Charla Nash, the woman who was severely mauled on February 16,2009, by a friend’s pet chimpanzee, appeared on the Oprah Winfrey show. The chimpanzee weighed 200 pounds when it brutally attacked Nash, and left her face completely destroyed. Nash appeared on the talk show wearing a black veil. After talking with Oprah for a bit, Oprah asked if she would be willing to remove the veil. Nash had no objections and stated she was much stronger now and did not care what people saw. When she removed the veil, Oprah explained to her that her face would be all over the media. Nash’s face is extremely disfigured. She lost both of her hands, her eyelids, nose, lips and the bony structure of her middle face. Nash says she is not in any pain, and does not remember the attack at all. Her family has filed a lawsuit against the owner of the chimp for 50 million dollars, and the state of Connecticut for 150 million dollars. Scott Drake interviews Nash's attorney Matt Newman.
A jury has awarded the families of two men killed when their Cirrus SR-22 crashed in Minnesota in January 2003 a total of $16.4 million in damages. The families of the men argued in their lawsuit that Cirrus Aircraft and the University of North Dakota provided training that should have made pilot Gary Prokop proficient in his plane and that the SR-22 was marketed as easy to fly.
Scott Drake interviews Dan OFallon and Phil Sieff counsel for the family of the Passenger James Kosak. O'Fallon and Sieff of counsel with Robins, Kaplan, Miller & Ciresi in Minneapolis.
Charla Nash, the woman who was severely mauled on February 16,2009, by a friend’s pet chimpanzee, appeared on the Oprah Winfrey show. The chimpanzee weighed 200 pounds when it brutally attacked Nash, and left her face completely destroyed. Nash appeared on the talk show wearing a black veil. After talking with Oprah for a bit, Oprah asked if she would be willing to remove the veil. Nash had no objections and stated she was much stronger now and did not care what people saw. When she removed the veil, Oprah explained to her that her face would be all over the media. Nash’s face is extremely disfigured. She lost both of her hands, her eyelids, nose, lips and the bony structure of her middle face. Nash says she is not in any pain, and does not remember the attack at all. Her family has filed a lawsuit against the owner of the chimp for 50 million dollars, and the state of Connecticut for 150 million dollars. Scott Drake interviews Nash's attorney Matt Newman.
A jury has awarded the families of two men killed when their Cirrus SR-22 crashed in Minnesota in January 2003 a total of $16.4 million in damages. The families of the men argued in their lawsuit that Cirrus Aircraft and the University of North Dakota provided training that should have made pilot Gary Prokop proficient in his plane and that the SR-22 was marketed as easy to fly.
Scott Drake interviews Dan OFallon and Phil Sieff counsel for the family of the Passenger James Kosak. O'Fallon and Sieff of counsel with Robins, Kaplan, Miller & Ciresi in Minneapolis.
http://lpcyu.instablogs.com/entry/updated-edition-of-mladic-karadzic-book/
(Read My Chill-Out Book In Full For Free Here)
What It’s Like to Chill Out With Whom the World Considers the Most Ruthless Men in the World
Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadzic:
Confessions of a Female War Crimes Investigator
Retrospectively, it was all so simple, natural and matter of fact being on a boat restaurant in Belgrade, sitting with, laughing, drinking a two hundred bottle of wine and chatting about war and peace while Ratko Mladic held my hand. Mladic, a man considered the world’s most ruthless war criminal since Adolf Hitler, still at large and currently having a five million dollar bounty on his head for genocide by the international community. Yet there I was with my two best friends at the time, a former Serbian diplomat, his wife, and Ratko Mladic just chilling. There was no security, nothing you’d ordinarily expect in such circumstances. Referring to himself merely as, Sharko; this is the story of it all came about.
A group of Maricopa County Sheriff's detention officers filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court on Monday seeking $8 million in compensation for unpaid overtime.
The detention officers filed a class-action complaint claiming they were required to attend pre-shift briefing sessions but weren't paid for the briefings.
Scott Drake interviews phoenix employment attorney Dan Barr.
A group of Maricopa County Sheriff's detention officers filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court on Monday seeking $8 million in compensation for unpaid overtime. The detention officers filed a class-action complaint claiming they were required to attend pre-shift briefing sessions but weren't paid for the briefings. Scott Drake interviews phoenix employmentattorney Dan Barr.
