A federal judge today ordered tobacco companies to publish corrective statements that say they lied about the dangers of smoking. US District Judge Gladys Kessler previously had said she wanted the industry to pay for the statements in various types of advertisements, the result of a case brought in 1999. But today's ruling is the first time she's laid out what they will say. Each is to be prefaced by a statement that a federal court has concluded that tobacco companies "deliberately deceived the American public about the health effects of smoking." Among the required statements are that smoking kills more people than murder, AIDS, suicide, drugs, car crashes, and alcohol combined, and that "secondhand smoke kills over 3,000 Americans a year." Examples: