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  • 28
    Aug
    2012
    3:17am, EDT

    Israeli court throws out family's lawsuit over death of US activist Rachel Corrie

    Reuters, file

    U.S. citizen Rachel Corrie, 23, speaks through a megaphone to an Israeli army bulldozer on the day she was killed in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip on March 16, 2003.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    HAIFA, Israel -- An Israeli court rejected on Tuesday accusations that Israel was at fault over the death of American activist Rachel Corrie, who was crushed by an army bulldozer during a 2003 pro-Palestinian demonstration in Gaza.

    Corrie's family had accused Israel of intentionally and unlawfully killing their 23-year-old daughter, launching a civil case in the northern Israeli city of Haifa after a military investigation had cleared the army of wrongdoing.



    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    In a ruling read out to the court, judge Oded Gershon called Corrie's death a "regrettable accident," but said the state was not responsible because the incident had occurred during what he termed a war-time situation.

    At the time of her death, during a Palestinian uprising, Corrie was protesting against Israel's demolition of Palestinian homes in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip.

    "I reject the suit," the judge said. "There is no justification to demand the state pay any damages."

    He added that the soldiers had done their utmost to keep people away from the site. "She (Corrie) did not distance herself from the area, as any thinking person would have done."

    Oliver Weiken / EPA

    Rachel Corrie's parents Craig and Cindy and her sister Sarah, left, are seen prior to the announcement of the verdict at the Haifa district court on Tuesday.

    Mom: 'I am hurt'
    Corrie's death made her a symbol of the uprising, and while her family battled through the courts to establish who was responsible for her killing, her story was dramatized on stage in a dozen countries and told in the book "Let Me Stand Alone."

    "I am hurt," Corrie's mother, Cindy, told reporters after the verdict was read.

    Corrie's mother Cindy told a news conference after the court's decision that the bulldozer personnel had the "ability" and also an "obligation" to have seen that her daughter was in its path.

    NBC station KING5: 'Rachel Corrie' aid ship boarded by Israelis

    She said she hoped the lawsuit would help change Israel's policies regarding the demolition of Palestinian houses.

    Cindy Corrie said that previously a senior Israeli soldier had said there were "no civilians in war."

    "Rachel was in Gaza because there were and are civilians there, those who have rights and deserve protection," she added. "Rachel's right to life and dignity were violated by the actions of the Israeli military."

    She said her daughter was a "rich thinker and a beautiful person" from "Olympia, Washington, USA," her voice breaking as she spoke.

    The family's attorney, Hussein Abu Hussein, said that the court's decision was so close to the Israeli government's position that the state's lawyers could have written it themselves, according to The Jerusalem Post.

    The U.K.'s Guardian newspaper reported that Corrie was with a group of international activists acting as human shields against the demolition of Palestinian houses.

    "She was standing on top of a pile of earth," fellow activist and eyewitness Richard Purssell, from Brighton, U.K., said at the time, according to the Guardian. "The driver cannot have failed to see her. As the blade pushed the pile, the earth rose up. Rachel slid down the pile. It looks as if her foot got caught. The driver didn't slow down; he just ran over her. Then he reversed the bulldozer back over her again."

    Few Israelis showed much sympathy for Corrie's death, which took place at the height of the uprising in which thousands of Palestinians were killed and hundreds of Israelis died in suicide bombings.

    Getty Images / Getty Images, file

    Rachel Corrie speaks during an interview with MBC Saudi Arabia television on March 14, 2003 in the Rafah refugee camp in the Gaza strip.

    Corrie was from Olympia, Washington, and was a volunteer with the pro-Palestinian International Solidarity Movement.

    Senior U.S. officials criticized the original military investigation into the case, saying it had been neither thorough nor credible. But the judge said the inquiry had been appropriate and pinned no blame on the army.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    2309 comments

    THOUSANDS of Palestinians vs. HUNDREDS of Israelis. Thank you for reporting this correctly. In almost every case, more Israeli deaths are reported even though about 10 times more Palestinians are killed on a regular basis.

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  • 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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  • 10
    Jul
    2012
    8:52am, EDT

    Scranton, Pa., slashes workers' pay to minimum wage

    About 400 municipal workers are now earning minimum wage because Scranton, Pa., faces $16 million in red ink. Scranton is just one of several struggling cities around the country grappling with budget deficits and searching for ways to bring in more money. NBC's Ron Allen reports.

