The Asbestos Industry's Knowledge of the Risk
Manufacturers of asbestos-containing products and many of the companies who employed the men and women who worked with and around these products knowingly exposed workers to the hazards of asbestos for decades. The attitude of many of these companies is illustrated by the testimony of Charles H. Roemer, formerly an employee of Unarco, who described a meeting between Unarco officials and Johns-Manville President Lewis Brown and his brother, Vandiver Brown, in the early 1940s:
“I’ll never forget, I turned to Mr. Brown, one of the Browns made this crack (that Unarco managers were a bunch of fools for notifying employees who had asbestosis), and I said, ‘Mr. Brown, do you mean to tell me you would let them work until they dropped dead?’ He said, ‘Yes. We save a lot of money that way.' " 1
This callous attitude is repeated time and again in numerous industry documents over the course of decades. The companies that manufactured and used asbestos-containing products had many sources of information demonstrating the hazards of asbestos exposure: published scientific and medical literature; industry trade organizations; and in some cases, the company’s own internal reports, studies, or other documentation.
The myriad of documents produced and possessed by the asbestos industry over the years share a common theme: uncontroverted evidence that asbestos exposure causes disease and death in people exposed to it. This information could have prevented countless asbestos-related deaths had these companies utilized this information to protect workers and the public.
Early Scientific and Medical Literature
Industry Trade Organizations
Corporate Documents
1Testimony of Charles H. Roemer about the meeting of Unarco officials with Johns-Manville President Lewis Brown and his brother, Vandiver Brown, in 1942 or 1943; deposition taken April 25, 1984 in the matter of Johns-Manville Corp. et al. v. The United States of America, U.S. Claims Court Civ. No. 465-83C.