ROANOKE TIMES Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times DATE: Thursday, July 11, 1996 TAG: 9607110064 SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL PAGE: A-1 EDITION: METRO DATELINE: ST. PAUL, MINN. SOURCE: Associated Press NOTE: Above
R.J. Reynolds concluded in a secret 1984 report that it needed to pitch its cigarettes to young adults to ``replace'' other smokers, according to court papers filed Wednesday.
The marketing report, citing federal research that show smokers begin as early as age 12 and rarely pick up the habit after 25, suggested that the company aggressively advertise toward young people.
``Younger adult smokers are critical to RJR's long-term performance and profitability. Therefore, RJR should make a substantial long-term commitment of manpower and money dedicated to younger-adult smoker programs,'' the report said.
``If younger adults turn away from smoking, the Industry must decline, just as a population which does not give birth will eventually dwindle,'' said the report, a copy of which was obtained by The Associated Press.
The 77-page report was filed by the company as part of the discovery process in a Minnesota lawsuit, one of at least nine in which states are trying to recover Medicaid costs spent treating tobacco-related illnesses.
``It is an extremely damning document,'' said Richard Daynard of the Tobacco Products Liability Project at Northeastern University in Boston. ``I think it's probably no accident that it came out of RJR shortly before they embarked upon their Joe Camel campaign, which was their first successful foray into the young adult - i.e. children's - market.''
On a page titled ``Younger Adults' Importance as Replacement Smokers,'' a chart used federal data to show that nearly 10 percent of male smokers had started smoking by age 12, with a median starting age of just under 17, and that no one started after age 25.
R.J. Reynolds spokeswoman Peggy Carter emphasized that the report defined young-adult smokers as 18 to 24.
``Nowhere in this report does [report author Diane] Burrows suggest that the company market to anyone younger than 18,'' Carter said.
Since the report was written, she said, RJR's share of 18- to 24-year-old smokers has dropped from just over 20 percent to less than 13 percent.
But Daynard said presuming that people begin smoking at 18 is ``absurd.'' Figures from the national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say 82 percent of adult smokers already have smoked their first cigarette by age 18.
``It's understood to be the very essence of success in the tobacco business: Pitching cigarettes to kids,'' Daynard said.
He also criticized R.J. Reynolds' use of the phrase ``replacement smokers.''
``Why do they have a replacement problem? Answer: Because they're dying,'' he said. ``They're quitting and they're dying. Very importantly, it's because of the product itself.''
Minnesota Attorney General Hubert Humphrey III said the document is central to the state's case, which accuses the tobacco industry of intentionally trying to maintain its markets by appealing to children and teen-agers.
``The term `young-adult marketing' is nothing more than a candy-coated euphemism for `marketing to kids,''' Humphrey said. ``We have no intention of letting the tobacco industry's Orwellian jargon keep us from discovering the truth.''
The Minnesota case has yielded other documents that tobacco critics call smoking guns. Filed in May, for example, was a secret industry report alleging that Philip Morris and Brown & Williamson boosted sales by deliberately enhancing their cigarettes' nicotine levels.
More than half the states are studying the possibility of suing tobacco companies to recover smoking-related health care costs. The Minnesota case is scheduled to go to trial in 1998.
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