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Original Source: Trial Lawyers
for Public Justice (http://www.tlpj.org/pr/tloy_winners_7-28-03.htm)
Fourteen Lawyers in Two Exceptional Cases Win 2003 Trial Lawyer
of the Year Award
Two California Trial Teams Share Award for Civil Rights Victory
in Estate of Judi Bari and Marianas Sweatshop Settlement Protecting
Workers’ Rights
Fourteen trial lawyers who worked on
two outstanding public interest cases have won the 2003 Trial Lawyer
of the Year Award. Solo practitioners Dennis Cunningham, J. Tony Serra,
Robert Bloom and Ben Rosenfeld of San Francisco, and William A. Simpich
of Oakland, California, along with William H. Goodman of Moore &
Goodman in New York and Michael E. Deutsch of The People’s Law
Office in Chicago received the nationally prestigious award from The
Trial Lawyers for Public Justice (TLPJ) Foundation at its 21st Anniversary
Gala on July 22, 2003, for winning a rare $4.4 million jury verdict
in Estate of Judi Bari v. Doyle against the Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI) and the City of Oakland for violating the civil rights of two
environmental activists during a 1990 bomb investigation.

Garment workers in a sweatshop.
Photo by Global Exchange.
Michael
Rubin of Altshuler
Berzon Nussbaum Rubin & Demain in San Francisco and Alan
M. Caplan of Bushnell, Caplan & Fielding, LLP in San Francisco,
Albert H. Meyerhoff, Jr. of Milberg Weiss Bershad Hynes & Lerach
LLP in Los Angeles, Pamela M. Parker and Keith F. Park of Milberg
Weiss Bershad Hynes & Lerach LLP in San Diego, Joyce C.H. Tang
of Teker Civille Torres & Tang in Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands,
and L. Thomas Galloway of Galloway & Associates in Boulder,
Colorado also received the 2003 Trial Lawyer of the Year Award for
reforming living and working conditions for sweatshop workers in
six Asian Pacific nations and a U.S. territory by negotiating a
comprehensive $20 million settlement of three novel human rights
class actions on behalf of approximately 30,000 garment workers.
This award is bestowed annually upon
the trial lawyer or lawyers who have made the greatest contribution
to the public interest by trying or settling a precedent-setting
case. It is the nation’s single most prestigious award for
trial lawyers.
"These exceptional attorneys
offer powerful examples of how trial lawyers play a crucial role
in exposing and redressing government intrusion and corporate misconduct,"
said outgoing Foundation President Paul Stritmatter of Stritmatter
Kessler Whelan Withey Coluccio in Hoquiam, Washington. "We
are proud to honor them for their exemplary work defending the Constitution
and protecting workers’ rights."
In Estate of Judi Bari v. Doyle the
jury found that both the FBI and the City had violated the First
and Fourth Amendment rights of Earth First! activists Judi Bari
and Darryl Cherney, under the false cover of a "terrorist"
investigation. The verdict in this case sends a strong, cautionary
message about the value of our constitutional rights and the abuse
of law enforcement power in the name of national security.
As part of the $20 million settlement
of the Marianas Sweatshop Litigation, the federal court of the U.S.
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands ordered the implementation
of a model Code of Conduct and a monitoring program to prevent the
recurrence of human rights abuses that have plagued the Saipan garment
industry sweatshops for 15 years. These attorneys devoted 70,000
hours to the three cases over a four-year period. Millions of dollars
in legal fees were waived during the course of the litigation and
new standards for fighting to protect workers’ rights were
put in place.
The TLPJ Foundation also presented
the newly-created Access to Justice Award to TLPJ Staff Attorneys
Leslie A. Brueckner and Michael J. Quirk, for their roles in winning
a unanimous U.S. Supreme Court decision securing access to justice
for injury victims nationwide in Sprietsma v. Mercury Marine. Brueckner
briefed and argued the landmark federal preemption case, and Quirk
assisted with the briefing and preparation for oral argument.
