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Products liability

November 2006 | Volume 42, Issue 12

Stop automaker discovery abuse
Christopher L. Brinkley

Just because an automaker has complied with your discovery request doesn’t mean you’ll be able to find the documents you need. Automakers have learned a few tricks to get around discovery rules, including hiding the relevant documents in huge, disorganized “reading rooms,” making databases unnecessarily complicated to search, and withholding key documents. Use these strategies to recognize their deceptions and come out ahead in the paper chase.

Undue deference
Richard Frankel

For years, tort “reformers” have sought to nullify state products liability and consumer protection laws, arguing they are preempted by federal law. Now the Bush administration is using the federal rulemaking process to push its pro-“reform’ agenda; some new rules contain language pronouncing that they preempt state laws. The author details why these pro-preemption statements don’t merit deference from the courts.

The slow death of lap-only seat belts
Brad Kuhlman

Automakers have long known that the lap-only seat belt, far from being a lifesaver, can severely injure and even kill people in car accidents. By next September, all new cars will be required to have lap-shoulder belts in every seat position—even the rear center seat—but hundreds of thousands of older cars with lap belts will remain on the roads. Here’s a rundown of the arguments automakers will use to avoid accountability for injuries caused by these dangerous products.

Embracing risk factors in pharmaceutical litigation
J. Paul Sizemore

Most plaintiff lawyers, understandably, are leery of representing people hurt by dangerous drugs if they have a history of illness or risk factors for disease. And while there may be good reasons for avoiding those cases, doing so leaves a large group of injured people with no recourse and no remedy. Recent Vioxx litigation shows how you can use epidemiology and the medical literature to fight—and win—these cases.

Features

Who’s really running the nursing home?
Nathan P. Carter

Owners of nursing home facilities can—and do—hide their identities in a complicated maze of corporate entities, so that finding out who actually runs and operates one can be daunting. You will need a targeted approach to get the information you need: Conduct a thorough presuit investigation, use a staggered system for discovery requests, and focus your depositions on budget, policy, and procedures.

Structuring attorney fees when you’re not a solo
Robert W. Wood

Like verdicts and settlements, contingent fees can be structured as a series of regular, periodic payments. The advantages include lower taxes, better asset protection, and the ability to keep your income steady. Find out whether a structured setup would work for you, and how to put one in place.

News & Trends

Do private judges need more public scrutiny?

Med-mal suits don’t hinder error disclosure, studies find

ADA applies to Web sites, federal court says

Fifth Circuit bars “misleading”Ford video evidence

Emotional damages are not taxable, D.C. Circuit rules

Schering-Plough fined for off-label marketing, overcharging, kickbacks

North Carolina launches commission to overturn wrongful convictions

Departments

President’s page
On the front lines

Supreme Court review
Roberts Court enters a divisive second year

ATLA Endowment: Donor profiles

Hearsay

ATLA in motion

Texas statute feeds restrictive class action proposal

Learn to prove damages effectively

Litigation groups name chairs and cochairs for 2006-2007

ATLA Education sets sail in Europe and lights again in New Orleans

Straight talk about the U.S. Chamber of Commerce

Books

Rules of the Road: A Plaintiff Lawyers’ Guide to Proving Liability
by Rick Friedman and Patrick Malone

The Rehnquist Legacy
Craig Bradley, editor

Experts & Professional Services

Classifieds

Lawyer Networking

Products & Services

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