Archives

Categories

Registration

Resources

Archive for June, 2010

Michael Jackson Wrongful Death Lawsuit

Monday, June 28th, 2010

By Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog, Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog.

Michael Jackson's father has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against his son’s doctor. The lawsuit alleges what you would expect: the doctor's negligence was the cause of Michael Jackson's wrongful death.

This wrongful death case is arguably worth over $1 billion because of the potential future lost wages. The only bigger malpractice case I can imagine: anyone touching Tiger Woods before Bimbogate. Oh, and Oprah. How could I forget Oprah? Actually, you could throw Bill Gates in there or a few others. I'm overstating my point. Still, you get the idea. The potential damages in a wrongful death case involving Michael Jackson would be incredibly high.

But the problem is that most malpractice cases, including this one, are damages limited by the insurance the doctor has which, in this case, is reportedly $1 million. But given the potential criminal conviction and the damages, I would not be surprised to see the malpractice insurer rushing to put up the $1 million policy if it has not already been offered.

Originally posted at Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog. Please visit http://www.marylandinjurylawyerblog.com/.

Kagan Confirmation Hearing

Monday, June 28th, 2010

By Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog, Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog.

I can't stop working to listen to the Elena Kagan confirmation hearing. But there has been so much talk of the questions Elena Kagan will get, it is hard not to check in.

NPR is live blogging through Tom Goldstein's SCOTUSblog. I love the NPR disclaimer on this: "While SCOTUSblog has relationships with the law firms of Akin Gump and Howe & Russell, it covers the work of the Supreme Court as an impartial, journalistic entity." I think I'll start putting this kind of disclaimer on the Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog. To make the Chinese Wall particularly high, I'll change my shoes and my socks to transition from personal injury lawyer to impartial journalist. You won't see the change but you will have to just trust me.

Getting that off my chest, Goldstein's live blog is worth reading. Also worth reading, for a very different reason, is David Lat and Elie Mystal's live blog of the confirmation hearings on Above the Law. I'm not sure who is doing most of the writing but this is quality stuff. I can't imagine Above the Law is a high paying gig. If I'm any judge of talent, both of these writers will leave Above the Law for greener pastures in the next year. (Then again, I would have bet the farm against Brett Favre last season.)

Originally posted at Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog. Please visit http://www.marylandinjurylawyerblog.com/.

Supreme Court to hear Arizona immigration law challenge

Monday, June 28th, 2010

By Breaking Legal News, Breaking Legal News.

The nation's highest court agreed to decide whether the 2007 state law infringed on federal immigration powers and should be struck down.

The law at issue in the case is different from the strict new Arizona immigration law passed earlier this year and criticized by President Barack Obama that requires the police to determine the immigration status of any person suspected of being in the country illegally.

But the Supreme Court's eventual decision in the case, depending on how the justices rule, could end up affecting the pending legal challenges to the new law as well.

The Obama administration last month urged the Supreme Court to rule that the 2007 law was preempted by federal immigration rules and would disrupt the careful legal balance that the U.S. Congress struck nearly 25 years ago.

The Arizona law suspends or revokes licenses to do business in the state in order to penalize employers who knowingly hire illegal immigrants. It also requires employers to use an electronic verification system to check the work-authorization status of employees through federal records.

The Legal Arizona Workers Act was adopted after a federal immigration overhaul law died in Congress in 2007.

Originally posted at Breaking Legal News. Please visit http://breakinglegalnews.com/.

Bankruptcy judge approves Visteon disclosure plan

Monday, June 28th, 2010

By Breaking Legal News, Breaking Legal News.

A Delaware bankruptcy court judge on Friday cleared the way for auto parts supplier Visteon Corp. to begin soliciting votes on its proposed reorganization plan, which would leave unsecured bond holders in control of the company.

Overruling objections from certain shareholders and holders of unsecured trade claims, Judge Christopher Sontchi approved documents describing Visteon's proposed reorganization plan and the process for creditors to vote on it.

Creditors will have until July 30 to vote on the plan, and Sontchi scheduled a plan confirmation trial to begin Sept. 28.

The shareholders could receive nothing under Visteon's plan, and the trade creditors would get no more than 50 cents on the dollar for their claims, which total about $48 million. Their attorneys argued that the disclosure statement outlining Visteon's plan did not contain enough information on the company's valuation, and that the plan itself was unconfirmable because of how it treats various creditor groups.

Attorneys for Visteon argued that the objections to the disclosure statement were without merit, or that they should be addressed at what promises to be a contentious plan confirmation trial stretching over two weeks.

Originally posted at Breaking Legal News. Please visit http://breakinglegalnews.com/.

Ore. trial court to reconsider $100M tobacco case

Monday, June 28th, 2010

By Breaking Legal News, Breaking Legal News.