The other finalists for the 2003
Trial Lawyer of the Year Award, also honored at the gala, were:
- David H. Dunaway of the Law Offices of David H. Dunaway
& Associates in LaFollette, Tennessee, fought for three years
to win-and successfully defend and appeal-a case that safeguards
indigent families’ access to heath care in rural Tennessee.
The verdict in LaFollette Medical Center v. City of LaFollette
represents an important victory for affordable, accessible health
care.
- J. Don Gordon of Hynds & Gordon, P.C. in Sherman,
Texas, and solo practitioners George Parker Young and Nikki Grote
Morton of Fort Worth, Texas, who won a precedent-setting $13 million
verdict-$10 million of it in punitive damages-when a Dallas jury
found in June 2002 that Cigna Healthcare of Texas put cost-saving
measures ahead of a patient’s life. The verdict in Pybas
v. Cigna Healthcare of Texas marked the first time that plaintiffs
won a case tried under the state’s 1997 Health Care Liability
Act that allows injured patients to sue a health maintenance organization
(HMO) for medical malpractice.
- Ford Greene of Hub Law Offices in San Anselmo, California,
and solo practitioners Charles B. O’Reilly of Marina Del
Rey, California, Daniel A. Leipold of Santa Ana, California, and
Craig J. Stein of Los Angeles, fought an epic 22-year battle-which
included two appeals to the U.S. Supreme Court and successful
defenses of several countersuits against the plaintiff and his
legal team-to collect a multimillion dollar jury verdict for a
man who was psychologically and financially ruined by the Church
of Scientology. Wollersheim v. Church of Scientology is a landmark
victory for former members of Scientology, which is known for
its heated and protracted legal battles.
- LJ Leatherman, Gary D. White, Jr., and Jerry Palmer of
Palmer, Leatherman & White, L.L.P. in Topeka, Kansas, and
Kiehl Rathbun of Rathbun Law Office in Wichita, Kansas, achieved
a groundbreaking victory for due process rights, securing an injunction
that stopped the City of Wichita from imprisoning people for failing
to pay traffic and misdemeanor fines, freeing 62 people from what
amounted to a debtor’s prison, and winning a $10 million
class action settlement on behalf of 7,111 people whom the City
had wrongfully imprisoned. The National Judicial College uses
Reinschmiedt v. City of Wichita to teach new judges the dangers
of converting monetary sentences into jail time.
- Stephen M. Tillery, George A. Zelcs, Steve A. Swedlow,
Donald M. Flack, and Lisa R. Kernan of Carr Korein Tillery LLC
in Chicago, Michael J. Brickman, Jerry Hudson Evans, Kimberly
S. Keevers, Gregory A. Lofstead, James C. Bradley, and Nina Hunter
Fields of Richardson, Patrick, Westbrook & Brickman, LLC of
Charleston, South Carolina, and Gerson H. Smoger of Smoger &
Associates, P.C. in Dallas pursued an innovative legal strategy
to win a precedent-setting $10.1 billion damages judgment (including
$3 billion in punitive damages) against the nation’s largest
tobacco company in the first class action lawsuit tried on behalf
of "light" cigarette smokers. Stephen A. Sheller of
Sheller, Ludwig & Badey P.C. in Philadelphia was also named
as a finalist in this case for discovering the light cigarette
fraud and initiating the litigation strategy to remedy the deception.
The landmark consumer fraud judgment in Price v. Philip Morris
USA, paves the way for new lines of attack against the tobacco
industry as a whole.
- D. Frank Winkles and Claude H. Tison of Winkles Law Group,
P.A. in Tampa, Florida set the stage for exposing an insurance
giant’s rampant bad faith practices in Tedesco v. The Paul
Revere Life Insurance Co., winning a $36.7 million punitive damages
verdict against an insurance company that wrongfully denied disability
payments to an ophthalmologist disabled by Parkinson’s disease
and a back injury. This case stands as an example of how tenacious
trial lawyers can force corporate giants to change their practices
by making them pay for their wrongdoing.
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