    By Patrick Rizzo

     Updated at 5:55 p.m. ET: Unions representing civil servants in Scranton, Pa., filed suit Tuesday after the mayor cut pay for police, firefighters, garbage collectors and other public workers to minimum wage, saying that was all the city could afford.

    Unions representing police, fire and public workers in the city of 76,000 filed three lawsuits after the city defied a judge's order and issued paychecks Friday that paid 398 city employees at the minimum wage of $7.25 an hour, according to the Scranton Times-Tribune.

    The lawsuits against Mayor Chris Doherty include one filed in federal court under the Fair Labor Standards Act accusing the city of failing to pay wages on time and failing to pay overtime. Another lawsuit seeks to hold the mayor in contempt for violating a judges order. Yet another alleges that benefits for disabled police and firefighters were cut without a hearing.

    The Times-Tribune, quoting City Business Manager Ryan McGowan, reported that as of Monday the city had $133,000 in cash, but owed $3.4 million in vendor bills. One of those bills was health insurance, McGowan said.

    Related: Are you making $30,000 a year or less? We want to hear from you.

    Scranton is among a number of cities struggling to pay their bills amid rising labor costs. Earlier this month, Stockton, Calif., became the largest city in U.S. history to file for bankruptcy protection from creditors.

    Scranton's mayor and the city council have been locked in a dispute over how to raise money in a city that has steadily lost population over the past 50 years and has been hit hard by the real estate slump and the Great Recession that followed. Doherty has argued that the city needs to increase taxes, but council members want to find other ways to raise money. Doherty is a Democrat. The city council  is comprised of Democrats.

    The Scranton newspaper said the city has been designated as financially distressed for 20 years.

    Related: US towns face perfect storm as budgets are squeezed

     

    3225 comments

    We don't care if you're out of money. Pay us, we're entitled!

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  • 21
    Jun
    2012
    4:04am, EDT

    Cyclist accused of vehicular manslaughter over pedestrian's death pleads not guilty

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    SAN FRANCISCO -- A cyclist charged with vehicular manslaughter in the death of an elderly pedestrian at a busy San Francisco intersection pleaded not guilty Wednesday.

    Software developer Chris Bucchere, 36, is accused of recklessly speeding downhill through a red light and into an intersection crowded with pedestrians in the city's Castro District on March 29. He struck Sutchi Hui, 71, who was crossing the street with his wife and died of his injuries four days later.


    The case, a rare felony prosecution of a bicycle rider for a fatal accident, comes amid a 71 percent increase in bike traffic in San Francisco in the past five years. It also marks the third instance in which a pedestrian has been killed by a cyclist during the past year in the Bay Area.

    Evidence against Bucchere, who is free on $150,000 bond, includes several eyewitnesses and a surveillance video that have helped investigators put his estimated speed at up to 35 miles per hour.

    A spokeswoman for District Attorney George Gascon's office, Stephanie Ong Stillman, said investigators had evidence Bucchere also ran a number of stop signs on his way downhill to the intersection where the crash occurred.

    'Plowed through'
    Authorities also suspect Bucchere was the author of an online blog post about the accident in which the cyclist recalled being "too committed" to stop at the traffic light before going through it.

    "I couldn't see a line through the crowd and I couldn't stop, so I laid it down and just plowed through the crowded crosswalk in the least-populated place I could find," the post said, going on to describe a "river of blood on the asphalt" in the aftermath of the collision.

    The post drew criticism from other people in the forum when Bucchere wrote that the moral of the story was that it was important for cyclists to wear helmets, local station KTVU Channel 2 News reported. The post was later removed. 


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The San Francisco Chronicle said Bucchere had been trying to set a speed record for a popular bike route through that neighborhood, and an electronic monitoring device on his bike provided investigators with some of their evidence against him.

    In a written statement issued to reporters at the courthouse on Wednesday, Bucchere's lawyer, Julie Salamon, said her client "anticipates the day when he may express his deepest condolences to the Hui family for their tragic loss. But for now, while the case is ongoing, he will continue to cooperate with the authorities and to respond responsibly to the charges in court."

    Bucchere, who left the courthouse without speaking to reporters following his 10-minute arraignment, is due back in court on July 27, when the judge will set a date for a preliminary hearing.

    Stillman said Bucchere was the first bicyclist charged by Gascon with felony vehicular manslaughter, an offense for which prosecutors must show gross negligence and is punishable by up to six years in prison.

