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  • 19
    Dec
    2012
    7:27am, EST

    School abuse victim wins $23 million in damages

    By Melissa Pamer, NBCLosAngeles.com

    LOS ANGELES -- A former student in Los Angeles was awarded $23 million in damages Tuesday for sexual abuse he endured at the hands of his elementary school teacher.

    A Los Angeles Superior Court jury deliberated for less than five hours before finding in favor of the teen.

    The lawsuit, filed on his behalf in October 2009, concerned abuse by Forrest Stobbe, the boy's fifth-grade teacher at Queen Anne Elementary School in the Mid-Wilshire area.


    Stobbe was sentenced to 16 years in prison after pleading no contest to criminal charges in the case in 2011. He had been arrested in 2010, when he was 39.

    Read more stories at NBCLosAngeles.com

    The jury on Tuesday apportioned 30 percent of the fault, or about $6.9 million, to the former Los Angeles Unified School District student.  The remaining fault was apportioned to Stobbe, but he had been dismissed as a defendant in the case, according to the plantiff's attorney, Stephen Estey.

    The district will have to pay a $3 million deductible to its insurer, which will cover the remaining $3.9 million portion of the award, according to Sean Rossall, a spokesman for LAUSD's Office of General Counsel.

    "The district is still evaluating whether an appeal is warranted in this case," Rossall said.

    Stobbe abused the boy 10 to 15 times in the classroom during the 2008-9 school years, and another five times during the summer of 2009, according to Estey.

    LAUSD General Counsel David Holmquist said in a statement: “Although we can't change what happened in this case, we remain committed to doing everything in our power to promote healing and improve trust with those impacted."

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    50 comments

    The absurdity of these kinds of jury awards is evident to everyone except, I guess, the jury. Welcome to lala land.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: schools, california, los-angeles, us-news, damages, featured, crime-courts, nbclosangeles
  • 3
    Nov
    2012
    5:11am, EDT

    Iraq War contractor ordered to pay National Guardsmen $85M over toxic chemical exposure

    By NBC News wire services

    PORTLAND, Ore. -- A jury on Friday ordered an American military contractor to pay $85 million after finding it guilty of negligence for illnesses suffered by a dozen Oregon soldiers who guarded an oilfield water plant during the Iraq War.

    After a three-week trial, the jury deliberated for just two days before reaching a decision against the contractor, Kellogg Brown and Root.

    Each Army National Guardsman was awarded $850,000 in non-economic damages and another $6.25 million in punitive damages for "reckless and outrageous indifference" to their health in the trial in U.S. District Court in Portland. 

    Guardsman Rocky Bixby, the soldier whose name appeared on the suit, said the verdict should reflect a punishment for the company's neglect of U.S. soldiers.

    "Justice was definitely served for the 12 of us," Bixby said, adding that two of his children were about to enter the military. "It wasn't about the money, it was about them never doing this again to another soldier."  

    The suit was the first concerning soldiers' exposure to a toxin at a water plant in southern Iraq. The soldiers said they suffer from respiratory ailments after their exposure to sodium dichromate, and they fear that a carcinogen the toxin contains, hexavalent chromium, could cause cancer later in life.

    Another suit from Oregon Guardsmen is on hold while the Portland trial plays out. There are also suits pending in Texas involving soldiers from Texas, Indiana and West Virginia.

    Pre-existing conditions?
    KBR was found guilty of negligence but not a secondary claim of fraud. U.S. District Court Judge Paul Papak acknowledged before the trial began that, whatever the verdict, the losing side was likely to appeal it.

    Any appeal must first wait for Papak to formally enter the judgment.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The company will appeal the verdict, said KBR attorney Geoffrey Harrison in a statement issued late Friday afternoon. Harrison said the verdict "bears no rational relationship to the evidence."

    "KBR did safe, professional, and exceptional work in Iraq under difficult circumstances," Harrison said in the statement, and multiple U.S. Army officers testified under oath that KBR communicated openly and honestly about the potential health risks.

    "We believe the facts and law ultimately will provide vindication."

    KBR witnesses testified that the soldiers' maladies were a result of the desert air and pre-existing conditions. Even if they were exposed to sodium dichromate, KBR witnesses argued, the soldiers weren't around enough of it, for long enough, to cause serious health problems.

    The contractor's defense ultimately rested on the fact that they informed the U.S. Army of the risks of exposure to sodium dichromate.

    KBR was tasked with reconstructing the decrepit, scavenged plant just after the March 2003 invasion while National Guardsmen defended the area. Bags of unguarded sodium dichromate — a corrosive substance used to keep pipes at the water plant free of rust — were ripped open, allowing the substance to spread across the plant an into the air.

