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Thursday, May 01, 2008
On Heparin: A Few, Kind Words For Plaintiffs’ Lawyers
By Hugh Hewitt
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When I began covering the heparin story in February, I was astonished at how little attention it was receiving in the MSM. Perhaps because my father had used heparin for many years before he died (long before the heparin poisoning occurred), or perhaps because I have some very close, very successful friends in the plaintiffs’ bar and we regularly debate mass tort actions and their impact on the economy, I was fascinated by the story. As the number of deaths rocketed up to 81, and the long-term health effects on those who did not die but were sickened by the adulterated batches of the drug began to be debated, my curiosity increased. I am now hoping that the victims find the best plaintiffs’ lawyers in America because we need those litigators not just to get compensation for the families, but to force reform on China.

There are many ridiculous costs associated with abusive litigation, many companies injured and even destroyed by greedy plaintiffs’ lawyers. We need tort reform as urgently today as we ever have, especially if we expect doctors and other professionals to continue to deliver urgently needed services, and American business to continue to innovate and create jobs and wealth..

But plaintiffs’ lawyers do sometimes bring urgently needed justice to victims of real torts. My friend, now a retired plaintiffs’ lawyer, Joseph Timothy Cook, for years put his skills as a former Navy fighter pilot at work getting compensation for the victims of airline and helicopter crashes. He is a passionate and proud defender of his calling and the skills of his colleagues, and when he and members of the defense bar –I have far more friends from the top ranks of America’s defense bar than from among its plaintiffs’ lawyers numbers—get to debating over our system of tort law, the sparks fly.

From watching those arguments over the years, I have come to appreciate the relentlessness of the best of the plaintiffs’ bar. It can take years to bring a case to a successful conclusion, especially when a foreign company is involved and especially when that foreign company is protected by a foreign government. When the foreign government is itself the defendant, well, the trail is long and hard. Cook was one of the lawyers on the KAL 007 case, and it took decades of effort to get compensation for the victims of the Soviet shoot-down.

The best of the plaintiffs’ bar spend long stretches in hotel rooms outside of the country, threading very small needles and tracking down very reluctant witnesses. They usually absorb all of the costs, and the best of them, like Cook, care passionately about their clients.

The heparin contamination case is the tip of an iceberg we have glimpsed before in the pet food and defective toy cases. But this time scores of people are dead and whose knows how many more sickened and possibly injured for life.

Those people are owed damages and the costs of their care. We are all owed major changes in the way China does business. We need Chinese manufacturing to change dramatically. Continued...

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About The Author

Hugh Hewitt is a law professor, broadcast journalist, and author of several books including A Mormon in the White House?: 110 Things Every American Should Know about Mitt Romney.

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I sympathize with you Hugh
You sat "So here’s a few kind words for a few great plaintiffs’ lawyers". Is this a case of a few good apples trying to redeem a rotten barrel?

I suspect that this case is not a case for plaintiffs' lawyers but the justice department and the State Department.

What congress should do is require that all products made in China be prominently labeled on the container in letters that are at least 20% of the packaging area.

Chinese manufacturing
Thank you, Hugh, for keeping this in the public eye as we tire of Rev Wright.

I have an observation on Chinese engineering/mfg from my husband, a software engineer, who works with Chinese software engineers. It may be an endemic problem in the approach to producing products in China.

My husband works for a major corporation. His product was, in part, sent off-shore to China. My husband is the last engineer here in the US still working on it, to his everlasting frustration.

He notes that, "They (engineers in China) seem to have no clue that what they are developing is a PRODUCT to be used by customers." The software he receives from them is flawed, untested and often is not 'checked in'. He has to deal with all these issues to take their software 'exercises' and incorporate it into his product. If he were not responsible for this, customers would be suffering.

Just thought this was an interesting observation on perhaps the Chinese approach to development.
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