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Happy birthday, Louise Fletcher, who won an Academy Award for her portrayal of the sadistic Nurse Ratched in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975).  Happy birthday also to Albert Brooks, writer/director/star of Modern Romance (1981), Lost in America (1985), Defending Your Life (1991), and a gaggle of other comedies.  Brooks also did fine work as an actor in several non-comedies, such as Taxi Driver (1976), Broadcast News (1987), and Drive (2011).  But for our money, his best performance is in Out of Sight (1998), where Brooks played a Michael Milken-esque financier-turned-prison-inmate.  By the way, Brooks’ birth name was Albert Einstein.  Brooks changed his name for obvious reasons.  He cracked that the great physicist had changed his name to Albert Einstein simply to sound smart.  Finally, happy birthday to Don Henley of The Eagles.  Henley sang and co-wrote “Hotel California” (1977), an allegory about SoCal showbiz excess.  The best line in the song is “We are all just prisoners here of our own device.”

Does that trio of birthdays suggest a theme?  Indeed, it does:  drugs and prisoners.  Today’s case is Flowers v. Eli Lilly & Co., 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS (D. Nevada July 10, 2015), in which a pro se plaintiff prisoner claimed that Zyprexa gave him diabetes.  The plaintiff had been prescribed Zyprexa at the beginning of his incarceration in 1997, went off it in 2003, and then back on it in 2009, continuing up through the filing of the lawsuit in 2014.  The plaintiff was diagnosed with diabetes in November 2012.  After learning of the diagnosis, the plaintiff requested that he be taken off Zyprexa.  The request was denied.  Remember, the plaintiff was a prisoner.  Patient choice seldom matters from a legal point of view in these cases (because of the learned intermediary doctrine, discussed below), but in this case it really, really does not matter. Zyprexa is an antipsychotic drug that can be used to treat very serious conditions such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.  The court’s opinion does not tell us why the prison wanted the plaintiff to be on an antipsychotic, but odds are there was a very good reason.Continue Reading Little Reprieve for Prisoner Zyprexa Suit

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Happy birthday, Justice Sotamayor.  Her autobiography, My Beloved World, is now in paperback and the Justice has been all over the airwaves for the inevitable promotional push.  Every time we see Justice Sotamayor interviewed, we like her more.  We learned that she shops at Costco, where she recently ran into Secretary Clinton, who was signing copies of her own book.  That makes us think that Justice Sotomayor is a real, down-to-earth person.  She is also smart and direct.  She reminds us of the old adage that the most effective politicians are tough liberals and cuddly conservatives.  Sotamayor was a prosecutor for a while, so we confess to harboring an undeniable bias in her favor.  She also makes a point of admitting her fallibility up front.  She points to retired Justice Stevens and his acknowledgment that he regrets some of his opinions and would now write them differently.  She says she fully expects to feel the same way about her judicial oeuvre in 20 years.

We do not have to wait so long to regret Justice Sotamayor’s opinions in an area close to our heart, FDA preemption.  Those opinions make for unpleasant reading. Luckily, they are dissents.  Justice Sotamayor wrote lengthy dissents in the Mensing and Bartlett cases.  Those dissents seem to turn on two fundamental notions: (1) hostility to conflict preemption, with a conviction that there is a conflict only when compliance with both federal and state law is impossible not only in a practical sense, but in a complete, almost metaphysical sense.  One gets the distinct impression that in Justice Sotamayor’s world view, it would be pretty much impossible for a manufacturer to show impossibility preemption. (2) Justice Sotamayor is irked that purchasers of generic products might be ousted from court while purchasers of branded products could still buy a ticket to the litigation lottery.  Big surprise: we think she is wrong about that, too.  Such distinct treatment of consumers of distinct products is not inherently unfair or illogical.  One could come up with a rational system where consumers could trade lower prices for reduced litigation options. Maybe that is what we have.  We certainly have it with respect to limited tort auto insurance policies.Continue Reading Ninth Circuit Applies One-Two Punch to Prevent Claims against Brandeds, and Preempt Claims against Generics

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While it may not be immediately obvious, the dismissal of pharmacy defendants from drug cases is almost always a good thing. 
The dismissals are often based on the learned intermediary doctrine, which says that a drug manufacturer’s obligation to warn about risks of its prescription medications runs to the doctors, not patients.  The doctrine recognizes

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We have to admit the news has been pretty dreary out of the Nevada Propofol litigation recently.  As far as the state litigation is concerned, we can only hope that the defendants do better on appeal than in the trial court (it would be hard to do worse).

There was some good news, however, from

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About a month ago, the Nevada Supreme Court took a look at the so-called “heeding presumption” – and rejected it outright. Rivera v. Philip Morris, Inc., ___ P.3d ___, 2009 WL 1563373 (Nev. June 4, 2009). Not only that, the decision was unanimous. Obviously, given the caption, Rivera wasn’t a drug or device case