TORT BAR'S STEALTH CAMPAIGN TO
GROW LITIGATION, ROLL BACK STATE REFORMS EXPOSED
New White Paper
Details Nearly 60 'Tort Deform' Bills
(Press Release Courtesy
ATRA)
Washington,
DC, March 10, 2008 -- A new white paper issued
widely today by the American Tort Reform Foundation
details the coordinated efforts of personal injury
lawyers to increase litigation and repeal or chip
away at existing tort reform statutes enacted
previously by state governments.
"The front-page prosecutions of Bill
Lerach and Dickie Scruggs, coupled with various tort
reform court victories in recent years, make it easy
enough for some in the media and elsewhere to
believe that the plaintiffs' bar is in retreat,"
began
American Tort Reform Association
president Sherman "Tiger" Joyce.
"But as this new white paper makes
clear, personal injury lawyers and their allies are
still aggressively, if subtly, on the march,
particularly at the state level," Joyce added.
"Their drive to expand liability and litigation
markets has been quiet, but it's robust and as
opportunistic as ever."
Joyce said the paper,
Defrocking Tort Deform: Stopping Personal Injury
Lawyers from Repealing Existing Tort Reforms and
Expanding Rights to Sue in State Legislatures,
cites nearly 60 of the more than 80 separate bills
proposed for serious consideration last year in more
than two dozen state legislatures across the
country. This year, at least 50 such bills have
already been introduced in 19 statehouses, he added.
"Surprisingly, the national trial
lawyers' association criticized our paper a few
weeks back - before it was published," Joyce
continued. "Naturally, they guessed wrong about its
contents. Our paper is not an advocacy piece; it
merely shines light on matters of public record
wherein the enterprising personal injury bar is
trying to grow its business."
Putting the paper in broader context,
Joyce explained that "For more than 30 years,
personal injury lawyers worked through the courts to
fight reasonable limits on lawsuit abuse. This
process became known as 'judicial nullification of
tort reform.'
"But now, the plaintiffs' bar has
opened a second front, seeking to roll back tort
reforms and create new litigation rights through the
legislative process. Often enough, these efforts
aren't overtly led by recognized trial lawyer
associations, but by so-called 'consumer groups'
closely allied with the trial lawyers.
"From explicitly authorizing new
types of lawsuits and implied causes of action to
the deputizing of private lawyers by activist state
attorneys general, and from expanding consumer laws
and limits on damages awards to the extension or
elimination of statutes of limitation and repose,
the tort bar's well-orchestrated, well-financed
campaign at the state level dovetails with its
comparable pursuit of 'trial lawyer earmarks' in
Congress," Joyce said.
"Since tort lawyers comprise one of
the nation's richest special interests and
collectively contribute more money to political
campaigns than just about any other industry group.
This makes their influence with legislators and
other elected officials a serious concern. We hope
our white paper will help tort reform advocates in
state capitals understand what they're up against
and how they can better defend against it," he
concluded.
The white paper specifically
references bills in Alabama, Arkansas, California,
Colorado, Connecticut, the District of Columbia,
Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland,
Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Nevada, New
Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North
Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, Rhode
island, South Carolina, Texas and Washington.
##
The American Tort Reform
Association (ATRA) is the only national organization
dedicated exclusively to tort and liability reform
through public education and the enactment of
legislation. ATRA's membership includes non profits,
small and large companies, as well as state and
national trade, business, and professional
associations.