What's new
  • As of today ICMag has his own Discord server. In this Discord server you can chat, talk with eachother, listen to music, share stories and pictures...and much more. Join now and let's grow together! Join ICMag Discord here! More details in this thread here: here.

Vape pen explodes, rips away chunk of man's face, breaks some teeth, lawsuit says

Sunshineinabag

Active member
MEMPHIS, Tenn. - Twenty-five-year-old David Bishop of Cordova was at home one morning last year when he decided to use an e-cigarette before going to work. He placed the device to his lips and pressed a button to start vaping.
Suddenly, a lithium battery inside the device exploded, a lawsuit alleges. The blast blew pieces of the e-cigarette into the man's face, breaking several teeth.
And the blast ripped away a chunk of flesh, from his upper lip through his lower left cheek, the legal filing says.
The explosion also splashed Bishop with battery acid, causing chemical or heat burns to his left hand, face, mouth and tongue, the suit alleges.
E-cigarette death: Texas man dies after vape pen he was using exploded, medical examiner says
FDA: Dozens of seizures reported after vaping, mostly by young people
The explosion that morning on May 31 was so violent that one piece of the vaping device flew into the air and left burn marks on the ceiling and wall before the piece finally landed on top of a cabinet, the lawsuit says.
Bishop required 65 stitches in his face and missed weeks from his job as a warehouse maintenance worker, his legal team says.
Bishop has filed suit against three companies involved in selling the e-cigarette and the two lithium batteries that powered it. The suit was originally filed in state court in October and transferred to federal court in February.
Bought at a store on Germantown Parkway, lawsuit says

Companies involved in the case have denied wrongdoing. A jury trial could take place next year.
The situation illustrates the fire and explosion dangers that accompany the use of the increasingly popular e-cigarette devices.
An e-cigarette or vape pen is a device that uses a battery to heat up a liquid that contains nicotine. The heat creates an inhalable vapor, and the practice is also called vaping.
The devices were introduced to the U.S. market around 2007 and since 2014 have been the most popular tobacco product among U.S. youth
Teen vaping: FDA proposes e-cigarette sale restrictions to curb teen vaping
Unlike other devices that use potentially explosive lithium batteries, e-cigarettes are put in people's mouths and held close to their faces.
"It's the prevalence and the intimacy of these devices," said David Hill, a lawyer for the Cordova man. "And if they are going to be so intimately used, they should be safe."
He declined to make his client available for an interview or to release photos of the damage to the client's face and to the home, citing the ongoing litigation.
Hill is also representing a client named Corry Stampley in another exploding e-cigarette lawsuit filed this year in Crittenden County Circuit Court in Arkansas.
'Like a bullet or small rocket' when a battery fails
Lithium-ion batteries are used in a laptops, phones and a wide range of other devices and are relatively safe, Consumer Reports wrote in a 2016 article.
However, in rare cases the batteries experience a failure called "thermal runway" in which the battery can hit temperatures as high as 1000 degrees. That can cause an explosion.
The e-cigarette lawsuit quotes extensively from a 2017 report produced by the U.S. Fire Administration, part of the Federal Emergency Management agency.
The report notes the intimacy of the e-cigarette devices — they go in people's mouths — plus other differences that make battery explosions more dangerous than in other devices.
<meta content="21 hours ago" itemprop="datePublished"> <meta content="Vape pen explodes, rips away chunk of man's face, breaks some teeth, lawsuit says" itemprop="headline"> <meta content="The explosion of the vaping device ripped away a chunk of David Bishop's face, burned him, and broke some of his teeth, a lawsuit alleges." itemprop="description"> Vape pen explodes, rips away chunk of man's face, breaks some teeth, lawsuit says

[URL=https://s3.yimg.com/lo/api/res/1.2/JMY_v9hLGlZjdef68hoWMQ--/YXBwaWQ9eW15O3c9MTUwO3NtPTE-/https://media-mbst-pub-ue1.s3.amazonaws.com/creatr-uploaded-images/2018-12/aaaa2f80-fa39-11e8-8fbf-da9c00b689c4]View Image [/URL] Daniel Connolly,USA TODAY 21 hours ago



