Daily Kos

My Review of "Blocking the Courthouse Door"

Sun Mar 11, 2007 at 03:03:14 PM PDT

Cross-posted to TortDeform.com last Thursday

A couple of years ago, while researching a book about tort reform, I discovered Stephanie Mencimer's reporting about the courts. Mencimer, an investigative journalist, has written extensively about how the scales of civil justice have been tipped in favor of corporations.

Her recently-published book, Blocking the Courthouse Door, explains how business interests and the Republican Party joined forces to make it tougher for the average citizen to get into court, let alone win. Mencimer gives Republican spinmeisters a great deal of credit for this phenomenon. Using phrases such as "tort reform," as well as "lawsuit abuse" and "junk science," they've had great success molding public opinion.

Mencimer also blames the media for spreading mistruths and even urban legends about litigation. Journalists are all too willing to repeat stories about greedy plaintiffs--today's version of Ronald Reagan's stereotypical "welfare queens"--and use them to paint a picture of an out-of-control civil justice system. What you won't find in those stories are the facts: the number of tort filings has fallen sharply, plaintiffs who go to trial often come home empty-handed, and the average judgment for winners has shrunk considerably.

Americans are unaware of these trends. They're still under the illusion that tort reform was aimed only at abusive litigation, and that they'll get a fair shake when it's time for them to go to court. Frank Cornelius found out otherwise, the hard way. After a botched surgical procedure, he racked up $5 million in medical bills, his marriage fell apart, and he ultimately killed himself. What makes this story ironic is that Cornelius was an insurance-company lobbyist who'd persuaded his home state of Indiana to impose a $500,000 cap on malpractice damages.

How did we get here? Mencimer traces the tort-reform movement to two sources: Big Tobacco and businessmen from Texas. A Philip Morris lobbyist named Karl Rove seized on tort reform as a way to grow the Texas Republican Party and, at the same time, starve the Democrats of cash. When the cigarette companies concluded that their courtroom winning streak was about to end, they joined forces with insurers to restrict lawsuits. They hid behind more palatable figures, such as Hilda Bankston, who allegedly sold her Mississippi drugstore after being caught in the crossfire between trial lawyers and drug companies. The facts of Bankston's story didn't stand up under investigation, which is not uncommon for tort reformers' "horror stories."

By the time the media figured out that tobacco money was funding it, the tort-reform movement had taken on a life of its own. Rove's game plan worked to perfection in Texas, where he helped elect a pro-business supreme court and launch George W. Bush's political career. Rove then took his show on the road, raising oodles of cash and using it to fund slash-and-burn campaigns against sitting justices. In my home state of Michigan, conservatives overturned 10 precedents in the first six months they had a majority. What was that again about "legislating from the bench"?

Tort reformers have demonized trial lawyers to the point that Americans view them as jet-setting high-rollers. However, the average trial lawyer's income is modest, and not very predictable either. New limits on lawsuits have made life tougher; in some states, entire firms have shut down. There are political repercussions as well. In Mississippi, tort reformers made trial lawyers' money radioactive and all but bankrupted the Democratic Party. [Aside: Now you know why Howard Dean sent those organizers into the state.]

Speaking of Mississippi, tort reformers branded Jefferson County a "tort hellhole." There's an element of racism at work here. Most so-called hellholes have a high percentage of poor and non-white residents, where corporate defendants are likely to feel the "Bronx effect," the supposed tendency of minority jurors to hand down big verdicts. Again, the facts don't bear out that claim: the most generous jurors live in the suburbs. Another myth spread by tort reformers is that punitive-damage awards have crippled corporations. However, such awards are not just rare, but so tightly capped that executives can engage in "Pinto math"--that is, calculate whether killing consumers is an acceptable cost of doing business.

One of tort reformers' biggest myths is that our courts are clogged with frivolous lawsuits. In real life, such suits are rare, and the reason should be obvious. As Mencimer observed, "the very definition of a frivolous lawsuit is one that isn't worth anything." She adds that efforts to weed out a few flimsy lawsuits end up suppressing valid ones.

