 are now obese or overweight, according to the US Centers for Disease Control (CDC). Hidden sugars in processed food, Mr Barrett says, are part of that problem, and mis-labelling is key. He cites one example: yoghurt from a food company which lists "evaporated cane juice" as an ingredient, a euphemism for "sugar".

His lawsuits are class actions, where the class is defined as every person who purchased one of the misbranded products in the previous four years.

"If it cost a dollar and 25 cents, then the customer is entitled to his dollar and 25 cents back," he explains. "And there's a four-year statute of limitations, so the damages in each of these cases is how much have they sold of this misbranded junk in the last four years."

Barrett claims that some 25% of products are misbranded in the US. So the scale of damages in these casescould easily match the many billions of the tobacco suits.

Quiz 测验

1. What did the US tobacco companies had to admit about a decade ago?

That they knew cigarettes were addictive.

2. Look at the article. What does Mr Barrett say companies do wrong?

The lawyer says that they misrepresent their products when they say that these are 'natural' and 'healthy'.

3. Is the following statement true, false or not given? Two thirds of Americans are now obese or overweight.

False. The data is about Americans over 20 years old and excludes children and teenagers.

4. What expression in the article means the use of a mild word instead of one that could be hurtful, offensive or, in the case in the article, too revealing?

Euphemism.

5. What expression means 'to have the right to' something?

To be entitled to.

Glossary 词汇表

to take on (someone or something) 挑战

to whet (their) appetite 刺激食欲

addictive 上瘾的,使成瘾的

medical costs 医疗费用

a settlement 和解协议

to file 递交

a case 一个案子

a player 一个选手(这里指食品公司)

to misrepresent 误导,歪曲

to assume 认为

legal 合法的

the letter of the law 法律条文

regulator 监管机构

to enforce 执行

to mis-label 贴错标签

an euphemism 委婉语

a lawsuit 诉讼

a class action 集体诉讼

misbranded 贴错标签的

to be entitled to 有权要求

the statute of limitations 诉讼时效

the damages 损失

to claim 声称

  原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/lesson/yytljxjjb/454634.html