The Oregon Supreme Court has ruled that Philip Morris does not have to pay $100 million in punitive damages to the family of a smoker who sued the tobacco giant over its low-tar cigarettes.

The case, however, is going to another jury to decide just how much the death of Michelle Schwarz from lung cancer in 1999 will cost Philip Morris — and legal experts say it could easily be another big award.

A Multnomah County jury in Portland originally awarded the Schwarz family $150 million in March 2002 before the trial judge reduced it to $100 million.

On Thursday, the Oregon Supreme Court vacated the $100 million award and sent the case back to the trial court to reconsider the punitive damages after ruling the judge failed to properly instruct the jury.

The court said the judge should have told the jury it could not punish Philip Morris directly for harm caused to others besides Schwarz.

But the court also supported the trial judge, who had rejected jury instructions the tobacco company had requested.


Originally posted at Breaking Legal News. Please visit http://breakinglegalnews.com/.

US top court extends gun rights to states, cities

Monday, June 28th, 2010

By Breaking Legal News, Breaking Legal News.

The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday extended gun rights to every state and city in the nation in a ruling involving Chicago's 28-year-old handgun ban.

By a 5-4 vote and splitting along conservative and liberal lines, the nation's highest court extended its landmark 2008 ruling that individual Americans have a constitutional right to own guns to all the cities and states for the first time.

The right to bear arms, under the Second Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, previously applied to just federal laws and federal enclaves, like Washington D.C., where the court struck down a similar handgun ban in its 2008 ruling.

Gun rights have been one of the country's most divisive social, political and legal issues. Some 90 million people in the United States have an estimated 200 million guns.

The United States is estimated to have the world's highest civilian gun ownership rate. Gun deaths average about 80 a day, 34 of them homicides, according to U.S. government statistics.

The ruling, issued on the last day of the Supreme Court's term, was a victory for four Chicago-area residents, two gun rights groups and the politically powerful National Rifle Association.

It was a defeat for Chicago, which defended its law as a reasonable exercise of local power to protect public safety. The law and a similar handgun ban in suburban Oak Park, Illinois, were the nation's most restrictive gun control measures.

"We hold that the Second Amendment right is fully applicable to the states," Justice Samuel Alito concluded for the court majority in the 45-page ruling.

Originally posted at Breaking Legal News. Please visit http://breakinglegalnews.com/.

Gibson’s Lawyer Slams Grigorieva’s Claims

Monday, June 28th, 2010

By Breaking Legal News, Breaking Legal News.

Mel Gibson’s lawyer slammed Oksana Grigorieva’s claims that she had been treated cruelly by Mel and that he hadn’t been paying child support.  His lawyer actually termed her claims as “sensational allegations” because they were meant to simply tarnish his name in the media.

Right now, the ex-couple is battling over visitation rights.  Oksana received a restraining order last week causing Gibson’s lawyers to ask for a modification so the star can visit his daughter and spend time with her.

Kolodny, Gibson’s lawyer, told TMZ, “Oksana’s deceitful conduct in trying to terminate Mel’s access to his daughter continues.”

Last week, Oksana filed a restraining order against Gibson, and began spreading the rumor that he was not paying any child support.  The actor already has a tarnished image in the media due to past mistakes he made such as the anti-Semitic remarks.  It will be interesting to see how this whole debacle resolves between this Hollywood couple.

Originally posted at Breaking Legal News. Please visit http://breakinglegalnews.com/.

Medicare Secondary Payer Enhancement Act of 2010

Friday, June 25th, 2010

By Atlanta Injury Law Blog , Ken Shigley.

One of the biggest headaches today in representing senior citizens in personal injury cases is the Medicare Secondary Payer Act.  Whenever Medicare has paid for treatment, or may in the future pay for any treatment even tangentially related, it may demand repayment out of a personal injury settlement. So far, so good, at least in abstract theory.
 
In practice, however, the system is absolutely riddled with inefficiency. While Medicare's contract with its sole source recovery contractor, Chickasaw Nations Industries, calls for providing a "conditional payment letter" within 30 days after request, that does not happen. We have had cases where it took 6 to 12 months to get the "conditional payment" number from them, and even then it is not a reliable number.
 
Legislation now pending in Congress, HR 4796, the Medicare Secondary Payer Enhancement Act of 2010 would correct this problem by requiring the Center for Medicare Services (CMS) to respond to requests for their lien amount within 60 days. Self-funded by a $30 application fee, this bill costs the taxpayers nothing, and it has the broad support of coalitions in insurance, large businesses and plaintiffs' trial lawyers, all of whom have been frustrated by the inefficiency of the current system. The bill may not be perfect, but it is a vast improvement over the current mess.
 