Then there's the "malpractice crisis," which even President Bush has weighed in on. Mencimer argues that few doctors have been driven out of the profession by litigation, and those few probably should have been booted out for incompetence. As for the reformers' pet solution, caps on non-economic damages, it makes women and children expendable and shifts the costs of malpractice away from bad doctors.

Blocking the Courthouse Door does an excellent job of exposing tort reformers and their agenda. Unfortunately, its message can barely be heard above the right-wing noise machine. As for Mencimer, she's pessimistic about the future. The tort-reform movement shows no sign of slowing, and Americans have an irrational hatred of lawyers. It will take many more Frank Cornelius stores--and journalists willing to tell them--to turn the tide.

Note: You can read more of Stephanie Mencimer's commentary on justice issues on her blog, The Tortellini.

Tags: Stepanie Mencimer, civil justice, tort reform, courts, law, Karl Rove, access to justice, book review (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 64 comments

  •  Are we really that stupid? (5+ / 0-)

    Americans are unaware of these trends

     Never mind, I really don't want to know.

    ...once you're willing to say whatever it takes to win, you lose. ~~Dean

    by dkmich on Sun Mar 11, 2007 at 03:13:46 PM PDT

  •  Tort Reform... (14+ / 0-)

    means limiting the average citizen's right to appeal to courts for justice.  Hardly any of the "horror stories" withstand any kind of scrutiny at all.

    You want revolution?  Let's talk corporate personhood and rights.

  •  There is a disturbing trend in Federal court (8+ / 0-)

    to constrict the notion of "standing."

    Standing is the concept that someone who challenges an action in court must allege facts which, if true, would indicate that the person was/will be actually injured by the action challenged.

    Thus, it's not enough that the Government did something illegal for you to go into court to challenge it; you have to show that you are someone who has been or might be injured by the illegal action.

    The "might be" part is what is being slowly constricted.  While standing is an old concept, courts have at times demanded that a plaintiff show a very tight causal connection between that particular plaintiff and the action challenged.

    And since the deleterious effects of illegal actions are not always clear or immediate, the courts are thereby making it more difficult as a general matter to challenge them.

    Judges hear the "tort reform" framing too and are influenced by it, even though they know far more than the target audience for such claptrap.

    And, of course, politicians who are helped by the tort reform meme will appoint judges who believe in it.

    You can't reason someone out of something they weren't reasoned into. - Jonathan Swift

    by A Mad Mad World on Sun Mar 11, 2007 at 03:23:22 PM PDT

  •  Another bigco on the "crazy lawsuits" bandwagon (7+ / 0-)

    AOL, in its Money department, is pushing this meme for all it's worth.

    Last week at http://money.aol.com/... :

    "Crazy Lawsuits You Won't Believe - AOL Money & Finance
    outrageous, frivolous lawsuits cost you a taxpayer and consumer. But do people really get away with these crazy lawsuits?"

    Link doesn't work now, because after getting walloped in the comments for this, the link now redirects to
    http://money.aol.com/...

    "Wacky Warning Labels -- Americans are lawsuit crazy. And  the very real prospect of being  sued has caused some companies to be extra cautious..."

    Now, just why does AOL want to push so-called "tort reform"? From an email my little-brother-the-lawyer forwarded to me:

    • On February 7, 2007, AOL reached a $105 million settlement with the California State Teachers' Retirement System that claimed that AOL executives and bankers had artificially boosted the value of its stocks prior to buying Time Warner.
    • In December, 2006, AOL settled a securities fraud case for $50 million with the state of Alaska.
    • In September, 2006, AOL members joined together in a class action suing AOL for violating their privacy by posting their search queries online. AOL made public the search queries of over 600,000 members.
    • In January, 2006, AOL settled a class action for $25 million after the company was accused of wrongfully billing its customers.
    •  AOL and the CAN-SPAM Act (2+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      zic, mcfly

      Three years ago, the federal CAN-SPAM Act took effect, and it largely pre-empted state anti-spam laws. Many of those laws gave individual computer owners the right to sue spammers. There is no such provision in the federal law, which means that we have to rely on the good faith and diligence of Internet service providers like AOL to control spammers.

