LAWYERS GETTING HEALTHY CHECKS FROM TOBACCO SUITS.Byline: Doug Bandow Douglas (Doug) Bandow is a former columnist with Copley News Service and senior fellow at the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank. He resigned in 2005 due a scandal involving payments for columns from lobbyist Jack Abramoff and wrote about it in the Los Angeles Times. THE fight over tobacco has degenerated into an emotional brawl, involving smokers, health lobbyists, tobacco farmers and liberal activists. Only one group seems certain to benefit: the lawyers. When the big tobacco settlement was first announced, Mississippi trial attorney Richard Scruggs Richard "Dickie" Scruggs was hired by Mississippi Attorney General Mike Moore to assist with a lawsuit against thirteen tobacco companies in the 1990s. Prior to that he was known for his class action lawsuits against the asbestos industry. admitted his fees might seem ``a little obscene.'' But that, he explained, was inevitable, since ``we have to come up with a fair way to compensate everyone.'' Some lawyers, like Scruggs, stand to collect an astonishing a·ston·ish tr.v. as·ton·ished, as·ton·ish·ing, as·ton·ish·es To fill with sudden wonder or amazement. See Synonyms at surprise. 25 percent of their states' payments. Even 3 percent of the total $368.5 billion settlement, which some attorneys characterize as ``fair and reasonable,'' would run an incredible $11 billion. Not that such a windfall would be unprecedented. In the recent flight attendants' secondhand smoking lawsuit, the tobacco industry agreed to pay $300 million to a research foundation - not the workers - and $49 million to the lawyers. Already some states, which sold their legal souls (adjusting liability law to enhance their chances, for instance) for the prospect of a huge financial gain, are having second thoughts about attorneys' fees. Florida agreed to give a quarter of its winnings to its lawyers, but reconsidered after negotiating a $11.3 billion settlement in August. Instead of paying the attorneys upward of more than; above. See also: Upward $200 million each, Florida agreed with the tobacco industry to set the legal fees through arbitration. State Judge Harold Jeffrey Cohen cohen or kohen (Hebrew: “priest”) Jewish priest descended from Zadok (a descendant of Aaron), priest at the First Temple of Jerusalem. The biblical priesthood was hereditary and male. then called the attorneys' demands ``unconscionable Unusually harsh and shocking to the conscience; that which is so grossly unfair that a court will proscribe it. When a court uses the word unconscionable to describe conduct, it means that the conduct does not conform to the dictates of conscience. and clearly excessive.'' He estimated that the original fee accord would result in $7,716 per hour - 24 hours a day, every day, during the 42 months the case was pending - for the 12 lead attorneys. To most people that seems, well, a bit much. Whatever the outcome in Florida, several of the attorneys are still pushing for every penny they were originally promised, Congress should prevent a similar national looting spree. There are, in fact, good reasons to kill the entire deal. It rests on dubious factual premises - by dying younger, smokers actually lower government Medicaid expenses. It unfairly immunizes the industry - if tobacco companies should be liable for the harm caused by their products, they should be liable in the future as well as the past. If the deal survives, and a lot of interests are lobbying for it, Congress should ensure that the public rather than the trial bar is the chief beneficiary. Observed House Speaker Newt Gingrich: ``If it simply makes trial lawyers richer, I would be inclined to oppose it.'' Senate Judiciary Committee The U.S. Senate established the Committee on the Judiciary on December 10, 1816, as one of the original 11 standing committees. It is also one of the most powerful committees in Congress; among its wide range of jurisdictions is investigation of federal judicial nominees and oversight of Chairman Orrin Hatch Orrin Grant Hatch (born March 22, 1934) is a Republican United States Senator from Utah, serving since 1977. Hatch is a member of the U.S. Senate Committee on Finance, where he serves on the subcommittees on Energy, Natural Resources, and Infrastructure and Taxation and IRS , R-Utah, has proposed establishing an arbitration panel arbitration panel A group of individuals charged with resolving a dispute between individuals and/or organizations. Arbitration panels to resolve investment disputes are sponsored by self-regulatory organizations such as NASD. for attorneys' fees and setting a fee cap of 5 percent. That is still far too generous - it could, for example, mean payments of $250 million to law firms This list of the world's largest law firms by revenue is taken from The Lawyer and The American Lawyer and is ordered by 2006 revenue:[1]
Rep. Scott McInnis, R-Colo., chosen by Gingrich to oversee the tobacco settlement process, would take a tougher approach. He has, along with Rep. Chris Cox, R-Newport Beach, and Rep. Paul McHale, D-Pa., introduced legislation to limit attorneys' fees to $150 per hour. The bill also would restrict overall payments to .01 percent or $35 million, whichever is less. Finally, the legislation would require law firms to publicly account for their time. The tobacco industry, which fears any controversy may kill the deal, is willing to live with arbitration and substantial attorneys' fees. But in McInnis' view, that only demonstrates how the settlement is unnecessarily skewed skewed curve of a usually unimodal distribution with one tail drawn out more than the other and the median will lie above or below the mean. skewed Epidemiology adjective Referring to an asymmetrical distribution of a population or of data toward the lawyers: ``I believe Congress will recognize that the additional money the tobacco companies are willing to pay should be put to a better use than simply creating a few new billionaires.'' The legislation would also provide some well-deserved scrutiny of the legal lottery that has enriched so many trial attorneys at public expense. Of course, the litigators are not amused. The Castano group, a collection of class-action lawyers, has argued against allowing their fees to be ``politicized.'' But the entire tobacco deal is political. The original lawsuits were a political shakedown that violated traditional liability law. The settlement, which covers everything from federal regulation to antitobacco ads, is pre-eminently political. The attorneys are using politics to make money, so Congress might as well use politics to control what they make. As the saying goes, those who live by the sword This article is about the fantasy novel by Mercedes Lackey. For other uses, see By the Sword (disambiguation). By the Sword is the name of a 1991 fantasy novel by Mercedes Lackey. die by the sword This article is about the computer game. For the phrase, see live by the sword, die by the sword. Die by the Sword is a computer swordfighting game developed by Treyarch, and published by Tantrum Entertainment (a sub-brand of Interplay Productions) . Lawyers, like everyone else, deserve to be rewarded for their labors. But they are not entitled to the multibillion-dollar windfall contained in the tobacco deal. Congress should kill the entire settlement. If not, legislators should at least protect the public from the trial bar. |
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