John Doe A v. Penn State
First Penn State scandal lawsuit says Coach Jerry Sandusky sexually abused a boy more than 100 times and the abuse was enabled by the school's "negligent oversight."
Bradley v. Lohan
Former Betty Ford Center employee sues Lindsay Lohan for assault, alleging the actress threw a phone at her and yanked her wrist while refusing to be breathalzyed.
N.D. v. New York Post
Hotel maid allegedly raped by French politician sues the New York Post for falsely reporting that she is a prostitute who "routinely traded sex for money" with male guests.
Reinhart v. Mortenson
Two Montana residents allege the author of "Three Cups of Tea" "fabricated material about his activities and work in Pakistan and Afghanistan" to sell the book.
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• Student alleges a prank involving a bottle rocket and another student's anus backfired, causing him to fall off the deck of a frat house.
Helmburg v. Alpha Tau Omega

• 5th Circuit reinstates a jury verdict finding a man employed by an engineering firm was sexually harassed by a male supervisor. "The text message 'I want cock' could be taken as an explicit sexual proposition." 
Cherry v. Shaw Coastal

• Massachusetts appeals court says the ex-wife of a man who fatally shot himself with a gun he had stolen cannot sue the gun's owner for wrongful death. "We conclude that public policy dictates that [Charles] Milot's criminal conduct acts as a bar to recovery."
Ryan v. Hughes-Ortiz

• Pennsylvania woman alleges her former employer discriminated against her because she wore a fake penis to assist her in her female-to-male transition. "Plaintiff's use of the prosthetic device was concealed and in no way interfered with the ability of Plaintiff to do her job." Davis v. J&J Snack Foods

• Son of a woman charged with murdering her husband cannot use the proceeds from the victim's life insurance policy to fund his mother's criminal defense. "[A]llowing the distribution of these proceeds to a third party who has clear intentions to transfer part of these proceeds to her, undermines the principles underlying the Slayer’s Act and federal common law."
In Re: Estate of Michael Burkland

• Oregon judge rules that a self-proclaimed "investigative blogger" is not "considered 'media' for the purposes of applying a negligence standard in a defamation claim." Obsidian Finance v. Cox

• Seattle judge says an actress cannot proceed anonymously in her suit against the IMDb.com website for publishing her age. "[W]hile Plaintiff may face public ridicule and embarrassment if she elects to go forward under her real name, the injury she fears is not severe enough to justify permitting her to proceed anonymously."
Doe v. Amazon.com

• Family of an 11-year-old girl who was crushed by a boulder of ice says forest ranger negligence caused her death. Rangers "did not warn users of the risk of harm associated with the dangerous, unstable snow and ice" at the Big Four Ice Caves in Snohomish County, Wash. Tam v. U.S.

• 3rd Circuit dismisses a breach of data security case against a payroll-processing company. "Appellants' allegations of an increased risk of identity theft as a result of the security breach are hypothetical, future injuries."
Reilly v. Ceridian Corp.

• Oregon judge denies First Amendment protections to a blogger. "Defendant cites no cases indicating that a self-proclaimed 'investigative blogger' is considered 'media' for the purposes of applying a negligence standard in a defamation claim."
Obsidian Finance v. Cox

• A transsexual who was fired from her government job while she was in the process of becoming a woman wins her sex discrimination suit. "[A] government agent violates the Equal Protection Clause’s prohibition of sex-based discrimination when he or she fires a transgender or transsexual employee because of his or her gender non-conformity."
Glenn v. Brumby

• New York man sues a Texas fertility clinic for wrongful insemination, alleging it failed to obtain his consent before using a sample of his sperm to impregnate his ex-girlfriend.
Pressil v. Advanced Fertility

• Nebraska judge rules that school officials may have illegally disciplined students for wearing t-shirts in honor of a slain friend suspected of gang membership. "[Q]uestions of fact remain whether Plaintiffs’ speech occurred in a context likely to provoke gang violence or other disruptions of school activities."
Kuhr v. Millard Public Sch. Dist.




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Stunning Decision Finds Taser Risks Not "Knowable" Print

taser1Less than 18 months after a jury found Taser International liable for failing to warn that its stun guns could cause heart attacks, a California judge has completely disregarded that verdict in dismissing a very similar wrongful-death lawsuit.

Granting Taser's motion for summary judgment, U.S. District Judge Jeremy Fogel ruled that the company could not be sued by the parents of Michael Rosa, who died of cardiac arrest in August 2004 after Seaside, Calif., police repeatedly shocked him with an M26 “electronic control device” (ECD).

Judge Jeremy Fogel

The plaintiffs, he said in a Nov. 20 opinion, had failed to present sufficient evidence that the danger of tasers causing acidosis-induced heart attacks was “scientifically known or knowable” by Taser at the time it sold the stun guns used on Rosa. “There is no legal authority for imposing a duty to warn based on evidence this sparse,” he concluded.

Acidosis is a buildup of lactic acid in the blood that can be caused by the rapid contraction and relaxation of muscles resulting from electric shocks.

In June 2008, a jury in the same San Jose courthouse where Fogel sits awarded $6.2 million to the parents of Robert Heston, who had a fatal heart attack after Salinas, Calif., police repeatedly tasered him with an M26. U.S. District Judge James Ware later reduced the award to $1 million, but affirmed the jury's finding of negligence against Taser.

“There was substantial evidence upon which a reasonable jury could find, as this jury did find, that a reasonable manufacturer would have warned” of the risks of prolonged exposure to ECDs, he said in Heston v. City of Salinas.

That evidence consisted of two reports warning of the acidosis risk, one of which was published in the prestigious British medical journal The Lancet in 2001. Dr. Raymond Fish, a Chicago emergency medicine specialist, contributed to both reports but is now an expert witness for Taser.

Finding the same evidence lacking, Fogel noted that “In his expert report on behalf of TASER in this action, Fish 'unequivocally rejects the theory that ECDs on humans decrease respirations and cause dangerous acidosis.'”

In apparent deference to his judicial colleague, he also insisted that his decision

is not inconsistent with any of Judge Ware’s rulings in Heston. While Judge Ware denied TASER’s motion for summary judgment, TASER’s motion in Heston did not challenge the sufficiency of the plaintiffs’ evidence regarding the “known or knowable” or “should have known” elements of the plaintiffs’ claims with respect to ECD-induced metabolic acidosis.

Since Taser never filed a summary judgment motion in Heston, it appears Fogel isn't very well versed in the record of that case.

Heston suffered his lethal tasering in February 2005 –- only six months after Rosa. But Fogel speculated that “the state of scientific and medical research in 2005 may have been different than it was at the time of the underlying incident in this case.”

“Does he point to anything that happened [between the two deaths] that changed anything?” asks Pasadena attorney John C. Burton, who represents both the Rosa and Heston families. “Doesn't he have to point to something to say that?”

The summary dismissal of the Rosa case averts a trial that had been scheduled for next month. Burton says he will appeal the decision, which he called a “travesty.”

More than 60 wrongful death or personal injury lawsuits involving Taser shocks have been filed in the U.S. but the Heston case was the first in which a jury found Taser liable. Both sides have appealed Judge Ware's final judgment.

This story linked by:


By Matthew Heller
11/24/09


 
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Marsh v. Air Tran Airways
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Brown v. Herbert
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