      Oh, and there's more spam than ever out there.

      John McCain's Straight Talk Express runs on fossil fuels.

      by Dump Terry McAuliffe on Sun Mar 11, 2007 at 03:54:49 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      •  And I wonder if the ISP providers who (2+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        Dump Terry McAuliffe, Halcyon

        aggresively pursued spam find themselves on the NSA short list? We recently had a case in Maine, brought before the Public Utilities Commission which oversees ISP's asking of our ISP's had turned data over to the NSA.

        A judge said the PUC cannot ask such questions (even though they're charged with enforcing both state and federal laws) because it had no standing to supercede classified efforts in the War on Terror. (Wording is my interpretation, I'll find links if you want.)

        "In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act." George Orwell

        by zic on Sun Mar 11, 2007 at 04:31:09 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

  •  Can't resist commenting that 42 U.S.C. section (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Dump Terry McAuliffe

    1983 is alive and well despite a two-term conservative Republican president and about six years of majority Republican Congress.  What does this mean for litigants:  if plaintiff prevails, plaintiff's attorney's fees and costs are part of the judgment to be paid by defendants.  Supposed to give plaintiffs who can't afford counsel an opportunity to litigate claims of federal civil rights violations against government actors.

    Result?  I am currently immersed in trying a case involving a coyote and some crippled birds, all under the guise of 42 U.S.C. section 1983.

    State tax dollars at work.

    No, this is not a tort lawsuit.  But, still . . . .

    •  Assault on attorney fees in 42 USC 1983 cases (1+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      suicide blonde

      In the 109th Congress, there was a bill in the House that would have denied attorney's fees to plaintiffs who prevailed in Establishment Clause cases. It was a lite version of the odious Constitution Restoration Act, which would strip federal courts of jurisdiction to hear Establishment Clause cases.

      Let's hope that those bills are dead for good.

      John McCain's Straight Talk Express runs on fossil fuels.

      by Dump Terry McAuliffe on Sun Mar 11, 2007 at 03:58:15 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      •  Its full employment for moi, but some of these (1+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        Dump Terry McAuliffe

        cases are ridiculous.

        •  I wonder how many of these silly cases (2+ / 0-)

          Recommended by:
          Dump Terry McAuliffe, oculus

          are an alternative to buying a lotto ticket by people who feel their ability to advance in this world is totally stymied.

          "In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act." George Orwell

          by zic on Sun Mar 11, 2007 at 04:32:34 PM PDT

          [ Parent ]

          •  There's some of that (3+ / 0-)

            Recommended by:
            zic, oculus, suicide blonde

            I know of several people who suffered personal injuries (not life-threatening) and saw it as an opportunity to play Liability Lotto. Problem is, they refused to listen to lawyers who tell them not to expect a big pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. They'd just pull out the Yellow Pages and call someone else.

            John McCain's Straight Talk Express runs on fossil fuels.

            by Dump Terry McAuliffe on Sun Mar 11, 2007 at 04:42:33 PM PDT

            [ Parent ]

            •  I know people who do that, (2+ / 0-)

              minor injury, file a law suit.

              Funny thing is, most of those people are hard-right republicans.

              It verifies my theory that we expect other people to behave the way we would behave; we measure others by our own inner yardstick and moral compass.

              "In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act." George Orwell

              by zic on Sun Mar 11, 2007 at 04:45:07 PM PDT

              [ Parent ]

              •  I'm involved in a real lawsuit, (3+ / 0-)

                Recommended by:
                Dump Terry McAuliffe, zic, marykk

                very complicated, in which I'm forced to sue my city for granting a building permit to my neighbor which effectively stole my ingress easement, as my neighbor is now using it as his parking area, after building a giant trophy house that is also too large for the zoning.