    In March, cyclist Randolph Ang, 23, pleaded guilty to misdemeanor vehicular manslaughter for running down a 67-year-old woman who died a month later. He was sentenced to three years' probation and 500 hours of community service.

    In a more recent accident, a 92-year-old woman was struck and killed by a cyclist in a crosswalk near El Cerrito, east of San Francisco.

    Msnbc.com staff and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    264 comments

    Several eyewitnesses, a surveillance video, plus his own words, this guy is toast... Big Brother is alive and well. CCTV and the Internet has made the POLICE and the Judge's job much easier...

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  • 16
    Jun
    2012
    8:49pm, EDT

    Parents' lawsuit: Third-grader forced to bathe at Texas school

    View more videos at: http://nbcdfw.com.

    By Scott Gordon, NBCDFW.com

    A school nurse and counselor forced an 8-year-old Texas boy to bathe after telling him he "smelled badly, was dirty and had bad hygiene," according to a lawsuit filed Thursday.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The boy was forced to take off his clothes one day in November and the two school officials "began violently washing his body," the parents said.

    Amber and Michael Tilley filed the suit against the Peaster School District on Thursday in federal court in Fort Worth.


    See the original report at NBCDFW.com

    "It's terrible, and we don't want anything like that to happen to any other children," Amber Tilley said.

    Peaster Independent School District Superintendent Matthew Adams did not return a phone call seeking comment. The district offices appeared to be closed on Friday.

    The boy is referred to by the initials "P.T." in the lawsuit.

    His parents also say school officials put cotton balls in their son's ears and left them there for the entire day.

    "His body and his ears, they were really sore, real tender from being scrubbed," Amber Tilley said.

    The lawsuit claims the boy was traumatized by what happened and has had to see therapists.

    "He just kept on and on, wanting to take baths," his mother said. "You know, he just felt so disgusting."

    The parents say nobody from the school ever contacted them about a hygiene problem.

    "The first thing I said was, 'You ought to try to call us,'" Michael Tilley said. "And they said, 'We were trying to avoid him being embarrassed.' And I said, 'You all did a real good job of helping that process along.'"

    His parents kept him out of school for a week.

    "The first day he went back to school, he completely sprayed himself from head to toe and back up again with cologne," Amber Tilley said. "And it was choking me out, but I didn't say anything to him."

    His parents say they believe he was clean before the incident and insist that, at age 8, he doesn't have a problem with body odor.

    "It's never go two, three days without a bath -- never," the mother said.

    The lawsuit seeks monetary damages and also asks that the district "cease all harassment and retaliation" against the boy.

    The parents' attorney, Jason Bach, of Austin, said the case is unlike any he has tried.

    "The thing that's unusual is that any school employee would take it upon themselves to do this to a child," Bach said. "As bizarre as that is, the injuries that this child has sustained are significant."

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    982 comments

    The parents say they weren't contacted. If true, then the school officials were stupid. It seems pretty stupid that they bathed him at school, too. Seems like he would have been sent home and the parents informed that he had to be cleaned up and presentable before he could return. This whole story i …

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  • 24
    May
    2012
    3:45am, EDT

    Female soldiers sue to lift combat ban 'solely on the basis of sex'

    The Pentagon has changed some of its rules.  Women will be permitted in crucial and dangerous jobs closer to the front lines.  NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.  

    By Reuters

    WASHINGTON -- Two female soldiers filed suit on Wednesday to scrap the U.S. military's restrictions on women in combat, claiming the policy violated their constitutional rights.

    Command Sergeant Major Jane Baldwin and Colonel Ellen Haring, both Army reservists, said policies barring them from assignments "solely on the basis of sex" violated their right to equal protectio under the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution.


    "This limitation on plaintiffs' careers restricts their current and future earnings, their potential for promotion and advancement, and their future retirement benefits," the women said in the suit filed in U.S. District Court.

    Pentagon's new rules deploy women closer to combat

    Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and Army Secretary John McHugh are among the defendants. Baldwin is from Tallahassee, Florida, and Haring lives in Bristow, Virginia.

    The Pentagon unveiled a new policy in February that opened up 14,000 more positions to women in the military. It still barred them from serving in infantry, armor and special-operations units whose main job is front-line combat.

    The Pentagon announces new rules that reflect changes brought on by wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. NBC's Chris Clackum reports.

    NBC News: Pentagon to open more military jobs to women

    Defense Department spokesman George Little declined to comment on the lawsuit. He said Panetta was "strongly committed to examining the expansion of roles for women in the U.S. military, as evidenced by the recent step of opening up thousands of more assignments to women."


