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The great outdoors

August 2006 | Volume 42, Issue 8

Carbon monoxide deaths from propane heaters
Mark Stageberg

Campers, anglers, and people who work outdoors rely on inexpensive, lightweight, portable heaters to keep warm in cold weather. What many of them don’t know is that using these heaters in an enclosed space can lead to carbon monoxide poisoning. Litigation can force manufacturers to adopt safer designs and issue more clearly worded warnings.

Skimming the surface of safety
Lee Brown and Amanda Morse

Personal watercraft—like Jet Skis and WaveRunners—are the motorcycles of boating: small, sleek, and speedy. They’re also dangerous, with unpredictable steering mechanisms and poor safety features that have made them the second- largest cause of water deaths after drowning. Safer alternative designs have been around for over 20 years, but manufacturers have been slow to use them.

Mayhem on wheels
Larry Setchell

All-terrain vehicles (ATVs) are rugged, off-road vehicles used for both work and play. Unstable by design, they cause thousands of injuries and hundreds of deaths each year—many to children under 16. A consent decree between the government and the industry expired in 1998, yet ATV makers have failed to incorporate new safety devices and typically blame injuries on “reckless” drivers. Here’s how to take them to task for playing fast and loose with consumer safety.

Features

Client conundrums

Sometimes you find yourself fighting—or at least negotiating with—not only defense counsel but also your own client. You may encounter a client who insists on taking the case in the wrong direction. Another may have a personality trait or emotional strain that stretches your people skills to the limit. Five lawyers recall times they had to stand their ground and show clients the way.

Mirror, mirror, on the wall
Susan Dennehy

Victims of a botched cosmetic surgery often find themselves victimized all over again when they seek restitution in court. Lawyers are often reluctant to take their cases, and jurors tend to be unsympathetic. But there are good reasons to stand up for these injury victims: Cosmetic surgery operates under a shockingly loose set of regulations, and the practice area is rife with false advertising, substandard facilities, and doctors with dubious medical credentials. Use this information to show a jury that nobody deserves to be harmed by bad surgery.

News & Trends

Lawsuits cast votes against electronic voting machines

Supreme Court to revisit punitive damages

Scrutiny of defibrillator defects grows

State confidentiality laws don’t protect peer review records

Tobacco company can’t assert “unreasonable use” defense, court says

Ruling on computer evidence animates Pennsylvania high court

Departments

President’s page
Exposing stealth tort ‘reform’

Supreme Court review
A sensible emergency doctrine

ATLA Endowment: Donor profiles

Hearsay

ATLA in motion

Insurance ‘compact’ moves ahead despite consumer objections

Republican Caucus sweeps into Washington for recruitment, lobbying

New packets help with Taser litigation and federal tort claims

Straight talk about hurricane insurance

Campaign brings results on Capitol Hill, training to the states

New seminar teaches how people make decisions

Books

Radicals in Robes: Why Extreme Right-Wing Courts Are Wrong for America
by Cass R. Sunstein

Preemption: A Knife That Cuts Both Ways
by Alan M. Dershowitz

Experts & Professional Services

Classifieds

Lawyer Networking

Products & Services

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Balancing the Scales of Justice
American Association for Justice • The Leonard M. Ring Law Center
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