                The value of my home has been reduced to a tear-down, my privacy encroached. I had to put up a fence to prevent the neighbor from backing over my lawn to turn around. The city has run up my legal bills into the tens of thousands by forging documents, blackmailing a surveyor into creating a phony survey which moved the property line and did away with the easement, etc. The DA refused to indict on 5 felonies after a thorough investigation by the sheriff.... We've been solicited for bribes to produce evidence. And they all think we're just doing it to extort a pay-off.

                Crooked people think everybody is crooked and merely in it for the money. It seems that a majority of people are suspicious of others' motives and buy into 'tort reform' out of jealousy: they think everyone else is just out to make a killing and that it's not fair if they collect big settlements. Until it happens to them they don't have the education or imagination to understand what the legal system is for: to protect the little guy.

                •  Good Lord, what a nightmare (0+ / 0-)

                  How have you managed to stay sane during this? It reads like the civil justice version of Kafka's "The Trial."

                  John McCain's Straight Talk Express runs on fossil fuels.

                  by Dump Terry McAuliffe on Sun Mar 11, 2007 at 06:36:56 PM PDT

                  [ Parent ]

                  •  Between my personal trials and tribulations (4+ / 0-)

                    Recommended by:
                    loretta, Dump Terry McAuliffe, zic, marykk

                    and peak oil, global warming and BushCo, this is the worst five years (and counting) in my entire life. It has caused a great strain in my marriage as well. It's similar to being a whistleblower because we're up against a corrupt government. We were very altruistic in the beginning, knowing that we were only one case of many (others contacted us with their similar stories when word of our suit got out; but they all missed the 30-day deadline for taking action) and we decided to stick it out in order to force the city government to clean house. At this point we'd be half willing to take a big settlement to end it, cover our bills and loss of the value of our property, just so we can sell and move to Vermont, the bluest state we can think of.

                    Daily Kos, as RenaRF pointed out, has been a huge help in staying sane, because participating here is affirming of the empathy and love that we can share here.

                    •  I hear you, (2+ / 0-)

                      Recommended by:
                      Dump Terry McAuliffe, marykk

                      I've not had that experience, but did have trouble with a code enforcement officer while renovating my house and trying to maintain historic value vs. modern code (in ME, there are no requirements for building code in single family houses, except for fire, electrical, and plumbing.)

                      The inspector also wanted bricks from a chimney we tore down.

                      After weeks and weeks of harrasing us, I finally decided to give him the bricks, though I had plans for them.

                      We never saw him again.

                      I wonder if you're dealing with a similar situation -- corrupt officer, potential of bribes from your neighbor?

                      I wish you a happy end to it all.

                      "In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act." George Orwell

                      by zic on Sun Mar 11, 2007 at 07:32:37 PM PDT

                      [ Parent ]

                      •  Not so simple in our case. (1+ / 0-)

                        Recommended by:
                        zic

                        The DA refused to indict on five felonies submitted by the sheriff. No, it's not one insepector soliciting a bribe. The city has a pattern of granting building permits for plans that violate zoning,  the city density plan, others' property rights. The city council and the mayor know it, since we're suing the city, and no one has approached us to try to resolve it. Instead they are fighting us, stonewalling, committing perjury in court, every step of the way. Our fifth amendment rights were violatated; we're suing in federal court. The city planning department has been engaging in a coverup, including creating false documents and inserting them into the files, including the files of the surveyor who originally surveyed the property before the house was even built back in the early 1970s. How is this like your case? Our roadway easement has been appropriated and awarded to the neighbor. This is way more serious. I'm sure of the bribes from the neighbor's builder. There have been cases here where a city employee got a free swimming pool or addition on their house in the past.

                        But thanks for sharing your experience. I had a more positive experience with a code enforcement inspector in another state when I lived in a townhouse and suddenly my basement started flooding, caused by my neighbor's downspout being in disrepair and directing the rain water at my foundation. After politely offering to fix it myself, and being refused, I called the county and the inspector forced her to fix it. The flooding stopped.

        •  I'm curious (4+ / 0-)

          as to what kind of cases you're defending, because I really don't see that there's much gold for plaintiffs in the Section 1983 hills.

