A document titled "P.I.D Study Sheet," which was
written by Baron & Budd paralegal Judy Bruton, gives information that is
similar to the Lynell Terrell "Preparing for Your Deposition" memo.
Like the much longer Terrell memo, the "Study Sheet" contains
detailed information on the different types of asbestos products that existed,
their color, packaging, and common uses, and identifying information about
specific products.
Of course, if that was the context 25 years ago, it no longer is. "These
folks have such volume, they may have drifted across the line because of the
volume," Pepper continues. "I'm sympathetic to that, until you tell
me the volume involves people who aren't sick, and then I'm less sympathetic to
that."
From 1987 until late 1991, Eads-Tone was a Baron & Budd "girl," a
paralegal handling the medical side of hundreds of asbestosis claims. "If
there ever was a screw-up, 'the girl' did it. It was a joke," Eads-Tone
says.
Baron and his partners move in rarefied circles in the legal profession. In
July, he was elected vice president of the American Trial Lawyers Association,
the most influential group of plaintiffs' lawyers in the country. He's a past
president of the Trial Lawyers for Public Justice and a member of several
professional groups, among them the American Law Institute, a widely respected
body of lawyers, judges, and legal scholars.
About Us The national law firm of Baron & Budd, P.C., with offices in Baton
Rouge, Austin, Los Angeles and Miami, is a nationally recognized law firm with
a 30-year history of "Protecting What's Right" for people,
communities and businesses who have been harmed. Baron & Budd's size and
resources enable the firm to take on large and complex cases. The firm
represents individuals, government and business entities in areas as diverse as
water contamination, Gulf oil spill, Qui Tam, California Proposition 65
violations, dangerous medications and medical devices, Chinese drywall,
insurance claims, commercial litigation, securities fraud and asbestos-related
illnesses such as mesothelioma. Patient Advocates
Loved working here, people were great, computer programs were user friendly.
Worked with clients from all walks of life and enjoyed being able to help
them.ProsEverythingConsworking with pople who were very sick and dying
"But if you come in here and say you were in an automobile accident at an
intersection, I'm going to say, 'Now if you tell me you ran the red light, that
means you are going to lose your case.' And then wait for your answer."
When the first asbestos cases were filed in the 1970s, the victims were
horribly ill with cancer, asbestosis, or lung ailments. The original targets of
most of those suits were the asbestos manufacturers who had held the largest
share of the market. Now, 25 years after those original cases, some of the big
manufacturers have been bankrupted by the legal claims, and many of the most
seriously harmed workers are in their graves.
Eads-Tone says her supervisor, an office manager, told her when she left the
firm that she could not be trusted to "do whatever it takes" to make
a case. She agrees. "I wasn't willing to do whatever it takes."
Baron's response was swift and personal. "He's a fruitcake," Baron
said of the judge--a comment that was made within earshot of several reporters.
Though Baron later apologized to the judge, he also fired off a
judicial-conduct complaint. (The complaint was later dismissed.) In a later
interview, he alleged that the judge has a habit of referring trivial matters
to the district attorney. "We were told that he routinely refers matters
to the grand jury and that so far the grand jury has--the DA's office has never
accepted any of Marshall's complaints," Baron says.
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