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Women make up about 14.5 percent of active-duty military personnel. More than 800 women have been wounded and more than 130 killed in fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, the lawsuit said.

    "The linear battlefield no longer exists," Baldwin and Haring said. They alleged that women are engaged in combat even when it is not part of their assigned roles.

    From wannabe housewife to managing $822 billion military budget

    Army Chief of Staff General Raymond Odierno said last week the Army was considering letting women attend its elite Ranger School and opening up infantry and armor positions to women.

    Report: Growing number of military women see combat, serve in leadership roles

    More than 200 women had begun reporting to maneuver battalions and combat teams last week, he said.

    The case is Baldwin et al v. Panetta et al in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, No. 12-cv-00832.

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    655 comments

    "This limitation on plaintiffs' careers restricts their current and future earnings, their potential for promotion and advancement, and their future retirement benefits," the women said in the suit filed in U.S. District Court."

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  • 22
    May
    2012
    6:06am, EDT

    Could you be sued for texting with a driver? Experts say, 'maybe'

    By Bob Sullivan, Columnist, NBC News

    Could you be blamed for a car crash because you sent a text message? 

    A New Jersey judge will decide later this week if the sender of a text message might be partially liable for a horrific auto accident that occurred because the driver was reading that message on his cell phone and drifted into oncoming traffic.

    With nearly half a million U.S. drivers injured in distracted driving-related accidents every year, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the judge’s decision could have wide-ranging impact in both the legal and digital realms.

    While it might seem absurd to blame someone who isn't even in the car -- or anywhere near it -- for causing an accident, some legal experts say the plaintiff is on firmer ground than you might think.


    Skippy Weinstein, a Morristown-based lawyer, is using similar logic to press the case he filed on behalf of David and Linda Kuber. Both Kubers lost their legs during a 2009 crash in Mine Hill, N.J., after 19-year-old Kyle Best sideswiped their car when driving while texting. Weinstein said Shannon Colonna, who was texting with Best, should also be held responsible for the Kubers’ injuries.

    "She was not physically in the vehicle but she was electronically present," Weinstein told msnbc.com. "She and he were assisting each other in a violation of the law."

    That word "assisting" is at the crux of Weinstein's novel legal argument. 

    Most readers will be familiar with the notion of "aiding and abetting" a criminal act and the guilt it brings: the man who knowingly holds the door for the gang is just likely to be convicted of bank robbery as the safe cracker.

    More recently, this notion of aiding and abetting has been extended to civil liability cases, too, creating a basis for what's sometimes called "secondary" or "vicarious" liability. For the past two decades, most civil aiding and abetting cases have been limited to investment and securities fraud: An aggrieved investor might not only sue Bernie Madoff for stealing his money, for example, but also go after a third-party broker who repeatedly executed trades for Madoff. Even if the trader wasn't profiting from the scheme or part of a "joint enterprise,“ a court might find the trader provided assistance to Madoff, and should have known that someone was likely be injured by his actions.

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    The aiding and abetting argument in injuries that give rise to lawsuits, known as "torts," is only beginning to find its way into other kinds of civil cases.

    There's a simple three-pronged test to prove someone is partly to blame for causing an injury by aiding and abetting someone else. It is set out in the Restatement of Torts published by the American Law Institute, which guides most civil courtrooms:

    1) The party the defendant assists must do a wrongful act;

    2) The party must be generally aware of his or her role in the illegal or "tortuous" act;

    3) The party must "substantially assist" in the principal violation.

    Weinstein think his argument is easy to make. The driver violated the law by texting while driving. Colonna, the text sender, should have known that Best was driving home from work and had to know texting while driving was a violation, he said. Therefore, it's hard to argue that a text sender isn't substantially assisting in the creation of a text message conversation that violates New Jersey's driving laws.

    "That very comfortably satisfies the third prong of the legal test," he said.

    Colonna’s lawyer, Joseph McGlone, doesn't think the argument has any merit, and has asked Morris County Superior Court Judge David Rand to dismiss the case. Rand is scheduled to rule this week on McGlone’s motion to dismiss the case.

    The sender of a text message has no way to control or predict when the recipient will read it, McGlone argues.

    "The sender of the text has the right to assume the recipient will read it at a safe time,” McGlone told the local Daily Record  newspaper. “It’s not fair. It’s not reasonable. Shannon Colonna has no way to control when Kyle Best is going to read that message."