          It's true that plaintiffs will try to make a fortune on a civil rights case, but in my state, anyway, few of them even get as far as summary disposition.  More important, if we get rid of Section 1983, the cases with merit will never get heard, along with the ones that don't have merit.

          I have a friend who defended Section 1983 prisoner lawsuits on behalf of the state.  Now those guys could tell some horror stories about litigation run amuck.  Prisoners have full access to law libraries and lots and lots of time on their hands.  But without Section 1983, what lawyer is going to bother defending a prisoner whose legitimate rights are being trampled on?

          The federal courts (where nearly all prisoner lawsuits get filed) have a pretty effective screening process under a statute that filters out the bullshit 1983 actions.

          As for non-prisoner plaintiffs who don't fall under the statute, I for one do not take any Section 1983 plaintiffs on contingency in my practice (and nearly all of them are contingency cases) because I don't want to spend a year and thousands of dollars doing discovery and then get no-caused.  Very bad for my financial and emotional well-being.

          •  Even with the attorney's fees provision of 42 (2+ / 0-)

            Recommended by:
            loretta, Dump Terry McAuliffe

            U.S.C. section 1983, most of the inmate cases are pro per and allege deliberate indifference to serious medical needs.  Then the four foot high stack of the inmates medical records arrives, belying the claim the inmate never got to see the doctor, get meds, get to a specialist, and on and on.  

            •  Yeah (3+ / 0-)

              my friend handled a lot of complaints written in pencil on the back of odd pieces of paper.  Some very bright people behind bars who would have made good attorneys.  Others, not so much, but very persistent.  So it goes.

              The Sixth Circuit's filtering statute for prisoner lawsuits is still alive since the Supreme Court decidedJones v. Bock last year, but its teeth are gone:

                1. Whether satisfaction of the PLRA' s exhaustion requirement is a prerequisite to a prisoner's federal civil rights suit such that the prisoner must allege in his complaint how he exhausted his administrative remedies (or attach proof of exhaustion to the complaint), or instead, whether non-exhaustion is an affirmative defense that must be pleaded and proven by the defense.

                2. Whether the PLRA requires a prisoner to name a particular defendant in his or her administrative grievance in order to exhaust his or her administrative remedies as to that defendant and to preserve his or her right to sue them.

                3. Whether the PLRA prescribes a "total exhaustion" rule that requires a federal district court to dismiss a prisoner's federal civil rights complaint for failure to exhaust administrative remedies whenever there is a single unexhausted claim, despite the presence of other exhausted claims.

              This was a unanimous decision by the SCOTUS, so I don't think there's anything too far out here.

          •  Correction (2+ / 0-)

            But without Section 1983, what lawyer is going to bother representing a prisoner whose legitimate rights are being trampled on?

  •  I'm currently reading (3+ / 0-)

    People's History of the Supreme Court by Irons and looking forward to reading Mencimer's book in the near future.  Nice review!

    "Whenever a voice of moderation addresses liberals, its sole purpose is to stomp out any real sign of life." - James Wolcott

    by suicide blonde on Sun Mar 11, 2007 at 03:59:43 PM PDT

  •  Horror stories (7+ / 0-)

