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Many Injured By Exploding E-Cigarette Batteries, Lawyer Says

At All Ways Vapor: Sandy and Daniel Holloway look on while Chris Watford mixes the e-liquid they ordered. The Holloways turned to vaping as a way to quit smoking.
Cyd Hoskinson
/
WJCT
At All Ways Vapor: Sandy and Daniel Holloway look on while Chris Watford mixes the e-liquid they ordered. The Holloways turned to vaping as a way to quit smoking.
At All Ways Vapor: Sandy and Daniel Holloway look on while Chris Watford mixes the e-liquid they ordered. The Holloways turned to vaping as a way to quit smoking.
Credit Cyd Hoskinson / WJCT
/
WJCT
At All Ways Vapor: Sandy and Daniel Holloway look on while Chris Watford mixes the e-liquid they ordered. The Holloways turned to vaping as a way to quit smoking.

As the use of electronic cigarettes goes up, so do concerns about their safety.

Because users can control the amount of nicotine they鈥檙e inhaling, the devices are helping some cigarette smokers kick the habit. But the batteries in these gadgets have been known to explode, resulting in broken bones, serious burns and lawsuits, even here in Florida.

has filed a number of lawsuits, including a couple on behalf of Florida residents who claim their electronic cigarettes caught fire or exploded.

鈥淎ll of our lawsuits involve people that have been severely injured,鈥 Morgan said. 鈥淸They] have suffered third degree burns, have had the vertebrae blown out the back of their neck.鈥

E-cigarettes use small but powerful lithium-ion batteries to vaporize liquid nicotine mixtures so they can be inhaled.

鈥淏asically the way these things end up exploding,鈥 Morgan said, 鈥渋t鈥檚 either the batteries are faulty or there鈥檚 not enough ventilation within the e-cigarette.鈥

And, he adds, because most e-cigs are just metal tubes, 鈥渨hen the heat builds up inside, they act as pipe bombs and they literally explode out.鈥

Morgan鈥檚 clients are seeking money for medical bills, and pain and suffering 鈥 and it鈥檚 not just manufacturers in his legal crosshairs. He said he鈥檚 also sued individual e-cigarette stores for failing to warn or educate customers about the dangers.

Chris Watford works at 鈥檚 Arlington area. He said he always brings up battery safety with his customers.

鈥淣ever put them loose in your pockets,鈥 he says. 鈥淣ever put them loose in your car and never keep them in your car on a hot day.鈥

The recently assumed oversight of e-cigarette liquids to make sure they鈥檙e safe to use. 

Websites, including , are currently among the only source of consumer information about the dangers of lithium-ion batteries since safety warning labels aren鈥檛 required on packaging. 

Still, Always Vapor customers Daniel Holloway and Sandy Holloway aren鈥檛 terribly worried.  Now in their 60s, they say they turned to e-cigs to help them kick their longtime smoking habit.  For them, the risk is worth it.

鈥淲ell, he has the beginnings of (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease), and I have a heart condition, so we started like at 18 (milligrams of nicotine) and we鈥檙e working our way down to 12 (mg) now,鈥 said Sandy Holloway, 66, about the strength of the e-cig jiuce. And, her husband Daniel Holloway added:  "Possibly we鈥檒l be able to quit, eventually.鈥

In line with the national trend, the percent of Duval County teens that use e-cigarettes has tripled since 2012.

Reporter Cyd Hoskinson can be reached at choskinson@wjct.org or on Twitter @cydwjctnews

Copyright 2020 WJCT News 89.9. To see more, visit .

Cyd Hoskinson began working at WJCT on Valentine鈥檚 Day 2011.
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