The RIAA prevails in it's case against music downloaderJoel Tenenbaum. Joel Tenenbaum appeared stoic as the jury announced that each of the 30 counts of willful infringement would cost him $22,500. The tab— while steep — is far less than the $4.5 million that the companies could have received had the jury imposed the maximum per-song damages allowed under law. Copyright law allows for damages of $750 to $30,000 for each copyright infringement and up to $150,000 for each willful infringement. Scott Drake interviews RIAA counsel Matthew Oppenheim.
The RIAA prevails in it's case against music downloaderJoel Tenenbaum. Joel Tenenbaum appeared stoic as the jury announced that each of the 30 counts of willful infringement would cost him $22,500. The tab— while steep — is far less than the $4.5 million that the companies could have received had the jury imposed the maximum per-song damages allowed under law. Copyright law allows for damages of $750 to $30,000 for each copyright infringement and up to $150,000 for each willful infringement. Scott Drake interviews RIAA counsel Matthew Oppenheim.
From Gerry Oginski, Esq.
A New York Medical Malpractice Trial Lawyer
June 15, 2009
Dear Mr. President,
The New York Times reported today (Obama Open to Reining in Medical Suits, June 15, 2009) that you were considering reining in medical malpractice lawsuits. Although you have expressed your opinion that you would not consider placing a cap on jury awards, I’d like you to read this letter before you give further thought to this potentially disastrous policy change.
A few years ago I had the privilege of representing a young man, aged 34, who worked as a mortgage broker. One day here in New York he suffered chest pain and went to a local hospital for evaluation. The physicians admitted him to the hospital for a few days to do a cardiac workup. Blood was drawn, a stress test was performed, and a physical examination was done. The patient was given a clean bill of health and told to follow up with a cardiologist after being discharged. Over the next three months this young and energetic young man continued to experience significant chest pain. On each visit to the cardiologist, the doctor performed a physical examination and shrugged off the patient’s complaints of pain as being “stress related.” Shortly after the third visit to the cardiologist, this young man experienced severe crushing pain which radiated down his arm.
He was taken by ambulance to his local emergency room where he was diagnosed as having a massive heart attack. His community Hospital was unable to care for this patient, and he was transferred him to a tertiary care center in Manhattan. This young man learned that 70% of his heart had died as a result of the massive heart attack he suffered. Because this patient’s heart no longer worked at the same capacity as it once did, all of the fluid would back up into his lungs and create a devastating condition known as severe pulmonary edema. His heart, which is essentially a never-ending pump was no longer able to pump its life-giving fluids throughout his body. In addition, this patient suffered kidney damage because his kidneys could no longer filter fluids traveling through his body.
He required 40 different pills to take each day in an attempt to maintain a fluid-electrolyte balance so that he would not go into renal failure and shock. He required pills to remove the excess fluid that had built up in his lungs. He became an insulin-dependent diabetic and was constantly fatigued because of his heart’s inability to provide the life-giving oxygen throughout his bloodstream to all of the necessary organs.
A once vibrant, energetic and a top-earning mortgage broker was now nothing more than a crippled man trapped inside his body. He could barely walk 10 feet without needing to stop and rest for a few minutes. This young man was told by his physicians that in order for him to improve, he would require a heart transplant. However, because of his co-morbid conditions, this patient was not a candidate for a heart transplant and was told that he had a decreased life expectancy without a new heart.
The New York Times reported today that you recently met with the head of the American Medical Association and discussed the fact that physicians who stay within standard practice guidelines should be afforded some freedom from liability. As the American Association of Justice has clearly pointed out, these standard practice guidelines were created by unregulated medical societies to be used primarily in a court of law in an attempt to debunk a plaintiff’s expert argument that there were departures from good and accepted care leading to permanent injury.
I had the privilege of representing this young man in his quest for compensation for the tragedy that befell him. Three independent medical experts who reviewed this patient’s records confirmed that when this patient initially was evaluated in his local hospital, the stress test records were not properly interpreted. The physician ignored the computer findings and the clinical presenting symptoms the patient had.
Significantly, each of the three independent medical experts who were consulted confirmed that if this patient’s heart disease had been recognized at the time he presented with chest pain, he could have had an elective heart bypass procedure with an excellent chance of success. Had the blood flow to this patient’s heart been timely restored before he suffered his massive heart attack, it would have prevented the unnecessary death of the majority of his patient’s heart.
As you know, no amount of compensation can alter a life-changing permanent physical injury. However, our system of justice requires that the injured victim be compensated not only for their pain and the suffering they have been caused but also for the economic damage they have suffered as a result of someone else’s wrongdoing.
