Philippe v. Wal-Mart Stores
Family of a Wal-Mart worker trampled to death in a "Black Friday" stampede sues the company for "creat[ing] an atmosphere of competition and anxiety amongst the crowd."
Mattel v. MGA Entertainment
Los Angeles judge permanently enjoins a toy company from making or selling Bratz dolls as a result of its infringement of the intellectual property of Barbie maker Mattel.
Wone v. Price
Widow of murdered attorney Robert Wone sues three men for wrongful death, alleging the knife used to stab him was "in [their] custody and control ... at all relevant times."
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• New Jersey appeals court orders the unsealing of a settlement paid by a Giants Stadium vendor to a girl injured in a crash with a drunken fan. "We fail to discern the compelling interest that allows plaintiffs to shroud the amount and terms of the settlement in secrecy by settling the case prior to trial."
Verni v. Lanzaro

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McBride v. City of Detroit

• Ex-wife of Henry Nicholas petitions to remove the co-founder of Broadcom Corp. as co-trustee of the family trust, alleging he whispered in her ear that "he was going to have [her] 'whacked.'"
In the Matter of the Nicholas Family Trust

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Amaya v. Victoria's Secret Stores

• ABC asks the 2nd Circuit to overturn a $1.4 million fine for airing a woman's nude buttocks on an episode of "NYPD Blue." The FCC's "conclusion that the threshold indecency requirement was met here rested entirely on the notion that buttocks are a sexual or excretory organ. But buttocks are not a sexual or excretory organ." ABC v. FCC

• Cookbook author Missy Chase Lapine, allegedly slandered by Jerry Seinfeld, says she has "never felt so frightened and vulnerable as the day my daughter, 7 years old, came home from school and asked, "Mom, what is an assassin?" Seinfeld had joked on the "David Letterman Show" that "if you read history, many of the three-name people do become assassins.” Lapine v. Seinfeld

• North Carolina Court of Appeals refuses to issue an injunction requiring pop singer Clay Aiken to endorse a book about him. "Our courts cannot be used to force celebrities or their family or friends into making endorsements for another person's profit."
Holleman v. Aiken

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Media Storm Prompts Injured Skier to Seek Gag Order

Buffeted by a media backlash, an injured skier suing an 8-year-old is seeking a gag order in the case to protect him from further public humiliation and address the “real threat” that he will not receive a fair trial.

David Pfahler has experienced what his attorney called “an electronic tar and feathering” since a Colorado newspaper published a story about his case. He and his wife sued Scott Swimm in September over a collision on a Vail Valley ski slope that injured his shoulder.

Gag orders are rarely granted in civil cases, but Pfahler argues one is warranted in his case because the media comments of Swimm's parents “combined with media commentary, and uninformed legal opinions as to the liability of minors on Colorado ski slopes, have caused the public to vilify and humiliate the plaintiffs.”

The Denver Post has quoted Swimm's mother saying of Pfahler, “It’s ludicrous. This man should be drawn and quartered.”

“It is positively inflammatory for a party to suggest that another party should be violently murdered for filing a civil claim,” Pfahler says in his motion for a gag order.

Stories about the case in the Denver newspapers, he notes, have generated “hundreds of reader comments ... almost all of which are negatively biased against the Pfahlers” and those postings,

in which readers (potential jurors) decry one party’s position before trial, are specific evidence that there is a reasonable likelihood that the ongoing media blitz poses a real threat that the Pfahlers will be deprived of a just resolution of their dispute.

The motion also provides a detailed account of the fateful collision, attaching the ski patrol's report as an exhibit.

“Pfahler never saw what was coming,” the motion says. “All he knows is that his legs were suddenly knocked out from under him, and that he was upended by the minor defendant who hit him at high speed from behind.”

The plaintiff also denies the Swimms' claim that he grabbed Scott by the ankles after they collided. “Mr. Pfahler was suffering at the time with what was later diagnosed as a 'massive rotator cuff tear,'” he says.

Some media accounts have said minors in Colorado are immune from civil suits. But Pfahler insists it is “settled Colorado law that the age of Scott Swimm is immaterial to his liability” and that his claims are “neither frivolous, groundless nor baseless.”

The Swimms have until Jan. 28 to respond to the motion. In the collision report, Scott's father says Pfahler "cut in front of my son. He was unable to stop in time."

UPDATE

  • U.S. Magistrate Judge Michael J. Watanabe denied the gag order motion. The publicity in the case "is not so great that a fair trial cannot be obtained," he said in a Feb. 4, 2008 order.

  • Other Pfahler v. Swimm Sources

    By Matthew Heller
    1/17/08



     
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    On Trial
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    Jose Padilla v. John Yoo
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