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FORD
10-29-2004, 09:09 AM
Cheney Wants Corporate Regulation... of Citizens

October 29, 2004
By Jeff Milchen

"We think lawsuit abuse is a serious problem in this country," proclaimed Dick Cheney while debating John Edwards in early October. That "runaway lawsuits" theme is repeated at almost every Bush/Cheney campaign stop.

Knowing the record of his own company, I can't help wondering whether Cheney is like an alcoholic seeking help, for during his five-year reign as CEO, Halliburton and its subsidiaries filed more than 150 separate court actions (documented by Halliburton Watch). Those lawsuits pursued injunctions, evictions, and attempted to collect alleged debts from other corporations and individuals, sometimes for as little as $1,500.

But Halliburton is just part of a larger pattern. A recent study by Public Citizen indicates that U.S. businesses file four times as many lawsuits as individual citizens - and there are 281 million Americans and only 7 million U.S. corporations.

The study covered the only four U.S. jurisdictions that require records with enough detail to distinguish corporate-initiated lawsuits from those filed on behalf of individuals: Mississippi, Arkansas, Philadelphia and Cook County (Chicago and vicinity).

And what about the "frivolous lawsuits" we hear about constantly? The same Public Citizen study noted, "businesses and their attorneys were 69 percent more likely than individual tort plaintiffs and their attorneys to be sanctioned by federal judges for filing frivolous claims or defenses."

Scrolling down big business' hit list, next up is "runaway awards." Here again, if large awards are a serious problem, corporations seem to be the primary cause. Last November, National Law Journal reported that eight of the year's 10 largest awards to date involved corporations suing each other.

And while Cheney blamed frivolous lawsuits for their "devastating impact" on health-care costs during the VP debate, perhaps he should focus on suits filed by pharmaceutical corporations, rather than injured citizens.

In 2001, a federal court ruled that Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMS) filed frivolous patent-infringement lawsuits to block the introduction of generic competition for its lucrative anti-anxiety drug, BuSpar. Despite "losing" the claim, BMS delayed competition for four months, during which it gouged Americans for about four times the price it could charge in a competitive market. BMS's actions were so egregious that the Federal Trade Commission ordered the company to halt "any fraudulent or objectively baseless claim or otherwise engage in sham litigation."

Again, this is an example of systemic abuse. As Merrill Goozner documents in his exhaustively-researched book, The $800 Million Pill, baseless claims to extend patent monopolies are routine practice for BMS and other drug manufacturers.

Of course, the corporate lobbyists behind calls for "tort reform" aren't so concerned by these cases. Class-action lawsuits - which help average citizens harmed by corporate negligence or malevolence to gain compensation and punish the offender - are their target. So while Congress considers capping class-action punitive damages (awards in such cases have not increased over the past decade) at $250,000, the bill wouldn't touch frivolous suits like those filed by BMS.

I've worked for years organizing and advocating for independent business owners, and learned there are indeed a few unscrupulous lawyers filing sleazy lawsuits. Since large corporations generally will fight any questionable lawsuit, small businesses that can't afford the time or risk of fighting are the usual targets.

We should strive to eliminate such suits and rid the legal profession of those who file them, but a $250,000 cap on punitive damages would do little to discourage the offenders. Their aim is to coerce smaller out-of-court settlements, not go to trial.

That cap on damages, however, would endanger every American, because the amount is inadequate to deter or change criminal practices at large companies. Consider that BMS voluntarily paid more than $500 million to victims of its fraudulent patent claim, and you quickly see that a $250,000 punishment is insufficient to deter large corporate criminals.

When asked during the debate if he thought Senator Edwards, a former trial lawyer, was part of the lawsuit problem, Cheney responded, "I'm not familiar with his cases." (As if Bush campaign staffers didn't scrutinize every lawsuit the man ever filed). But as The Washington Post noted, Edwards' previous political opponents seeking dirt "came away frustrated because Edwards' clients were almost universally sympathetic figures." Like most trial lawyers, he helped genuine victims get justified compensation and deter wrongdoers from harming others.

The attack on trial lawyers is really an attack on citizens' ability to sue corporations, and it goes far beyond this election cycle; it's part of a long-term assault on the rights of citizens and small business owners to hold corporations accountable via the courts. Having successfully undermined or dismantled regulations on big business in many realms, the next corporate agenda item is to regulate us - to strip citizens of our right to punish corporate crime and criminals.

We can and should find ways to curb groundless lawsuits, including disbarring lawyers deemed by judges and peers to have repeatedly filed unjustified lawsuits (and nobody despises unscrupulous attorneys more than honest ones). Genuine improvements, however, must work narrowly to discourage the small fraction of suits that truly are frivolous, not shield giant corporations from one of our few functioning tools to hold them accountable.

Jeff Milchen directs ReclaimDemocracy.org, a non-profit organization devoted to restoring citizen authority over corporations. The organization recently launched several local chapters and created a new online forum for strategizing on corporate power and democracy issues.

ODShowtime
10-29-2004, 10:44 AM
That's a good point. If Edwards really ever had any shady cases, we'd have heard about it.

Big Train
10-29-2004, 12:44 PM
These essays just keep getting sadder and sadder, reaching more and more. The kind of lawsuits we are talking about here are the McDonalds "You burned me when I poured hot coffee on myself" lawsuits. Not legitimate lawsuits. There is no irony here (which the author pathetically attempts to create).

