Documents: Chinese drywall supplier agreed not to discuss possible smell, health risks

By AP
Friday, June 4, 2010

Docs: Drywall supplier agreed not to discuss risks

MIAMI — A South Florida construction supplier that purchased faulty Chinese drywall made an agreement with the manufacturer not to make any statements regarding the plasterboard’s possible smell or health risks, according to court documents released in a class action suit Friday.

The documents, unsealed Friday and provided to The Associated Press by attorney Victor Diaz, include a settlement agreement between Banner Supply Co. and manufacturer Knauf Plasterboard Tianjin Co.

In the agreement, signed in December 2006, Knauf agreed to provide Banner Supply with thousands of pieces of U.S.-produced plasterboard and to pay them $7,300 per month to store the Chinese product.

Banner agreed to keep the terms of the agreement confidential and not make any statements “regarding any perceived or actual smell or health risks” relating to the Knauf boards to the press or any person or corporation.

Breaching the provision “could cause irreparable harm to Knauf Tianjin,” the settlement states.

“My clients who bought their homes in 2008 would have loved to have known what Banner knew in 2006,” said Diaz, who is representing more than 150 Miami-Dade homeowners in the lawsuit.

“Clearly this agreement was meant to buy the silence of banner,” Diaz said. “It not only victimized consumers it also victimized other consumers and installers who were not advised of this sweetheart deal.”

Michael Peterson, an attorney for Banner Supply, said the company did not hide anything. When the agreement was made, Banner knew of only one complaint regarding five homes where there was a smell associated with the board, Peterson said. Scientific tests paid for by Knauf established that the board was not defective or a health risk, he said.

“Banner empathizes and sympathizes with the people that own homes that have this drywall,” Peterson said. “But just as people that own homes and have the drywall are looking to Banner to recover their losses, Banner is looking to the manufacturers of the board to step up and to take responsibility for the product.”

Chinese drywall has been linked to possible health problems along with corrosion of wiring, air conditioning units, computers, doorknobs and jewelry. Homes often have to be gutted to fix the problem.

Previously released court documents show several homebuilders, suppliers, distributors and Knauf were aware of issues with the Chinese drywall dating back to 2006.

Discussion
June 7, 2010: 3:54 am

Most structured settlements aren’t received in a lump sum. Instead, the client generally gets money on a fixed schedule, usually a monthly basis. There is an option where the you can get money in a lump sum. You do this through annuity selling. The process is a bit different, but can be accomplished with the right people on your side.

June 5, 2010: 6:03 am

Eli Lilly promotes sales of their #1 drug (Zyprexa $4.8 billion per year) that can *cause* diabetes and then turns around and makes billions selling more drugs to treat the diabetes.
Lilly’s cash cow Zyprexa has been over-prescribed and linked to a 10-times greater risk of causing type 2 diabetes and increased risk of heart attack.
At 5 to ten times the cost of the old standby thorazine,recent comparative studies show the diabetes inducing zyprexa class of drugs are only borderline better in controlling symptoms.
Only 9 percent of adult Americans think the pharmaceutical industry can be trusted right around the same rating as big tobacco. No Wonder!
Daniel Haszard Zyprexa whistle-blower

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