WASHINGTON (AFP) –
The family of a 14-year-old Maryland girl is suing the California makers of
Monster Energy, alleging Friday that too much caffeine in the popular energy
drink led to her death.
Lawyers said the two 24-ounce (0.7 liter) cans of Monster Energy
consumed by Anais Fournier in the 24 hours prior to her fatal cardiac arrest in
December 2011
contained as much caffeine — 480 milligrams —
as 14 12-ounce cans of Coca-Cola.
The ensuing autopsy
cited “cardiac arrhythmia due to caffeine toxicity” as the cause of death.
The family is asking
the California Supreme Court for “all damages allowed by law,” claiming that
Monster Energy should be held responsible for wrongful death for allegedly
failing to warn about its product’s dangers.
By law, soft drinks
in the United States can contain no more than 71.5 milligrams of caffeine per
12 ounces. But the limit does not apply to energy drinks like Monster Energy
that are considered dietary supplements.
“These drinks are
death traps for young, developing girls and boys like my daughter Anais,” her
mother Wendy Crossland said in a statement issued by the family’s law firm,
Goldberg, Finnegan and Mester.
“I just want Monster
Energy to know their product can kill.”
In a statement, the
drink’s manufacturer, Monster Beverage, said it was unaware of any fatality
caused by any of the more than eight billion energy drinks it has sold
worldwide.
“Monster does not
believe that its beverages are in any way responsible for the death of Ms.
Fournier,” it said, adding that it intended to “vigorously” defend itself in
court.
The product website
for Monster Energy claims the beverage is “the meanest energy supplement on the
planet … a wicked mega hit that delivers twice the buzz of a regular energy
drink.”
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