200,000 Military Veterans Suing 3M For Defective Hearing Protection

Army Earplug Lawsuit News

What started as a single lawsuit by a company whistleblower and the Department of Justice (DOJ) has mushroomed into one of the largest court cases in recent history

Monday, August 31, 2020 - The whistleblower was a former employer of Aearo, Inc., now a subsidiary of 3M, who came forward with the information that the company knew that the Army Earplug was too short and would not fit certain soldiers and failed to warn them. In 2018, 3M Inc. agreed to pay $9.1 million to the United States military to settle allegations that it knowingly sold the dual-ended Combat Arms Earplugs military without disclosing defects that the hearing protection device was ineffective.

Today, thousands of US military veterans have come forward with hearing damage that occurred during their combat and other military activities, to file suit against 3M Inc., the maker of the allegedly faulty Dual-Sided Combat Army Earplug. According to Bloomberg Law, "The litigation is one of the largest mass torts ever, with about 200,000 cases. It likely trails only asbestos litigation, which saw more than 700,000 claimants by 2003, according to a 2005 report for the RAND Institute for Civil Justice."

Hearing loss and tinnitus, the continuous ringing in the ear, are the reasons given more than any other for soldiers that have filed claims for disability compensation. US veterans are unable to assimilate back to civilian life as their hearing injuries have made it impossible to hold a job of their choice, have a healthy marital or other relationship, and made it difficult to raise their children. One soldier reported that his young son was embarrassed by his father's deafness rather than proud of him for serving his country. Lawyers representing military veterans with 3M hearing loss cite that being unable to hear could contribute to depression that might lead to suicide, a syndrome plaguing the military in record-breaking numbers. Plaintiffs’ lawyer Bryan Aylstock told Bloomberg, "These are relatively young individuals; it doesn’t bode well, and the conditions can contribute to insomnia, social isolation, depression, and PTSD, he said." Until 3M allegedly fraudulently misrepresented the effectiveness of their hearing protection device, soldiers for generations had accepted hearing loss as a necessary evil of serving one's country.

Trials for plaintiffs suffering 3M Earplug hearing damage delayed by the coronavirus and protests will start in the first quarter of 2021. Clients continue to be accepted by attorneys on a contingency where the only way you pay is if you win your case. Army Earplug lawyers are ready to help obtain lump-sum compensation for the damages soldiers have had to endure. 3M Inc. continues to represent that their Army earplug was designed to the specifications that the military gave them despite a judge declaring last month that that defense was invalid. "We remain confident the evidence will show that the CAEv2 product, which was developed in response to the U.S. military's request and based on its specifications and testing, was not defective and did not cause injuries," the statement said."

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