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June 30, 2003

Toast dem Tortsters

Lawyers v. First Amendment

America's plaintiffs' bar has always been fast with a lawsuit 9see Jason Riley's article below)1), but now it is even suing as a way to inhibit free speech. That's the point behind a trial lawyer attempt to bully opponents off the legendary plaintiff-friendly turf of Madison County, Illinois.

A group of tort reform advocates held a press conference earlier this month to attract attention to the outrageous awards and settlements being paid in cases filed in Madison County, which they termed a "judicial hellhole." This year Madison County courts have already awarded $10 billion in a class-action case against Philip Morris and $250 million to a single asbestos plaintiff.

At the end of the press conference, a process server handed subpoenas to four speakers ...

.... among them U.S. Chamber of Commerce President Tom Donohue and Ed Murnane, President of the Illinois Civil Justice League. The subpoenas were issued by Brad Lakin of the Lakin Law Firm, of Wood River, Illinois. His firm happens to have filed 38 of the 77 class action cases in Madison County last year, and 24 more this year. The Lakin firm filed its first class action in 1995, but has yet to take even one to trial.

Mr. Lakin issued the subpoenas as part of a class-action suit brought by a Lakin Law Firm employee against Ford Motor Co. over defective paint. Sherman Joyce, president of the American Tort Reform Association, tells us he had never heard of the case before he was subpoenaed. Nevertheless he's now ordered to show up in Madison County on July 7 to be deposed.

The Lakin subpoena -- er, trawling operation -- demands to know the current and past membership of the non-profit groups represented at the press conference. It demands a list of their donors and contributions, as well as donations that the groups have given to political campaigns and political groups in Illinois. The law does not require such disclosure, though the groups' tax returns are public record.

This certainly looks like an abuse of the legal system to harass political opponents. It isn't enough that trial-lawyer cash has bought the U.S. Senate and most state legislatures. Now the tort bar wants to burden those who disagree with them with lawsuits imposing costs (in time and money) that make it difficult to exercise their free speech rights under the First Amendment. By demanding private information about association members and financing, they are also encroaching on the groups' right to free assembly.

Mark it down as one more reason that our runaway tort system needs to be reined in.

URL for this article:
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB105693717642723000,00.html

Hyperlinks in this Article:
(1) http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB105693827658675000,00.html

Updated June 30, 2003 12:27 a.m.





Salivating Over Fast-Food Torts

By JASON L. RILEY

BOSTON -- On a recent Saturday afternoon, John Banzhaf, a plus-size professor of law, finished off his chocolate fudge brownie, washed it down with a Diet Coke, and ambled up to the front of a packed Northeastern University lecture hall to talk about suing the food industry for making people fat.

Professor Banzhaf, an architect of the tobacco lawsuits that cost Philip Morris and others hundreds of billions of dollars to settle five years ago, teaches a course in public interest law at George Washington University. He calls it his "sue the bastards" class, and students must file a lawsuit to receive a passing grade.

A federal judge tossed out one of several Banzhaf suits against McDonald's back in January, ruling that it's not the law's place to protect people from their dietary excesses. Still, the professor is pressing on. Addressing a sympathetic audience here at the "First Annual Conference on Legal Approaches to the Obesity Epidemic," Mr. Banzhaf declared that, among others, Burger King, Taco Bell, Pizza Hut, Kentucky Fried Chicken and Wendy's would be hearing from him soon. "Seven suits are in progress," he told those on hand, mostly trial lawyers and their potential expert witnesses in academia. "Three have been won, and four or five more are in the works."

***

As silly as it is, the coming legal assault on junk food was predictable. The tobacco victories, which followed big scores in asbestos and breast implants, have made the trial lawyers richer and more cocksure than ever. The profession seems incapable of policing its own, and the result has been an explosion of self-interested legal entrepreneurs masquerading as public servants. The politicians, particularly Democrats, have done little to advance the cause of tort reform, lest they clog a major artery of campaign contributions. What distinguishes this latest class-action money grab, however, is that, at bottom, it's a bald assault on the public's intelligence.

The case against the food industry -- broadly defined by opponents to include everyone from farmers and retailers to advertisers and restaurant owners -- ultimately rests on the assumption that overweight Americans are too weak-willed or too stupid to resist food marketing. Hence, Professor Banzhaf's pep rally was preceded and followed by presentations from a dozen or so other activists with tenure, all attempting to separate obesity from individual responsibility.

Professor James Hyde of Tufts University told the audience the idea that a healthy lifestyle is a matter of personal choice is a common myth. "The reality," he continued, "is that healthy behavior is often dictated by factors completely outside the individual's control." Professor Marion Nestle of New York University said that obesity is the result of America's food supply being too plentiful and too cheap, and that "deliberate federal policies make this so." Ben Kelley, who heads the Public Health Advocacy Institute, which sponsored the conference, said he simply wants "to help the many who can't resist the blandishments of the marketplace."

Others couldn't resist dragging their sundry liberal political causes into the mix. After calculating that obesity-related illnesses cost the U.S. up to $50 billion annually, Professor Aviva Must of Tufts University remarked, "That's a lot, even for very wealthy countries that have a lot of money to spend on things like war." Michael Jacobson of the Center for Science in the Public Interest said the federal government isn't spending enough money on the problem because "the Republicans' $400 billion federal deficit will not allow for such things." Stephen Joseph, the San Francisco trial lawyer who filed (and later dropped) a suit to ban Oreo cookies, warned that "male conservative Republican right-wing elements" are the biggest opponents of this litigation. "They're more worried about freedom," he said. "They don't care about kids."

What Professor Banzhaf and others plan to do with all this counterintuitive "expertise" is hard to say. The second part of the conference, a "Legal Strategies Workshop," was off-limits to the press. Nonjournalists who did attend were forced to sign a two-page affidavit beforehand that read in part, "I understand that [the Workshop] . . . is intended to encourage and support litigation against the food industry and that information acquired at the Workshop is to be confidential and in keeping with these interests." Attendees also had to agree "not to appear as an expert witness or work as a consultant or in any other capacity for or in the food industry before December 31, 2006."

The Personal Responsibility in Food Consumption Act, recently introduced by Republican Congressman Ric Keller of Florida, would quash much of this nonsense pronto. But like all tort reform legislation approved by the House -- a similar bill banning frivolous suits against gun manufacturers passed Congress earlier this year -- the measure is likely to stall in the Senate unless Republicans can muster a filibuster-proof majority. In the meantime, says Walter Olson of Overlawyered.com, we can only hope that "a fit of sense will descend on the judiciary and the press, and that this will all be laughed off the national stage eventually."

Mr. Riley is a senior editorial page writer at the Journal.

URL for this article:
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB105693827658675000,00.html

Updated June 30, 2003





Posted by pecksnif at June 30, 2003 02:36 PM | TrackBack
Comments

After long and serious consideration I've come to the conclusion that these lawyers need to visit the Marianas Trench with the support of large heavy lead weights.

The sooner the better!

Posted by: AnnoyedOne on June 30, 2003 03:07 PM

onion eyed clotpole?

Posted by: Captain Scarlet on June 30, 2003 11:24 PM

Please, Unca Rodger, can we start shooting them yet?

Posted by: Kim du Toit on July 1, 2003 03:04 AM

You may, yes. But, I'll deny I said that.

Posted by: Rodger Schultz on July 1, 2003 08:27 AM

Shooting is too good (and quick) for them. I like my method better ;-) Plus you'll never find the bodies!

Posted by: AnnoyedOne on July 1, 2003 08:55 AM

Very nice blog

Posted by: Steven on October 23, 2003 08:10 AM
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