MEMPHIS, Tenn. - Twenty-five-year-old David Bishop of Cordova was at home one morning last year when he decided to use an e-cigarette before going to work. He placed the device to his lips and pressed a button to start vaping.
Suddenly, a lithium battery inside the device exploded, a lawsuit alleges. The blast blew pieces of the e-cigarette into the man's face, breaking several teeth.
And the blast ripped away a chunk of flesh, from his upper lip through his lower left cheek, the legal filing says.
The explosion also splashed Bishop with battery acid, causing chemical or heat burns to his left hand, face, mouth and tongue, the suit alleges.
E-cigarette death: Texas man dies after vape pen he was using exploded, medical examiner says
FDA: Dozens of seizures reported after vaping, mostly by young people
The explosion that morning on May 31 was so violent that one piece of the vaping device flew into the air and left burn marks on the ceiling and wall before the piece finally landed on top of a cabinet, the lawsuit says.
Bishop required 65 stitches in his face and missed weeks from his job as a warehouse maintenance worker, his legal team says.
Bishop has filed suit against three companies involved in selling the e-cigarette and the two lithium batteries that powered it. The suit was originally filed in state court in October and transferred to federal court in February.
Bought at a store on Germantown Parkway, lawsuit says

Companies involved in the case have denied wrongdoing. A jury trial could take place next year.
The situation illustrates the fire and explosion dangers that accompany the use of the increasingly popular e-cigarette devices.
An e-cigarette or vape pen is a device that uses a battery to heat up a liquid that contains nicotine. The heat creates an inhalable vapor, and the practice is also called vaping.
The devices were introduced to the U.S. market around 2007 and since 2014 have been the most popular tobacco product among U.S. youth, according to a surgeon general's report.
'Modern-day prohibition'?: San Francisco looks to ban e-cigarette sales until FDA review
Teen vaping: FDA proposes e-cigarette sale restrictions to curb teen vaping
Unlike other devices that use potentially explosive lithium batteries, e-cigarettes are put in people's mouths and held close to their faces.
"It's the prevalence and the intimacy of these devices," said David Hill, a lawyer for the Cordova man. "And if they are going to be so intimately used, they should be safe."
He declined to make his client available for an interview or to release photos of the damage to the client's face and to the home, citing the ongoing litigation.
Hill is also representing a client named Corry Stampley in another exploding e-cigarette lawsuit filed this year in Crittenden County Circuit Court in Arkansas.
'Like a bullet or small rocket' when a battery fails
Lithium-ion batteries are used in a laptops, phones and a wide range of other devices and are relatively safe, Consumer Reports wrote in a 2016 article.
However, in rare cases the batteries experience a failure called "thermal runway" in which the battery can hit temperatures as high as 1000 degrees. That can cause an explosion.
The e-cigarette lawsuit quotes extensively from a 2017 report produced by the U.S. Fire Administration, part of the Federal Emergency Management agency.
The report notes the intimacy of the e-cigarette devices — they go in people's mouths — plus other differences that make battery explosions more dangerous than in other devices.
View Image
A flat lithium battery in a device such as a cell phone case might catch fire, but is less likely to explode, the report says.
And the shape and construction of e-cigarettes — something like a pipe — can contribute to explosions. "When the battery seal (at the end of the battery) ruptures, the pressure within the e-cigarette cylinder builds quickly until it ruptures, usually at the end," the report says.
The report recommends against using lithium batteries in e-cigarettes.
E-cigarette explosions are rare, but potentially deadly — at least two people have been killed in the U.S.

The report notes that fires and explosions caused by batteries in electronic cigarettes are uncommon.
"However, the consequences can be devastating and life-altering for the victims," the fire administration report says. "It is likely that the number of incidents and injuries will continue to increase."
A total of 195 separate incidents of explosion and fire involving an electronic cigarette were reported in the media between January 2009 and December 2016, the report says. Those reported incidents resulted in 133 injuries, of which 38 were severe.
The report says many other small fires were likely not reported to any fire department.
E-cigarette death: Florida man killed by exploding e-cigarette, medical examiner's office says
Since the 2017 U.S. Fire Administration report was published, media accounts have identified at least two deaths associated with exploding vaping devices.
A 38-year-old man was killed in Florida in May 2018 when a vape pen blew two projectiles into his head and caused a fire that burned 80 percent of his body, the Tampa Bay Times reported.
And a 24-year-old man died two days after a vape pen explosion in the Fort Worth area severed the carotid artery in his neck, The Washington Post reported.
Companies say Bishop brought explosion on himself