    He added that there is no precedent for heaping liability on a person on the other side of a text message conversation that causes injury.

    Of course, there's no precedent for a lot of legal areas in the Digital Age. In situations like this, judges usually turn to analogies. In driving injury cases, the judge has a bushel full to choose from.

    For starters, it's hard to tag liability on anyone who isn't holding the steering wheel of the car while an accident occurs. Lawyers around the nation have repeatedly tried and failed to make passengers partly responsible for accidents caused by drunken drivers when passengers knowingly get into a car with an intoxicated driver.

    There are exceptions, however. A South Carolina court has said a passenger could be judged a "proximate cause" of an injury if the driver and passenger were in some kind of "joint enterprise," such as the passenger steering the car while the driver presses the gas pedal.

    Passengers who have directly encouraged drivers to break the law -- by urging them to speed excessively or to drive in the oncoming lane as part of a game, for example -- have also been found liable, Weinstein says.

    But to find a passenger liable, the South Carolina court said, "The passenger must have an equal right to control the direction and management of the vehicle." It seems hard to argue that a text message sender has equal ability to control the vehicle as the driver does.

    But there are plenty of other situations where someone other than the driver has to pay after an injury accident, an extension of liability called “imputed negligence.” The most common is when the driver is "an agent" of someone else -- when a pizza delivery man driving for work causes an accident, his employer is liable.  Parents are often liable for accidents their children cause if they kids are directly under their care. 

    There's also concept called "negligent entrustment": if you knowingly let an unlicensed driver take your auto out for a spin, you will probably be liable for an accident he or she causes. 

    Neither of those cases fit this situation well, however. So Weinstein has settled on a simpler analogy.

    "If she was in the vehicle and put her hands over his eyes so he couldn't see, she would be liable," he said. "(Texting with him) is as if she put her hands over his eyes."

    Is texting the digital equivalent of willfully rendering someone blind? To even make that argument, and to press on with the aiding and abetting claim, Weinstein has to persuade the judge that Colonna knew that Best was texting while driving. Colonna's lawyers are contesting that point, but Weinstein says the pattern of texts between boyfriend and girlfriend make clear that she must have known he was on his way home from work.

    But even if he fails on that argument, it's easy to imagine other lawsuits where evidence of knowledge by the sender could be hard to deny. A driver might directly text, "Hey, I'm driving home," for example.

    That would make a big difference in a case like this, said Robert Mitchell, a Utah-based lawyer and author of a recent article on aiding and abetting claims.

    "If there is conclusive evidence that the person sending the text messages to the driver knew the driver was texting while driving, we see no reason why a claim for aiding and abetting the driver’s negligent or reckless conduct could not be made. The case is probably weaker if there is no evidence of actual knowledge, but only evidence of ‘constructive knowledge,’" said Mitchell, referring to a concept that the sender "should have known" the recipient was driving. "Courts disagree over whether constructive knowledge is sufficient to give rise to aiding and abetting liability."

    Courts have found that the contribution by this third party in aiding and abetting cases can't be slight – it must be “significant.” For example, giving directions to the bank robber probably wouldn’t be substantial enough to get you prosecuted, but telling him what time security guard shifts change could be. And, as with most civil liability cases, the harm caused by the action doesn't have to be intentional.

    Mitchell said this is the critical phrase in the American Law Institute's guidelines.

    "If the encouragement or assistance is a substantial factor in causing the resulting tort, the one giving it is himself a tortfeasor and is responsible for the consequences of the other’s act. This is true both when the act done is (intentional) and when it is merely (negligent)," Mitchell wrote in his review, quoting the guidelines with added parenthesis. In fact, liability exists even if the third-party has no idea he or she is doing something illegal or negligent.

    So in Mitchell’s view, it's a relatively easy to argue that the texter "substantially assisted" the driver in causing the accident. 

    "The third prong, substantial assistance, would be an easier hurdle to clear (than knowledge) since sending somebody a text message while driving distracts the driver and that distraction may ultimately cause the accident," he said.  "Of course defenses may include superseding or intervening causes to the underlying tort (the first prong), like bad weather, poor road conditions or visibility, avoiding someone or something on the road."

    Not all experts agree, however. Maryland-based lawyer Bradley Shear, an expert in digital law, openly fretted about how far liability might extend if Weinstein is successful in his novel legal argument.

    "What if someone is hopping on a boat, and they look down at a text, slip and drown? What if a doctor gets a text before a surgery that upsets him and he makes a mistake? Is the sender responsible?" he said. "If you start going down that route where are you going to draw the line?"

