October 31st, 2008

Linkworthy (Halloween Edition)

Beck/Herrmann at Drug and Device Law with a post title that should draw you in: A Halloween Special: Bodysnatchers! And Jujyfruits! These guys certainly don’t suffer in the writing style department;

TortsProf Bill Childs has his Personal Injury Law Round-Up, which is not only his 13th edition, but comes with two bonus Halloween photos (warning, cute kids alert);

Ron Miller has a surprising piece debunking the myth of big Christmastime verdicts;

LemonJustice should have held this post from yesterday for today, about Allstate and their commercials and what they don’t tell you about their own conduct and how it can hurt you;

f/k/a on the sex offender Halloween sign;

The UCL Practitioner hosted Blawg Review #183, with posts from all over California, which is kinda scary from a New Yawker’s perspective;

And a special Halloween post from Ed. at Blawg Review on the upcoming election. Have you written anything about the election worthy of the Blawg Review?

 

October 31st, 2008

P.T. Barnum Was Wrong On Sarah Palin

The Sarah Palin debacle contains a lesson for trial lawyers. It’s a lesson on playing a trial straight, without shtick. And a lesson that runs contrary to what legendary showman P.T. Barnum was alleged to have said:

Nobody ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American people.

Today a New York Times / CBS pol shows that the public doesn’t believe Sarah Palin is ready for the job. According to this NYT story (Growing Doubts on Palin Take a Toll, Poll Finds):

All told, 59 percent of voters surveyed said Ms. Palin was not prepared for the job, up nine percentage points since the beginning of the month. Nearly a third of voters polled said the vice-presidential selection would be a major factor influencing their vote for president, and those voters broadly favor Senator Barack Obama, the Democratic nominee.

And according to this CBS story:

A third of voters saying the vice presidential nominees will factor in their vote, and here the Democrats have the edge: While 74 percent say Democratic vice presidential nominee Joe Biden is prepared to be vice president, just 35 percent say GOP counterpart Sarah Palin is prepared for the job.

The lesson to draw from this mess? Argue the evidence. Jurors will feel insulted if you do otherwise. (Of course, this doesn’t necessarily explain how and why voters did what they did in other elections.)

The quote, by the way, most likely wasn’t Barnum’s, but belonged to H. L. Mencken. If you decide you want to believe what you read on the Internet.

 

October 29th, 2008

Preemption v. Preemption v. Preemption (Wyeth v. Levine)

With oral argument scheduled for Monday in Wyeth v. Levine, three separate stories leaped off the screen at me. This included a devastating report of FDA officials being deeply opposed to Bush Administration policies regarding the issue of federal preemption of state law suits over drug cases, calling justification for new regulations “false and misleading.”

So here are the three stories in a nutshell: One from the standpoint of defendants, one from plaintiffs, and one from the government. (That’s plaintiff/musician Diane Levine at right. Her below the elbow amputation came from a drug injected in an improper manner that caused gangrene. The suit alleged, and the jury agreed, that the drug labels should have specifically warned that that type of injection should not be used.)

But before hitting those three posts, here is a quickie primer to get you up to speed in case you are late to the discussion, which I summarized a week ago (Preemption Gone Wild (How Bush Pushed Immunity for Big Business)). With preemption, a federal law that grants immunity will supersede a state law that allows lawsuits. But since President Bush couldn’t get Congress to agree to anti-consumer laws that grant immunity to corporations, drug companies try to argue that such preemption is implied by virtue of a conflict. Since there happens to be a presumption against preemption, that creates a problem for those corporations. They try to solve that problem with helpful politicians doing by executive fiat at an agency what they could not do in Congress; for example, by placing a corporate immunity clause in the preamble of an FDA rule that says if a drug is FDA approved, you can’t sue. Thus, drug companies ask the courts to imply that preemption exists even though it was not expressly legislated.

Now on to the three blogs:

First in the dock is the Drug and Device Blog — whose authors defend pharmaceutical companies from drug lawsuits — with Everything You Need To Know About Wyeth v. Levine, From A Defense Perspective. This lengthy piece summarizes all of their points about preemption and why drug companies deserve immunity if the FDA approves a drug, which is the number one thrust of this blog. The argument essentially ignores defects and under-funding in the drug-approval process.

Next up is from the Center for Justice and Democracy, a consumer rights group dedicated to preserving the civil justice system. They issued a report today: THE BITTEREST PILL — How Drug Companies Fail To Protect Women and How Lawsuits Save Their Lives. The report, according to the authors, “tells the story of the hyped marketing to women of a disproportionate number of unsafe drugs and devices resulting in countless deaths and injuries.” As you may guess, they aren’t too keen on immunity being granted to a company that was negligent, and whose negligence injured people. It’s part of that whole personal responsibility thing that conservatives usually talk about, except when it comes to big business.

And last up comes from Pharmalot, with this — Report: FDA Staff Objected To Preemption Policy. Here is the devastating lede:

Key FDA career officials strongly objected to Bush Administration drug labeling regulations that would preempt state liability lawsuits, according to a report just released by the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. The staffers viewed the justifications for the regs were “false and misleading” and warned the changes would deprive consumers of timely info about drug safety, the report concludes.

This report is like sticking a dagger into the heart of the drug companies that argue for preemption because a drug is FDA-approved. For if the approval process is tainted, then we have the age-old problem of garbage-in-garbage-out.

I’ve filed this under tort “reform” because that is what it is. Except is a way of closing the courthouse door by a quiet administrative rule rather than a policy fight in a legislative body.

See also:

 

October 28th, 2008

The Ethical Problem of Electing Judges

New York elects judges, and when judges are up for election, where to do they get their contributions from? That’s right. Lawyers. Lawyers that often appear before them. The judicial candidates are forbidden from asking who gave what. But the information is available to the public on the internet.

Mark Lagerkvist at Judicial Reports has a piece tomorrow on this subject and the problems inherent in such a system (The System is the Crime). The piece focuses on the contributions from the well-regarded Albany firm of Powers and Santola, a firm that does what I do, plaintiffs personal injury and medical malpractice.

And the article is well worth the read because John Powers, a former President of the New York State Trial Lawyers Association, acknowledges the problems inherent in the system as he also discusses his firm’s contributions of $10,000 and more to various judges before whom the firm practices.

When election day comes, as it is now, my local train station is always chock fully of politicians showing their faces and talking to people. Judicial candidates make regular appearances. And that is one thing I was never comfortable with; politicking judges.

While judges can never be above politics — and anyone who watches a Supreme Court confirmation proceeding can see that — the idea of asking for votes doesn’t seem to be an improvement over the appointment process. It debases the judiciary and, I think, leaves a taste in the public eye that the judges are little more than politicians.

I’d like to see nominations by the executive and confirmations by a super-majority of the legislature (or legislative committee). That would protect everyone against radicals appearing from the wings of either party. It seems to be the safest way to get protect the public. And the judiciary.

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Note on courtroom sketch – That is Judge John Sirica with H.E. Haldeman on the witness stand. The original hangs in my office.

 

October 27th, 2008

Stevens Convicted (I Was Wrong)


Senator Ted Stevens of Alaska was just convicted of seven corruption charges. So when I suggested the other day about a deadlocked jury possibly leading to an acquittal, or at least a compromised verdict, I was wrong.

There was one juror that was having “violent outbursts” that I assumed was going to cause great problems. (And there was another juror that went home due to family problems.)

Will we get to find out what happened with respect to the two above jurors? Not right now. According to the judge:

The jurors have unanimously told me that no one has any desire to speak to any member of the media. They have asked to go home and they are en route home.

Of course, that often changes.