The device that exploded in the Cordova man's face was a VGOD Pro Mech 2 vaping device that Bishop purchased at Create a Cig Cordova at 465 Germantown Parkway, the lawsuit says.
The lawsuit demands damages from three companies: Create a Cig, VGOD, a California-based seller of e-cigarettes, as well as a U.S. affiliate of LG, the South Korean company that made the batteries.
Darrell Suriff, CEO of the Create A Cig parent company in Austin, Texas, said he didn't have specific information about the case.
In a court filing, Create A Cig offered more than 30 legal defenses, including that the company didn't manufacture the e-cigarette or the battery, and that Bishop's claims are barred because he assumed the risk of using the device, and that the explosion is his own fault.
VGOD made similar legal defenses, arguing that it didn't manufacture the e-cigarette — it's not clear who they say made it — and that Bishop brought the explosion on himself. "Plaintiff so carelessly and negligently conducted himself that he, by his own negligence, contributed directly and proximately to his own injuries," the lawyers for VGOD wrote.
Neither Create A Cig nor VGOD cited any specific actions by Bishop that brought on the explosion.
Juul: E-cigarette company Juul boosts lobbying spending by 167 percent amid FDA scrutiny
Meanwhile, LG Electronics filed a legal motion asking the judge to dismiss the company from the lawsuit.
"I can tell you they are probably barking up the wrong tree because LG Electronics doesn't make any batteries," said John Taylor, a company spokesman.
He said a sister company, LG Chemical, may make batteries.
Hill, the plaintiff's lawyer, said the legal team is working to sort out remaining questions of what companies should be named in the lawsuit.
Careful use of chargers recommended — but risks go beyond explosions

Using the right e-cigarette charger can help prevent fires, the U.S. Fire Administration report says. "Always use the charging appliance that comes with the unit, and follow the manufacturer’s instructions. Plugging an e-cigarette into a 'standard' USB port to recharge may result in an explosion and/or fire."
Separately, the U.S. surgeon general's office has launched a campaign urging young people not to use e-cigarettes, citing factors including a high risk of nicotine addiction, potential nicotine damage to developing brains, plus exposure to other potentially harmful chemicals in vapor.
The federal Food and Drug Administration is also investigating whether use of e-cigarettes can cause seizures.
Jury trial and mediation set

A federal jury trial in the David Bishop case is set for June 15, 2020 before U.S. District Judge Sheryl H. Lipman.
The parties have also agreed to mediation later this year, a settlement negotiation process that could make the trial unnecessary.
https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/vape-pen-explodes-rips-away-195636638.html

Too bad this lawsuit won't shut er down for good, funny fact.....folks will read this article and still vape! Idk man....I can barely handle bic lighter, glass pipe bowls of grass.....I picked tobacco all my youth.....don't miss it at all!:tiphat:
 

Hashmasta-Kut

honey oil addict
Veteran
Somebody chime in here about how vaping is safer than smoking, LOL. Anybody ever have a joint or a bowl blow off part of their face?


vaping is certainly more healthy than smoke.

I don't use epens, that is a delivery method, not the actual vapor. You are contesting the wrong point.
 

Ringodoggie

Well-known member
I love vaping dry herb. I still smoke regularly but if I am in the mood to flavor chase... wow, vaping becomes a real fine wine.

When it comes to flavor..... vaping is tasting fine wine. Smoking is mixing that same wine with 7-up and making a spritzer out of it. LMAO

Just a joke, please don't roll me and burn me. ;)




.
 

Jellyfish

Invertebrata Inebriata
Veteran
vaping is certainly more healthy than smoke.

I don't use epens, that is a delivery method, not the actual vapor. You are contesting the wrong point.


Correction noted. Now explain to me how vaping cannabis is "certainly more healthy" than smoking cannabis. Go ahead.
 

Hashmasta-Kut

honey oil addict
Veteran
Correction noted. Now explain to me how vaping cannabis is "certainly more healthy" than smoking cannabis. Go ahead.