    Mark Rasch, for head of the Justice Department’s Computer Crimes Unit, said he thinks the case will boil down simply into this question: Can anyone really prove that the sender of the text, Colonna, knew that Best would read it while driving? Absent such proof, there is no case, he says.

    But he was concerned with the larger issue of extending liability through digital means.

    “The real question here is, do we as a society want to impose a duty on the non-driving texter for accidents that happen when a recipient is driving?” he said. “For now, it seems a reasonable place to draw the line at this: The person driving has a duty not to text. And the person on other end of line has no duty unless there are special circumstances.”

    One special circumstance he envisioned: A boss or other person in a position of power who received a message from an employee saying, “I can’t text, I’m driving,” but continued to send demanding texts with an implied threat if they weren’t answered quickly.

    “The person in the position of authority might have liability then,” said Rasch, now a cybersecurity consultant with Virginia-based CSC Inc.

    Complicating matters, juries can apportion liability, and theoretically could find a driver 90 percent responsible and the sender of a text 10 percent responsible. Damages can be similarly apportioned, although the realities of collections means the party with the deepest pockets usually pays the most in damages.

    It’s also possible that Congress or state legislatures might create a chain of liability, as states have done with dram shop laws, which make bars liable for injuries and damages caused by patron who are served after they’re drunk.

    For his part, Weinstein demurs when asked if he's trying to set an important legal precedent or make law. He's just trying to win a case for his client, he said.

    "The defense ... wants to make this into a cause celebre, but this is not complicated," he said. "A jury may find I'm wrong and thrown me out on my duff. ... All I'm saying is don't (text) while driving, and don't assist someone else in texting while driving."

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  • 16
    May
    2012
    6:49pm, EDT

    New York City stop-and-frisk lawsuit gets class-action status

    By NBC News and msnbc.com staff

    A federal judge sharply critical of New York City police tactics granted class-action status to a lawsuit claiming officers’ stop-and-frisk policy discriminates against blacks and Latinos.


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    U.S. District Judge Shira Scheindlin in Manhattan said in a written ruling that there was "overwhelming evidence" that the centralized stop-and-frisk program led to thousands of unlawful stops. She noted that the vast majority of New Yorkers who are unlawfully stopped will never file a lawsuit in response, and she said class-action status was created for just these kinds of court cases.


    The ruling comes on the heels of last weekend’s revelation by the Police Department that it made 601,055 street stops of potential suspects last year, with about 10 percent of the stops resulting in arrests. In 2009, there were 575,304 stops. Police conducted more than 200,000 frisk searches in the first three months of this year, it said.

    Earlier: New York cops boost stop-and-frisks despite criticism

    Thousands of people who were stopped could now join the lawsuit, originally filed in 2008 by four plaintiffs.

    The lawsuit alleged that the Police Department purposefully engaged in a widespread practice of concentrating its stop-and-frisk activity on black and Latino neighborhoods based on their racial composition rather than legitimate non-racial factors. The lawsuit said officers are pressured to meet quotas as part of the program and are punished if they do not.

    Scheindlin said she found it "disturbing" that the city responded to the lawsuit by saying that a court order to stop the practice would amount to "judicial intrusion" and that an injunction couldn't guarantee the end of “suspicionless” stops.

    "First, suspicionless stops should never occur," Scheindlin wrote. She said the department's "cavalier attitude towards the prospect of a 'widespread practice of suspicionless stops' displays a deeply troubling apathy towards New Yorkers' most fundamental constitutional rights."

    She called it "rather audacious" of the Police Department to argue that legislators already would have passed necessary laws if it were possible to protect people from unlawful searches and seizures.

    She added that if the department was engaging in a widespread practice of unlawful stops, then an injunction seeking to curb that practice is not the "judicial intrusion into a social institution" that the city claims it would be but "a vindication of the Constitution and an exercise of the courts' most important function: protecting individual rights in the face of the government's malfeasance."

    The city law office said in a statement: "We respectfully disagree with the decision and (are) reviewing our legal options."

    Darius Charney, who argued the case on behalf of the Center for Constitutional Rights, a non-profit legal organization, said: "We're very pleased. We think she clearly got everything right on the law."

    This article includes reporting by NBCNewYork.com and msnbc.com's Jim Gold.