    Read more US news on NBCNews.com

    Attorneys for the 12 Oregon National Guardsmen focused on the months of April, May and June 2003, alleging KBR knew about the presence of sodium dichromate and took no action.

    One of the soldiers' key witnesses, a doctor, testified that hexavalent chromium caused a change to soldiers' genes, leaving them more susceptible to cancer. KBR's attorneys challenged that diagnosis, saying the soldiers' witness was the only physician in the U.S. prepared to make such a diagnosis.

    Concern over role of contractors
    Plaintiff Jason Arnold said he understands that contractors are a necessity for often-specialized tasks, but he hopes the verdict forces the U.S. military to reexamine its relationship with the private defense industry.

    "For a corporation to come in and have this much disregard for the health and well-being of men that are shedding blood, sweat and tears for this country," Arnold said, "for them to come in and to say that we mean less than their profit, is wrong."

    During the Iraq war, KBR was the engineering and construction arm of Halliburton, the biggest U.S. contractor during the conflict. KBR split from Halliburton in April 2007.

    Read more World news on NBCNews.com

    KBR has faced lawsuits before related to its work in Iraq. One of the more prominent cases, involving a soldier who was electrocuted in his barracks shower at an Army base, was dismissed.

    A second case is still in Maryland federal court, in which former KBR employees and others who worked on Army bases in Iraq and Afghanistan allege KBR allowed them to be exposed to toxic smoke from garbage disposal "burn pits."

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    156 comments

    Defense contractor has no regard for anything but profit. How is this news again? And what kind of nonsense is comparing industrial poisoning to war? A soldier is (or should be) prepared to lay his life down for the country. Not for some @!$%#can corporations bottom line.

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    Explore related topics: iraq, army, security, chemicals, defense, contractor, national-guard, damages, featured, crime-and-courts
  • 18
    Jul
    2012
    4:09am, EDT

    Logging company to pay record $122.5M in damages over 2007 California wildfire

    US Forest Service

    The so-called Moonlight Fire charred 65,000 acres in September 2007. "What was lost was priceless and will not return for over a century," U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of California Benjamin B. Wagner said in a statement.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- Logging company Sierra Pacific Industries agreed to pay the United States $122.5 million in damages to settle a lawsuit over a 2007 wildfire that was among the most devastating in California history, the Department of Justice said on Tuesday.

    The settlement is the largest ever received by the United States for damages caused by a wildfire, the so-called Moonlight Fire that charred 65,000 acres in September 2007.


    The blaze was sparked by employees of the logging company and a contractor who struck a rock with a bulldozer, prosecutors said, sending sparks into the dry ground on a day the National Weather Service had issued a red flag warning, indicating a high fire danger.

    The smoldering fire went unnoticed because the employees skipped a company-required fire patrol, prosecutors said.

    'No relief' from drought as sweltering temperatures return to Midwest, Northeast

    "Instead, the designated fire watch left the work area and drove 30 minutes away to get a soda. When he returned over an hour later, there was a 100-foot wall of smoke billowing from the work area," the Department of Justice said in a statement.

    Sierra Pacific Industries denied responsibility for the fire, and the company's attorney William Warne said that the government's investigation into the fire "was seriously off the rails," Bloomberg Businessweek reported. 

    "Typically, a settlement signifies the end of a dispute, but this is just the beginning," The Record Searchlight newspaper quoted Warne as saying.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    15 million trees killed
    The settlement will include a $55 million cash payment and 22,500 acres of land in California owned by Sierra Pacific. The U.S. Forest Service will choose the land, which prosecutors said is expected to bridge gaps between existing national forests and will support critical watersheds and sensitive species habitats.

    The Moonlight Fire scorched more than 46,000 acres of national forests in September 2007, killing more than 15 million trees on public land, some of which were more than 400 years old. It also destroyed thousands of acres inhabited by sensitive species including the California spotted owl.

    "The Moonlight Fire was a devastating blow to National Forest land here in California," U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of California Benjamin B. Wagner said in a statement.

    "What was lost was priceless and will not return for over a century. The recovery in this case will help start the process of making the public whole."

    According to The Sacramento Bee, Warne said the U.S. sought as much as $791 million in damages, but Wagner disputed said the figure was actually $200 million or less.

    Sierra Pacific Industries owns nearly 1.9 millions acres of timberland in California and Washington state and is the second largest lumber producer in the United States, according to the company.

    NBC News staff and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    73 comments

    When it is dry enough, just a hot muffler a few inches from dry grass will ignite. When the dozers are piling debris, a lot of debris, twigs and leaves get on the dozer also. I am not too fond of corporate forestry practices, think they should be accountable. My Dad was a logger until the big boys d …

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    Explore related topics: lawsuit, settlement, california, wildfire, damages, featured, sierra-pacific-industries, moonlight-fire

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