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Trial Lawyers Help Keep Consumers Safe

Trial lawyers are routinely demonized as “ambulance chasers” and “blood suckers” and we saw this type of attack on full display during the health care debate with baseless…

Trial    lawyers are routinely demonized as “ambulance chasers” and “blood suckers” and    we saw this type of attack on full display during the health care debate with    baseless rhetoric about the need for tort reform and capping compensation for    seriously injured victims (check out the CBO report which says tort    reform would actually only reduce costs by 0.5 percent). The truth is,    trial lawyers play an important role in keeping consumers safe and going after    big corporations that neglect their safety responsibilities.

A recent    op-ed in the Wall Street Journal talked about how trial lawyers provided    support for over-worked and under-resourced federal agencies like the Food and    Drug Administration and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

A perfect example is the recent problems surrounding    Toyota. If it’s revealed Toyota purposely misled the general public and    government officials (which looks like a real possibility considering the internal documents brought to light) the Department of Transportation can levy a fine of only $16.4    million against the car company. That’s a drop in the bucker for the    multi-billion dollar corporation.    Toyota    executives are definitely more worried about impending class action lawsuits    that could potentially require the company to pay hundreds of millions of    dollars to injured drivers and family members who lost a loved one in a major    car wreck involving a Toyota that suddenly accelerated.

Another    example was in the 1990s with the recall of Firestone tires on Ford Explorers. The actions    taken by trial lawyers helped expedite the recall and government investigation    in to why so many Ford Explorers were getting involved in rollover accidents.   Need more    proof? How about the revelations surrounding asbestos and mesothelioma cancer?    Once again, the actions taken by trial lawyers helped cause railroad    companies into finally and belatedly removing asbstos from the workplace,    implementing new safety rules and taking measures to ensure railroad workers    are warned about exposure to toxic asbestos.

The    efforts of injury lawyers can even spur the creation of new laws and    safety regulations.  In a 2009 case, Wyeth v. Levine      (a case involving the    prescription drug Phenergan), the Supreme Court noted that    state tort suits "can serve as a catalyst" for regulatory action. Does this    change the public perception of trial injury attorneys? Not instantly-no.     There will always be some people who think trial lawyers are    terrible and capitalize on people’s suffering. Nevertheless, when these same    people or their family members get seriously injured in a car accident,    truck wreck, or prescription drug error, who do they call? A good injury    lawyer; and we’re happy to represent them because that’s what we do – help    injured victims by seeking justice in a court of law.

About the Editors: Shapiro, Cooper, Lewis & Appleton personal injury law firm (VA-NC law offices ) edits the injury law blogs Virginia Beach Injuryboard, Norfolk Injuryboard, and Northeast North Carolina Injuryboard as a pro bono service to consumers.

Richard Shapiro

Richard Shapiro

Richard N. Shapiro (Rick) is a personal injury trial attorney, American inventor, and international award-winning fiction author. One of his co-authored legal treatises was published in the American Jurisprudence “Trials” Law Encyclopedia.

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