       In the mid-1970's, I filed (for my boss) one of the first suits against asbestos manufacturers.  The person who had asbestosis was, of course, dead.  When the news hit the papers about this first lawsuit, the phones rang off the hook.  Thousands of people were dead or dying, not knowing what was wrong with them.  The asbestos industry, however, had known that the stuff was lethal since 1947, yet was still putting it into products.  The dead and dying were mostly blue collar, plumbers, ship fitters, etc.  Then their wives started to die because they (the wives) had been laundering their husbands' clothing for years, inhaling asbestos fibers.  Asbestos fibers stick to the lungs like glue and irritate the tissue.  Actor Steve McQueen died of asbestosis.
       More recently, a few years ago I was defending a routine DUI case.  The defendant had chosen a blood test, as opposed to the more familiar breath test.  I learned that a single company had the sole contract for three Southern California counties.  In each instance, the contract had been awarded by the local District Attorney, without competitive bidding.  In each instance, the owner of the company had contributed heavily to the District Attorney's campaign coffers.
       As it turned out, the company identified its blood draw people as "nurses".  As it further turned out, they were not nurses.  They were not phlebotomists.  They were just people who were willing to do a job cheap.  We turned up all sorts of folks with adverse reactions to the blood draws.  We found that the supposedly "sterile" blood draw kits were being stored in the technicians' garages.
       We sued in Federal court and the matter was thrown out by a Federal judge who was a former US Attorney.  She then retired and is doing very well in private judging.
       The payoffs are all around us.  All one need do is dig up the evidence, as I did with the campaign contributions to District Attorneys.

    •  Another thing about asbestos litigation (3+ / 0-)

      Tort reformers make a big issue of the number of companies that declared bankruptcy, but many of them did so to get out from under the cloud of asbestos liability. If memory serves me right, one of those companies was Halliburton.

      That DUI story is amazing. It makes me wonder how many people who run rehab clinics and such are getting referrals because of their political connections. There's a lot of money to be made in the War on Drugs.

      John McCain's Straight Talk Express runs on fossil fuels.

      by Dump Terry McAuliffe on Sun Mar 11, 2007 at 04:22:32 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

    •  These kinds of stories (4+ / 0-)

      are why I seriously am considering throwing my support behind Edwards.

      "In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act." George Orwell

      by zic on Sun Mar 11, 2007 at 04:33:30 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      •  A thought on Edwards (4+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        Dump Terry McAuliffe, zic, debedb, marykk

           Edwards never lost a case in front of a jury.  As one who does this sort of thing for a living, I can tell you that convincing a jury is one of the most difficult things there is to do.  Since I defend those accused to crime, I don't even get the sympathy factor Edwards could play on for his injured clients.
           However, Edwards had to overcome the natural reluctance of juries to take money away from someone and give it to someone else.  (Remember that jurors do not know if there is insurance coverage.)
           Many jurors look at a plaintiff who has been injured as a money grubber.  To overcome all the biases and win (and win substantially) gives me hope that he can lead a nation.  It's a stretch, I realize, but if you've been there you'll understand.  (Go watch a trial some time.  You'll get a glimpse of what I mean.)

  •  The real crisis (3+ / 0-)

    in our courts is not civil suits.  If you have a tort claim, good luck getting a summary judgment hearing docketed sometime before doomsday.  The judge will keep sending you back into the arbitration room with the words, "you're both reasonable people; I'm sure you can work something out," only he looks a little more pissed off each time he says it.

    It's the war on drugs that's keeping our state and federal court system so busy.  This serves a number of conservative social agenda items: it keeps poor and minority males locked up so they can't demand their rights, it keeps civil claims by plaintiffs against corporations out of the courts and shunted into arbitration, and it erodes peoples' faith in government that justice can be done without taking matters into their own hands.

    The real tort reform in this country has taken the form of sentencing guidelines for drug offenders.

    •  "Government by contract" (6+ / 0-)

      The folks over at Tort Deform.com have done a lot of work on the unfairness of arbitration clauses. One notorious example, from Texas, of course, involved shoddily-built homes. The case against the homebuilder was damning--we're talking uninhabitability--but the arbitrator wouldn't award any remedy beyond additional repairs.

      Arbitration is just one form of government by contract. Homeowners' associations are another. People don't realize how many of their rights they've surrendered until they get into a dispute with the assocation--and wind up not only losing but being on the hook for a hefty award of attorney's fees. The only exception seems to be displaying the flag. Those cases get a lot of media coverage, which leads the association to back down.

      John McCain's Straight Talk Express runs on fossil fuels.

      by Dump Terry McAuliffe on Sun Mar 11, 2007 at 06:16:49 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      •  No way out (2+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        Dump Terry McAuliffe, mcfly

        More and more, binding arbitration gets foisted on consumers without any recourse in court afterward.  Amway Corporation used to do this to their reps; not sure whether they still do.  I suppose you always have the option of not signing the contract, but when one party is a huge corporation with armies of lawyers and the other party is a consumer, the playing field ain't exactly level.

