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Insider Timeline
The following information
regarding Jeffrey Wigand, his employment at Brown & Williamson Tobacco
Company (B&W), his interactions with 60 Minutes and his deposition in
Mississippi were culled from media reports, legal transcripts, the Internet
and Dr. Wigand himself.
1989
§January
B&W hires Wigand as Vice
President for Research and Development, ostensibly to develop a safer
cigarette.
§September
Wigand attends a meeting of
B&W and British-American Tobacco (B&W’s parent company) scientists in
Vancouver, British Columbia to discuss the development of safer
cigarettes. Wigand later discovers that notes taken from the conference
have been altered to include no mention of “safer” or “less hazardous”
products. Shortly thereafter, Wigand is told that B&W would not pursue
the development of safer cigarettes.
1992
Wigand reads a study issued by
the National Toxicology Program regarding the carcinogenic dangers of
coumarin, a key additive in the B&W pipe product, Sir Walter Raleigh.
The study, which stated that the composition of coumarin is similar to
that of rat poison, found that the additive caused tumors in mice and
rats. Wigand advocates for the company to remove the additive. B&W
president Thomas Sandefur refuses on the grounds that its removal would
alter the taste of the tobacco and, therefore, have an adverse effect on
sales.
1993
§January
§March
Wigand is fired. He signs a
confidentiality agreement regarding his B&W employment and severance
package.
§September
Wigand learns that B&W is
suing him for breach of contract. Under threat of losing medical
benefits for his sick daughter, he signs a stricter, broader
confidentiality agreement.
1994
Lowell Bergman, 60 Minutes
producer, asks Wigand to serve as an analyst of Philip Morris documents
that Bergman has received anonymously (this does not violate the
confidentiality agreement between Wigand and B&W).
§April
Executives from the seven
largest tobacco companies in the United States, including B&W CEO Thomas
Sandefur, testify before Congress that they believe nicotine is not
addictive. Wigand is incensed but out of fear of violating the
confidentiality agreement, does not act.
Wigand receives two telephone
threats toward his daughters after he agrees to act as advisor to the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in its case against the tobacco
industry. (His work as advisor also does not violate his
confidentiality agreement; Wigand had notified B&W of his contact with
the FDA.)
§June
The New York Times
runs a series of stories based on internal B&W documents, spirited out
of the company’s lawyers’ offices by paralegal Merrell Williams. The
articles illustrate long-term cover-ups by B&W executives on the dangers
and addictive nature of its products.
Wigand becomes a technical
advisor to the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) as it defends itself
against a $10 billion lawsuit brought by Philip Morris (maker of
Marlboro cigarettes) over an ABC story that contended Philip Morris
secretly manipulated nicotine levels in its products.
1995
§March
§June
§July
Stories begin circulating that
Wigand will testify on behalf of ABC in the Philip Morris lawsuit.
Bergman becomes concerned that Wigand will be court-ordered not to speak
to the press and pushes harder for an on-camera interview before that
happens.
§August
60 Minutes
interviews Wigand but agrees to not air it without Wigand’s permission.
Philip Morris settles its
lawsuit with ABC out of court. ABC issues an apology statement
emphasizing that it stood by the central
premise of the piece, which was that cigarette companies manipulated
nicotine to hook smokers. It apologized narrowly for reporting that the
companies used significant quantities of nicotine purchased from outside
suppliers.
§September
CBS, Inc. (the network that
owns 60 Minutes) enters into merger negotiations with
Westinghouse.
CBS lawyers propose dropping
the Wigand story due to “tortious interference,” a legal term referring
to Wigand’s confidentiality agreement with B&W. Others at CBS
reportedly worry about adverse effects the story may have on the
impending Westinghouse merger and on Andrew Tisch, who is chairman of
Lorillard Tobacco Company (maker of Newport cigarettes) and the son of
CBS chairman Laurence Tisch.
§November
CBS kills the Wigand story.
B&W subpoenas Wigand for
violating his confidentiality agreement by talking to CBS.
Wigand is
deposed
in the Mississippi lawsuit against the tobacco industry. Among his
charges: Thomas Sandefur lied under oath when he testified before
Congress regarding his belief of nicotine’s addictiveness, and B&W was
involved in a deep cover-up of research and documents attesting to the
dangers of tobacco. Under judge’s order, the deposition is sealed.
B&W launches a Wigand smear
campaign by hiring public relations expert John Scanlon.
§December
The sale of CBS to
Westinghouse is announced.
The
Washington Post gets word that Wigand has an alleged history of
spousal abuse.
Scanlon, a personal friend of
60 Minutes executive producer Don Hewitt, begins bombarding
Hewitt with accounts of alleged misdeeds by Wigand. Hewitt initially
does not know that Scanlon has been hired by B&W.
1996
§January
Wigand finds a bullet in his
mailbox.
Hewitt and 60 Minutes
correspondent Mike Wallace discover Scanlon’s ties with B&W.
Reporters in Louisville,
Kentucky begin receiving tips of alleged Wigand misdeeds. B&W is based
in Louisville and Wigand was still living there at the time.
Mississippi attorney Richard
Scruggs hires private investigators to counteract the Wigand smear
campaign.
The Wall Street Journal
runs an article on Wigand and includes leaked testimony from the
Mississippi deposition. The publication of Wigand testimony allows
60 Minutes to air the Wigand piece.
§February
The Wall Street Journal
reports on a 500-page document issued by B&W that highlights countless
alleged misdeeds committed by Wigand. The charges range from Wigand
lying about his residence to falsely claiming luggage damage. The
Wall Street Journal reviews the document and deems most of the
charges unsubstantiated. The paper called the report a “chilling
insight into how much a company can find out about a former employee
and the lengths it may go to discredit a critic.”
Wigand’s wife files for
divorce.
60 Minutes
finally airs the Wigand
interview.
The report includes facts on the B&W smear campaign.
The offices of Wigand’s
lawyers are burglarized. A pile of burned matches is found at the door.
§May
Vanity Fair
runs “The Man Who Knew Too Much,” an exhaustive article chronicling the
storm surrounding Wigand. Disney buys the rights to the story and later
produces
“The Insider”
based on the facts presented in it.
1997
§June
§August
1998
§January
§May
§November
The remaining forty-six states
settle each of their lawsuits with the tobacco industry for $206
billion. Among the stipulations was an agreement from the industry to
drop all remaining charges against Jeffrey Wigand. The information
provided by Wigand in the Mississippi deposition was key to each of the
individual state settlements and the larger Multi-State Agreement.
1999
§November
“The Insider,” starring Al
Pacino and Russell Crowe, opens nationwide.
Sources:
§
Pretrial deposition of Dr.
Jeffrey Wigand, November 29, 1995, by the State of Mississippi;
§
“Getting Personal: Brown &
Williamson Has 500-Page Dossier Attacking Chief Critic,” by Suein L.
Hwang and Milo Geyelin, published in The Wall Street Journal,
February 1, 1996;
§
transcript of 60 Minutes
“Jeffrey Wigand, Ph.D.,” aired February 4, 1996;
§
“The Man Who Knew Too Much,” by
Marie Brenner, published in Vanity Fair, May 1996;
§
Dr. Jeffrey Wigand;
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