The Medicare Secondary Payer system at present makes it extremely difficult to reasonably settle cases and impairs access to justice by making it uneconomical for lawyers to represent seniors on Medicare in injury cases. HR 4796 should be passed.
 

 

Ken Shigley is president-elect of the State Bar of Georgia and author of Georgia Law of Torts: Trial Preparation & Practice. A Certified Civil Trial Advocate of the National Board of Trial Advocacy, he has been listed as a "Super Lawyer" (Atlanta Magazine), among the "Legal Elite" (Georgia Trend Magazine), and in the Bar Register of Preeminent Lawyers (Martindale).

Mr. Shigley is a truck and bus safety trial attorney representing seriously injured people and families of people killed in tractor trailer, big rig, semi, intermodal container freight, log truck, cement truck, dump truck, log truck and bus accidents statewide in Georgia.  He has extensive experience representing parties in interstate trucking collision cases, He served as chair of the Southeastern Motor Carrier Litigation Institute and is a national board member of the Interstate Trucking Litigation Group of the American Association for Justice. In addition to trucking litigation, he has broad experience in products liability, catastrophic personal injury, wrongful death, spinal cord injury, brain injury and burn injury cases.

This post is subject to our ethical disclaimer.

Originally posted at Atlanta Injury Law Blog . Please visit http://www.atlantainjurylawblog.com/ .

Maryland Lawsuits: We Are Having a Sale

Friday, June 25th, 2010

By Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog, Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog.

The fee to file a lawsuit in Maryland will rise $30 to $155 on July 1st. Sue now at the low, low price of $125.

Originally posted at Maryland Injury Lawyer Blog. Please visit http://www.marylandinjurylawyerblog.com/.

American Bar Association Finds Kagan “Well-Qualified”

Friday, June 25th, 2010

By Breaking Legal News, Breaking Legal News.

The American Bar Association Standing Committee on the Federal Judiciary has rated U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice nominee Elena Kagan as “well-qualified,” the highest mark the committee offers.

Since 1953, the ABA has had a role in reviewing the qualifications of federal court nominees, including Supreme Court nominees.  A committee of 15 members — two from the Ninth Circuit, one from each of the 12 other federal judicial circuits and one who serves as chair — measures the individual’s integrity, professional competence and judicial temperament. 

While the standing committee insulates its work from all other activities of the association, ABA president Carolyn Lamm is familiar with the procedures used to evaluate a nominee’s qualifications.  Lamm served as chair of the committee from 1995 to 1996. 

Lamm explained, “In terms of legal competence, you’re looking at legal, analytical ability.  You’re looking at what they’ve written, how they’ve argued, whether they’ve argued — how they’ve done it.  We listen to opponents, or from those on the same side and from judges to find out, how did they do as lawyers and what is their legal ability?”

A comprehensive evaluation is conducted by interviewing a broad spectrum of the legal community, reviewing pertinent materials written by the nominee, and interviewing the nominee personally.  After the evaluation is complete, the findings are assembled into a report which is reviewed by each member of the standing committee who then individually rates the nominee as either “well-qualified,” “qualified” or “not-qualified.”  The majority vote constitutes the official rating of the ABA standing committee.

To merit a “well-qualified” rating, a Supreme Court nominee must be a preeminent member of the legal profession, have outstanding legal ability and exceptional breadth of experience, and meet the highest standards of integrity, professional competence and judicial temperament.  Kagan’s well-qualified rating was unanimous with one abstention.

Investigations of nominees to the U.S. Supreme Court differ in respect to other federal nominees in that they are conducted after the president has selected a nominee; they involve all members of the standing committee; a team or teams of law professors examine the nominee’s legal writings; and a group of practicing lawyers with Supreme Court experience also examines the writings.

Kagan currently serves as solicitor general of the United States.  She was nominated to fill the seat of John Paul Stevens, who will step down at the end of the 2009-2010 Supreme Court term.

When asked how the standing committee evaluates nominees who may not have had prior judicial experience, standing committee chair Kim Askew noted, “There are many, many judges who have served on courts who have never been judges and are very effective judges.  We look at what they do and we go to the three criteria — professional competence, integrity, and temperament — and we look at what they have done in their legal careers in the practice of law, which may or may not be on a bench.”

The past five U.S. Supreme Court nominees were also found well-qualified by the committee.

The Senate Judiciary Committee is scheduled to begin its confirmation hearing for Kagan on June 28.  Kim Askew, the chair of the Standing Committee on the Federal Judiciary, has been invited to testify relating to the standing committee’s rating.

Originally posted at Breaking Legal News. Please visit http://www.breakinglegalnews.com/.