    •  Ack (2+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      Dump Terry McAuliffe, marykk

      I meant mediation, not arbitration.  Although mediation sounds nice on paper, judges are practically forcing it on civil suit parties because their dockets are so plugged up with criminal cases.

      I had a recent health crisis and am chock full of meds right now.  Good thing I'm not making all these rookie mistakes in court.

  •  If you want to know where there heading (5+ / 0-)

    on a national level, look at Michigan.  Engler, the governor for years and a Republican Hack who could set standards for other wannabe hacks, has stacked our Supreme Court w/ people of his integrity and gutted basic protections for individuals.  

    Medical malpractice, owner liability, auto...you name it and they've gutted it, mangled it beyond repair or outright banned it.  The average person thinks any changes are there to protect against "frivolous lawsuits".  No one is more surprised then they when it turns out they are the "frivolous" ones who were blocked from court.

    So that I don't sound like I have a persecution complex, you should see what they've done to criminal law.  

    •  I'm from Michigan (2+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      loretta, real world chick

      And so is loretta, who posted here.

      Mary Ellen Gurwitz, who's general counsel to the Michigan Democratic Party, was quoted in "Blocking the Courthouse Door." She said that the way to predict the winner of a case before our state's supreme court was not to look at the law but at the identity of the parties: insurance companies win, criminal defendants lose, for instance.

      John Engler, who put those justices on the bench, is now the head of the National Association of Manufacturers. Part of his job is helping the Bushies find judicial nominees who are friendly to big corporations as well as the Religious Right.

      John McCain's Straight Talk Express runs on fossil fuels.

      by Dump Terry McAuliffe on Sun Mar 11, 2007 at 06:24:58 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  •  You can also read Stephanie Mencimer's (3+ / 0-)

    Daily Kos diaries at smencimer.

    More diaries on this topic at Tort Deform com.

    DTA: very nice, succinct book review.Thanks.

  •  Deny 100% of all Claims-Auto Insurance Conspiracy (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Dump Terry McAuliffe, debedb

    CNN just recently did one of their specials on the Auto insurance Companies conspiracy to deny all crash claims. They know that if they make you live on nothing while you are mangled and hurting they can force you to take next to nothing or because they have propogandized so extensively about fraudulant claims that juries will screw you and now lawyers won't help you either. Welcome to America where only the rich survive.

    •  State Farm v. Campbell (1+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      marykk

      That was a 2003 Supreme Court decision that put additional limits on punitive damages. The facts of the case were infuriating: the insurance company essentially adopted a scorched-earth strategy toward claimants.

      Justice Ginsberg, who dissented in Campbell, wrote:

      Ray Summers, “the adjuster who handled the Campbell case and who was a State Farm employee in Utah for almost twenty years,” described several methods used by State Farm to deny claimants fair benefits, for example, “falsifying or withholding of evidence in claim files.” Id., at 121a. A common tactic, Summers recounted, was to “unjustly attac[k] the character, reputation and credibility of a claimant and mak[e] notations to that effect in the claim file to create prejudice in the event the claim ever came before a jury.”

      Adorable.

      John McCain's Straight Talk Express runs on fossil fuels.

      by Dump Terry McAuliffe on Sun Mar 11, 2007 at 08:31:33 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

    •  My Torts Prof (1+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      Dump Terry McAuliffe

      in law school used to refer to everyinsurer as "Standard Denial Insurance Co."  At the time, I thought it was a clever joke.

      If you think you're too small to be effective, you've never been in the dark with a mosquito.

      by marykk on Sun Mar 11, 2007 at 08:40:25 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  •  Don't forget.... (0+ / 0-)

    ....the right wing-paid junkets to luxury vacation locations for Federal Court judges to educate them on various right wing approaches to litigation.

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