Jury Rules for Plaintiff in Red Hat Club Libel Trial

GainesvilleTimes.com:  “The bestselling 2003 novel ‘The Red Hat Club’ treaded a little too close to one woman’s real life, a Hall County jury decided Thursday in a case that could have wider implications in the publishing world.   Vickie Stewart won her defamation lawsuit against author and former friend Haywood Smith when a Hall County State Court jury found that the book libeled her by including a fictional character that closely resembled Stewart.”

Appeals Court OKs $5M in Punitives for Victim of Phone Hoax Strip Search

ABA Journal News: “The state Court of Appeals upheld a $5 million award of punitive damages to the then 18-year-old worker who was targeted by the fake law enforcement officer on the phone.  The restaurant chain could have foreseen and prevented the incident by alerting and training employees, reports the Courier-Journal.  In its ruling Friday, the unanimous three-judge appellate panel noted that the hoax was one of some 30 incidents that had occurred at McDonald’s restaurants over a decade. Proper training of employees, the court said, likely would have prevented the young worker’s three-hour ordeal, in which she was also sexually abused.”

See the important comments made by Overlawyered about the alleged perpetrator of the hoax.

What the press coverage to date has not mentioned is that the person who almost certainly perpetrated the incident was acquitted after the Kentucky case fell apart because the criminal defense attorney was able to impeach the witnesses by noting their financial stakes in the civil litigation decided today. Thus, thanks to our civil litigation system’s quest for the deep pocket, the guilty party went free and a tertiary innocent victim got hit with damages. Which is precisely why it’s a misnomer when trial lawyers rename themselves associations for “justice.”

Class Action Target Sues Law Firm for Defamation

Law.com:  “Soon after filing a class action last spring against the maker of a dietary supplement called Procera AVH, Thomas Clarke Jr., a partner in the San Francisco office of Ropers, Majeski, Kohn & Bentley, uploaded a video on YouTube about the class action and talked to a television reporter for a news story about the litigation.  Now, Brain Research Labs, the defendant in that class action, has sued Clarke and his law firm, as well as the plaintiff named in the complaint, saying their comments on TV and the Internet are defamatory and have hurt the company’s business.  In a Friday hearing on a motion to dismiss the lawsuit, the company’s lawyers painted Clarke as an attorney who’d gone too far.”

Model Sues Stuffy Building for $10 Million for Stuffy Treatment After Marrying Doorman

New York Daiy News:  “A famous foot-and-hand model is suing her stuffy upper East Side building because workers there made her life miserable after she fell head over heels for a lowly doorman.  Christina Ambers, once dubbed the “Heidi Klum of foot models,” says a romance with her porter-turned-husband, Angel Rotger, turned her into a pariah among workers at 340 E. 74th St., who made her hail taxis and retrieve packages on her own.”

Jury Orders Tobacco Company to Pay Woman Who Smoked 25 Years $300 Million

From the I injured myself, but somebody else must pay for my stupidity department. SunSentinel.com:  “The sister of former Fort Lauderdale Mayor Jim Naugle on Thursday won a $300 million jury verdict, the largest individual win in the Big Tobacco lawsuits in Florida.  Cindy Naugle, an office manager and bookkeeper at Layton’s Garage in Fort Lauderdale, sued Philip Morris, owner of her cigarette brand of choice, Benson & Hedges.  Naugle was found only 10 percent at fault for taking up smoking when she was 20 years old.”

Go to Top