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    25 comments

    And this reignites the old statement of, "If you've got nothing to hide, you shouldn't have a problem with being searched." In reality, it's another nail in the coffin of your personal freedoms, where even the pockets of your clothes aren't private property any more, not when you're on a public str …

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  • 3
    May
    2012
    6:07am, EDT

    Student left in cell for 4 days files $20M claim against DEA

    Daniel Chong, a 23-year-old university student who was allegedly forgotten about in a Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) holding cell for nearly five days. KNSD-TV's Tony Shin reports.

    By Sarah Grieco and Rory Devine, NBC San Diego

    Daniel Chong, a San Diego student who was left in a Drug Enforcement Administration holding cell for nearly five days after he was allegedly forgotten about, has filed a claim for $20 million after what he described as his "life-altering" experience, NBC San Diego reported.

    The 23-year-old told NBC San Diego that he was increasingly worried throughout the days he spent in a 5-foot-by-10-foot cell, and told how he drank his own urine to survive.

    “They never came back, ignored all my cries and I still don’t know what happened,” he said. “I’m not sure how they could forget me.” 


    As NBC San Diego was first to report Saturday, the DEA confirmed its agents were investigating an incident in which a suspect, arrested Saturday, April 21, was detained at their office for several days and allegedly forgotten about. 

    DEA apologizes to student left for days in cell with no food or water

    Chong's lawyers filed the claim Wednesday, and also asked the DEA provide evidence related to the incident. The DEA said it was investigating why the student was not released.

    Chong said he was at a friend’s house in University City celebrating 4/20, a day many marijuana users set aside to smoke, when agents came inside and raided the residence. Chong was then taken to the DEA office in Kearny Mesa. 

    He said agents questioned him, and then told him he could go home. One agent even offered him a ride, Chong said. No criminal charges were filed against him. 

    But Chong did not go home that night. Instead, he was placed in a cell for five days without any human contact and was not given food or drink. In his desperation, he said he was forced to drink his own urine.

    “I had to do what I had to do to survive ... I hallucinated by the third day,” Chong said. “I was completely insane.” 

    Chong said he lost roughly 15 pounds during the time he was alone.

    His lawyer, Gene Iredale, confirmed that Chong ingested a powdery substance found inside the cell. Later testing revealed the substance was methamphetamine. 

    After days of being ignored, Chong said he tried to take his own life by breaking the glass from his spectacles with his teeth and then attempting to carve “Sorry mom” on his arm.

    He said nurses also found pieces of glass in his throat, which led him to believe he ingested the pieces purposefully. 

    Chong said he could hear DEA employees and people in neighboring cells. He screamed to let them know he was there, but no one replied.


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    He kicked the door, but no one came to get him. By the time DEA officers found Chong in his cell Wednesday morning, he was completely incoherent, said Iredale. 

    “I didn’t think I would come out,” Chong said. 

    He said when employees discovered him in the cell that they looked confused and nervous. A DEA employee rode with him to the hospital, where they paid for Chong’s visit. 

    He spent three days in the intensive care unit at Sharp Hospital and his kidneys were close to failing. 

    “He was at the wrong place at the wrong time,” said Iredale, who compared Chong’s experience to the torture suffered by inmates at in the Abu Ghraib prison in Baghdad, Iraq.

    The incident also caused Chong to miss his midterms at UCSD. He said he does not know if he will return to school because his perspective on life has changed since his isolation. 

    San Diego defense attorney Gretchen Von Helms said Chong could get millions from a lawsuit. 

    "In all my years of practice, I've never heard of the DEA or any federal government employee simply forgetting about someone that they have in their care," she said. 

    "There has to be repercussions if people do not follow the safety and the care when they have a human being in their custody," she added. 

    The Drug Enforcement Administration has issued an apology to Chong. 

    DEA San Diego Acting Special Agent-In-Charge William R. Sherman said in a statement Wednesday that he was troubled by the treatment of Chong and extended his "deepest apologies" to him. He has ordered an extensive review of his office's policies and procedures. 

     

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    628 comments

    I hope he wins every single penny of the $20mil suit, plus personal punitive award against everyone of the DEA perpetrators who violated his civil rights without due processd under the disguise of law enforcement. Nobody's son or daughter deserves to be torture in this manner in USA.

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  • 21
    Apr
    2012
    3:18am, EDT

    Two women sue military officials over alleged rape, sexual assault

    By Reuters

    NEW YORK -- Two women who said they were raped while attending U.S. military academies sued military officials on Friday, accusing them of failing to address widespread problems of sexual assault at the elite schools. 