All I have on that is my own life study, and some peers who seem to agree, and they did pretty much the same thing: I smoked for about 20 years, every day, pipes of mainly roadkill skunk from the 80s to around 2003. I had a pretty consistent cough, hacked up a lot of phlegm in the morning, and it was not typically enjoyable. In 2003-2004, I switched to 99% just vaping extracts. Since then, I have some respiratory issue, but much less so, and I intake far more thc per day. I don't hack up shit from my lungs any mornings now. For me the difference is pretty remarkable, and I really appreciate it.
 

Jellyfish

Invertebrata Inebriata
Veteran
All I have on that is my own life study, and some peers who seem to agree, and they did pretty much the same thing: I smoked for about 20 years, every day, pipes of mainly roadkill skunk from the 80s to around 2003. I had a pretty consistent cough, hacked up a lot of phlegm in the morning, and it was not typically enjoyable. In 2003-2004, I switched to 99% just vaping extracts. Since then, I have some respiratory issue, but much less so, and I intake far more thc per day. I don't hack up shit from my lungs any mornings now. For me the difference is pretty remarkable, and I really appreciate it.


Do you smoke tobacco too perchance?
 

soil margin

Active member
Veteran
All I have on that is my own life study, and some peers who seem to agree, and they did pretty much the same thing: I smoked for about 20 years, every day, pipes of mainly roadkill skunk from the 80s to around 2003. I had a pretty consistent cough, hacked up a lot of phlegm in the morning, and it was not typically enjoyable. In 2003-2004, I switched to 99% just vaping extracts. Since then, I have some respiratory issue, but much less so, and I intake far more thc per day. I don't hack up shit from my lungs any mornings now. For me the difference is pretty remarkable, and I really appreciate it.

Sounds like the typical description of every tobacco smoker.

Been smoking weed out of a bong/pipe all day every day for 15 years and never had ANY of the issues you're describing. Am I just a badass or are you overlooking important parts of the story?
 

SamsonsRiddle

Active member
If you look at all these exploding vapes, there is one common denominator: they are mechanical mods.



Using a mechanical mod requires some basic comprehension of math and ohm's law. Also, there isn't a safety feature if you want to fire it at more power than the batteries can handle. These are SUPPOSED to be sold to people with knowledge of what they are buying and how it operates, not newbies.



Of course big tobacco and their cohorts will continue to bring up these explosions by people doing things they shouldn't be doing in the first place (think of people blasting butane on their stove).



Then again, i may be wrong because i got psychosis from conspiracy theories and schizophrenia from weed intake (according to "studies").
 

Switcher56

Comfortably numb!
... reading this (9 yr vaper here) I had to laugh. I suggest everyone quit using their phones. That sucker is stuck to your ear (use your imagination) and they have been known to go boom, and yes their batteries are also made in China.

I haven't followed the recent events on the subject but back in the day it was (exploding batteries) used by the media spreading panic (fake news (no surprise there)) as a tool to stop legalization of vaping. In the day, the majority of incidents were caused by human error and general ignorance by the owner.

So much BS here, that we needen't buy ferts for the next 10 years :)
 

Jellyfish

Invertebrata Inebriata
Veteran
If you look at all these exploding vapes, there is one common denominator: they are mechanical mods.



Using a mechanical mod requires some basic comprehension of math and ohm's law. Also, there isn't a safety feature if you want to fire it at more power than the batteries can handle. These are SUPPOSED to be sold to people with knowledge of what they are buying and how it operates, not newbies.



Of course big tobacco and their cohorts will continue to bring up these explosions by people doing things they shouldn't be doing in the first place (think of people blasting butane on their stove).



Then again, i may be wrong because i got psychosis from conspiracy theories and schizophrenia from weed intake (according to "studies").




Great post! May I quote your disclaimer at the end in my sig? Thanks!:tiphat:
 

Jellyfish

Invertebrata Inebriata
Veteran
I do not have anything against vaping or people who vape. I have vaped myself. What I don't like is self-righteous vapers telling me what they are doing is safer than what I'm doing (smoking), when there's no proof of that, and when smoking weed has been around for centuries with no deaths, and vaping only a relatively short time and some deaths. Thank you.
 

Hashmasta-Kut

honey oil addict
Veteran
Sounds like the typical description of every tobacco smoker.

Been smoking weed out of a bong/pipe all day every day for 15 years and never had ANY of the issues you're describing. Am I just a badass or are you overlooking important parts of the story?


were you smoking skunkweed and hash made from it, or some lightweight shit that people usually smoke?
 
Top