Angel Boy, err Edwards, is a shakedown artist. People pay him to go away, as he is happy to make it uncomfortable until you pay and avoid a trial. His suits go for maximum and stupid amounts of money for pain and suffering, which more often than not he gets, which makes insurance more expensive for all and drives doctors to play defensive, putting there own career ahead of their patients (which I'm sure is text that can be applied to any of his briefs).

For all the problems the drug companies cause, these types of lawsuits are right behind it in what is truly fucking up healthcare, although I am SURE Mr. Moore will skim right over that, unless he can find a Repub doing the same shit. Then it will be half the film.

FORD
10-29-2004, 01:02 PM
Cheney is trying to claim that there's no difference between suing Mickey D's because you spill hot coffee on yourself - and - suing a pharmaceutical company because you have an autistic child, thanks to shitty drugs that weren't thoroughly tested.

There IS a major difference. And while you, I and John Edwards will all agree that the coffee lawsuit was ludicrous, suing a swimming pool equipment company because one of their pumps literally sucked out a child's intestines and left her injured for life definitely is not.

Such companies deserve to be financially punished to the point where they go out of business, because they don't care enough about the safety of their own products to be IN business. If you want to pass a law that says the lawyer has to donate a sizeable chunk of that settlement to charity, I'm all for that, but letting irresponsible corporations off the hook is NOT acceptable.

ODShowtime
10-29-2004, 01:05 PM
If ya'll think most US corporations care about product safety... it's too fuckin late for you.

Big Train
10-29-2004, 01:05 PM
Nobody said they shouldn't pay, but it is caps that certainly need to be in place. How much is enough? If they paid her millions and millions for her injuries and took the product off the market (millions and millions more, plus the livelihood of thousands of workers at stake), that isn't enough? We have to get millions and millions more on top of that, of which the trail lawyers (i.e. Edwards) get up to 40% off the top? How is that erasing anything or helping anyone?

ODShowtime
10-29-2004, 01:07 PM
Originally posted by Big Train
the trail lawyers (i.e. Edwards) get up to 40% off the top? How is that erasing anything or helping anyone?


I agree that their cut is a little excessive sometimes.

FORD
10-29-2004, 01:11 PM
Originally posted by ODShowtime
If ya'll think most US corporations care about product safety... it's too fuckin late for you.

Maybe if they were held accountable they would. It's too bad that Ralph Nader doesn't go back to doing what he was good at (holding corporations accountable) instead of seeing how badly he can fuck up an election :(

FORD
10-29-2004, 01:13 PM
Originally posted by Big Train
Nobody said they shouldn't pay, but it is caps that certainly need to be in place. How much is enough? If they paid her millions and millions for her injuries and took the product off the market (millions and millions more, plus the livelihood of thousands of workers at stake), that isn't enough? We have to get millions and millions more on top of that, of which the trail lawyers (i.e. Edwards) get up to 40% off the top? How is that erasing anything or helping anyone?

Like I said, if the lawyer's profit margin is the issue, pass a law and make them donate half their profit to charity. Either the corporations will clean up their act or we'll cure some fucked up diseases. Sounds like a win-win to me.

Big Train
10-29-2004, 01:13 PM
Why it is the same job...holding corporations accountable. Perhaps he is a specialist best suited to the auto industry.

Big Train
10-29-2004, 01:17 PM
Well, the lawyers cut is a bit excessive, but it is high stakes poker. It is a contingency case and they lay out all the cash. The amount the victim recieves at the end of the day is a fraction, which is why they try to pump the numbers up and up, no different than what lawyers and managers try to do in my business. Pump up the number, take your cut, who cares what happens.

If the family gets 5 million or 10 million, it doesn't change anything about what they really want, their daughter to be fine. That's the main point. Pumping the numbers up doesn't help the family anymore, it helps only the lawyers after a certain point.
This is what Edwards specializes in.

aesop
10-29-2004, 01:46 PM
Originally posted by ODShowtime
That's a good point. If Edwards really ever had any shady cases, we'd have heard about it.

How about this one:

Very interesting:

Influenza vaccine is produced by growing the virus in eggs. The virus is killed and processed to create the vaccine, which is given by injection under the skin. The body then produces antibodies to the virus over the next two to four weeks.

If the immunized person then comes into contact with the influenza virus, the antibodies attack and kill the virus before it has a chance to cause infection. The vaccine contains the 3 most likely strains to be active during the "flu season".

Why the shortage:

Almost half of the nation's flu vaccine will not be delivered this year. Chiron, a major manufacturer of flu vaccine, will not be distributing any influenza vaccine this flu season. Chiron was to make 46-48 million doses vaccine for the United States. Chiron is a British company. Recently British health officials stopped Chiron from distributing and making the vaccine when inspectors found unsanitary conditions in the labs. Some lots of the vaccine were recalled and destroyed. Why is our vaccine made in the UK and not the US? The major pharmaceutical companies in the US provided almost 90% of the nations flu vaccine at one time. They did this despite a very low profit margin for the product. Basically, they were doing us a favor.

In the late 80's a man from North Carolina who had received the vaccine got the flu. The strain he caught was one of the strains in that years vaccine made by a US company. What did he do? He sued and he won. He was awarded almost $5 million! After that case was appealed and lost, most US pharmaceutical companies stopped making the vaccine. The liability out weighed the profit margin. Since UK and Canadian laws prohibit such frivolous law suits UK and Canadian companies began selling the vaccine in the US. By the way...

The lawyer that represented the man in the flu shot law suit was a young ambulance chaser by the name of John Edwards.