Jeffrey Wigand: The big tobacco whistleblower

TL;DR
Dr. Jeffrey Wigand, a former director of research at Brown & Williamson, exposes the company's knowledge of harmful additives in cigarettes and their manipulation of nicotine levels.
Transcript
60 minutes rewind a story we set out to report six months ago has now turned into two stories how cigarettes can destroy people's lives and how one cigarette company is trying to destroy the reputation of a man who refused to keep quiet about what he says he learned when he worked for them the company is Brown & Williamson America's third largest t... Read More
Key Insights
- ❓ Brown & Williamson allegedly had knowledge of the harmful additives in their tobacco products and the addictive nature of nicotine.
- 🤫 The company engaged in a campaign to destroy Dr. Wigand's reputation and silence him through legal and public relations tactics.
- 👻 The release of a confidential deposition to the Wall Street Journal allowed Wigand's story to be made public.
- 🧑⚕️ State Attorneys General are pursuing lawsuits against the tobacco industry for the health costs incurred due to smoking-related illnesses.
- 🧑⚕️ The tobacco industry has been accused of deception and fraud in concealing the health risks of smoking.
- ❓ Dr. Wigand's testimony is considered critical in the US Justice Department's criminal investigation into the tobacco industry.
- 🤙 Brown & Williamson's accusations against Dr. Wigand have been called into question by The Wall Street Journal's investigation.
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Summary & Key Takeaways
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Dr. Jeffrey Wigand reveals that Brown & Williamson executives were aware of the health risks associated with their tobacco products, including additives that increase the danger of disease and the addictive nature of nicotine.
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Brown & Williamson engaged in a campaign to destroy Dr. Wigand's reputation and silence him through lawsuits, investigations, and damaging stories planted in media outlets.
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Despite the initial hesitation of CBS to broadcast the original story due to potential lawsuits, the Wall Street Journal published a confidential deposition given by Wigand, repeating the charges he made in his interview.
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