Injured victims who are prohibited from recovering money to compensate them for their injuries would be unable to pay their medical bills, recoup their lost earnings, and earn a living because of their ongoing disability or death. To afford protections to physicians in an attempt to minimize lawsuits or payouts, fails to recognize the significant disparity between the learned professional and the patient, and also fails to take into account that the patient did nothing to cause or contribute to their devastating injuries.
Limiting an injured victim from seeking compensation fails to look at why we award compensation in the first place. If we have a Picasso painting that is valued at $5 million dollars and someone destroys it, that person is obligated to pay the value of that painting. The same is true for an injured victim. The difficulty arises when a jury is asked to award money for a victims’ pain and suffering. The bottom line is that a wrongdoer is still obligated to compensate the victim for their injuries.
Although we as attorneys recognize that there is much enmity between the doctor’s arguments about the root cause of medical malpractice and the trial lawyers arguments as to who is responsible for medical malpractice lawsuits, the fact remains that our system of civil Justice must reign supreme in protecting the rights of injured victims whether they reside in New York, California, Florida, or anywhere else in this great country. I remain curious as to why more physicians do not question their own medical malpractice insurance companies about their investment practices and the cyclical nature of the financial markets and how they influence the premiums that these companies charge for their physician members.
Rather than focus on the attorneys and their injured victims who bring cases in their respective states or on the standards of care that have been created to protect physicians in courtrooms throughout the United States, let us look closely at the insurance companies and call them to task for their investment strategies and the need to recoup income in a down market.
I thank you for the opportunity to express my feelings in this blog post and hope that these comments provide a steppingstone for understanding that changing the way injured victims are compensated for medical malpractice cases in the United States is not the solution.
Very truly yours,
Gerry Oginski
Renowned environmental lawyer and host of "Voices of the Law" Jan Schlichtmann has filed a class-action lawsuit claiming tolls collected on the Massachusetts Turnpike are an illegal tax.
Jan Schlichtmann's complaint filed Friday in Middlesex Superior Court on behalf of three drivers who use the highway seeks a refund that could amount to $300 million.
Schlichtmann tells Scott Drake that tolls collected on the Pike are "an unconstitutional expropriation of money" because they are used to pay for other projects, including the $15 billion Big Dig.
He says there is legal precedent supporting his clients.
Read the Boston Herald story
Renea Poppel, a passenger seriously injured in the Metra derailment
in Chicago on September 17, 2005, received a $29,560,081.15 jury verdict after a two-week trial presided over by Cook County Circuit Court Judge Thomas H. Hogan. The verdict is believed to be the largest mass transit crash verdict in Illinois history. The plaintiff was represented by Chicago personal injury attorneys Thomas A. Demetrio, Daniel M. Kotin and William T. Gibbs of the Corboy & Demetrio law.
A legal battle over parking garages for upscale Phoenix Arizona shopping center CityNorth could trigger major changes in how cities work with private developers and in the longtime practice of awarding sales-tax subsidies to them.
A high court decision against a $97.4 million subsidy offered to CityNorth by Phoenix potentially could scuttle other deals, create liability for cities and change the equation on developers’ decisions on whether to build high- profile projects.
Clint Bollick, director of the Goldwater Institute’s Scharf-Norton Center for Constitutional Litigation, said the group chose to challenge the CityNorth agreement because it was “the most egregious case of abuse we could find.”
Scott talks with Clint Bollick.
A Fullerton, Calif., judge on Monday increased the bail to $2 million for Andrew Gallo, the 22-year-old man charged in the traffic collision death of Angels pitcher Nick Adenhart and two other people, The Associated Press reported.
Gallo had nearly three times the legal blood-alcohol level when he ran a red light in his minivan Thursday and hit the car carrying Adenhart, the report said. The Associated Press also reported Orange County Superior Court Judge Roger B. Robbins continued Andrew Gallo's arraignment until June 8.
Also killed in the collision were the car's driver, Courtney Stewart, 20, of Diamond Bar, Calif., and passenger Henry Pearson, 25, of Manhattan Beach, Calif. Jon Wilhite, 24, of Manhattan Beach, was injured in the crash and has been upgraded to serious condition.
Gallo was charged with three counts of murder, felony drunken driving and fleeing the scene of a traffic accident causing death or injury, among other counts. If convicted of all counts, he could face nearly 55 years to life in prison.
Scott discusses the charges with Los Angeles criminal defense lawyer Mike Kraut