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Exxon struck with $725.5 million verdict over mechanic's leukemia diagnosis

A Pennsylvania jury purchased ExxonMobil to pay $725.5 million to a former mechanic who declared toxic chemicals in the business's fuel and solvents triggered his cancer, according to attorneys for the complainant.

The 10-2 verdict began Thursday, lawyers stated, after a. trial in a state court in Philadelphia, where former mechanic. Paul Gill declared he was exposed to benzene in ExxonMobil. products while operating at a gasoline station in between 1975 and 1980.

Following the trial that lasted just over a week, the jury. discovered Exxon accountable for negligently stopping working to alert about the. health risks of benzene, which the U.S. Environmental Protect. Agency (EPA) has actually classified as a known carcinogen. The whole. decision was in offsetting damages, according to Gill's. attorneys.

An Exxon representative called the decision unreasonable and. said the business would ask the court to reverse it, and that it. prepared to tire all readily available appeals.

The 67-year-old previous mechanic stated in his 2020 lawsuit. that he used petroleum products to tidy cars and truck parts with his bare. hands, which exposed him to benzene through direct skin contact. and inhalation.

He was identified with intense myeloid leukemia, a kind of. blood cancer, in 2019.

This verdict is very important since it's a finding that their. gasoline triggers cancer, stated Patrick Wigle, an attorney for. Gill, in a declaration. ExxonMobil has actually understood for decades that. benzene causes cancer, yet they resisted warning the public and. taking basic precautions to caution the public and limitation direct exposure.

Benzene is extensively used in the United States in motor fuels,. as a solvent for plastics and resins, and for other industrial. purposes.

The EPA, which limits the amount of benzene that is. appropriate in fuels, states it likewise can be discovered in emissions from. burning coal and oil, from vehicle exhaust and from evaporation at. gasoline station, to name a few things.

(source: Reuters)