    In the lawsuit filed in Manhattan federal court, the two women said the Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland and the Army's United States Military Academy in West Point, New York, tolerate sexual assault and discourage victims of attacks from reporting them.



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    "Both institutions systematically and repeatedly ignore rampant sexual harassment," the lawsuit filed by Leah Marquet, 20, and Anne Kendzior, 22, stated. "Both institutions have a history of failing to prosecute and punish those students found to have sexually assaulted and raped their fellow students." 

    In the lawsuit, Marquet, a former West Point cadet, said she was pressured by upperclassmen to get drunk and raped by a fellow student while she was intoxicated.

    Lawsuit claims rape, misconduct at DC Marine Barracks

    After she reported an assault, other students taunted her, the lawsuit said, and the school punished her for reporting the incident by forcing her to take out her attacker's trash. She quit West Point after becoming suicidal, the lawsuit said.

    Kendzior, who entered the Naval Academy in 2008, said she was raped twice by two different fellow students, both times while she was drunk. Kendzior accused the Naval Academy of forcing her to drop out after she reported the rapes to an academy counselor.

    The suit accused former Defense Secretary Robert Gates and four other military officials of failing to implement steps to fight sexual assaults at the schools.

    The suit seeks an unspecified amount of monetary damages.

    Panetta seeks to curb assaults
    U.S. Navy Commander William Marks, a Naval Academy spokesman, declined comment on the lawsuit itself, but said the academy takes every report of alleged sexual assault "extremely seriously" and that its "sexual assault response and advocacy program is among the strongest in the nation." 

    Eight current and former U.S. service members are stepping forward today to accuse U.S. military officials of tolerating a "staggering" number of sexual assaults in a lawsuit that focuses on one of the nation's most prestigious bases in the Marine Corps. NBC's Michael Isikoff reports.

    Officials at West Point said they could not comment on pending litigation, but that the school takes sexual harassment issues "very seriously."

    "Every unrestricted report of sexual assault is thoroughly investigated, the results of the investigation are reviewed by legal experts and appropriate action taken," said Lt. Col. Sherri K. Reed, the academy's spokesperson.

    Officials at the Pentagon had no immediate comment on the lawsuit.

    Last month, eight other women filed a lawsuit in federal court in Washington saying they were raped, assaulted or sexually harassed while in the military, and were retaliated against when they complained.

    The latest lawsuit was filed less than a week after Defense Secretary Leon Panetta announced new steps to curb thousands of sexual assaults a year within the military.

    The case is Karley Leah Marquet v. Robert Gates et al, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, No. 12-3117.

     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    436 comments

    sounds like they were ordered to drink by upperclassmen and then they raped them and the rape was not even investigated so they were raped by the classmates then again by the administrators of the school shamefull behavior .women have just as much right to be in the military then men .

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  • 18
    Apr
    2012
    7:04am, EDT

    Author Greg Mortenson faces civil suit over 'Three Cups of Tea'

    Greg Mortenson poses with Sitara "Star" schoolchildren in Wakhan, northeastern Afghanistan in this undated handout file photograph released to Reuters March 11, 2009.

    By The Associated Press

    A federal court is expected to hear accusations Wednesday that author and humanitarian Greg Mortenson fabricated parts of his best-selling books "Three Cups of Tea" and "Stones Into Schools." 

    A hearing is scheduled in Great Falls, Montana on claims that Mortenson lied about how he came to build schools in Central Asia after losing his way in a failed mountaineering expedition and being nursed back to health in a Pakistani village. 


     The lawsuit — filed by two California residents, a Montana man and an Illinois woman who bought the books — list more than two dozen alleged fabrications and accusations of wrongdoing by Mortenson, publisher Penguin Group, co-author David Oliver Relin and the Central Asia Institute. 

    The plaintiffs say Mortenson and the others purposely presented the lies as the truth to trick readers into buying the books and donating to the charity. They accuse Mortenson and the others of racketeering, fraud, deceit, breach of contract and unjust enrichment. 

    A First Amendment expert calls the lawsuit absurd, regardless of whether the books contain fabrications. 

    'Three Cups of Tea' author Greg Mortenson must pay $1 million to charity

    Mortenson did not defame or harm anybody in his books, and barring narrow exceptions like national secrets, he can write what he wants and does not have to justify it, said Wayne Giampietro, a Chicago attorney and general counsel of the First Amendment Lawyers Association. 

    "It's his story. It purports to be his experiences. He can say it any way he wants to say. He has the right to publish anything he wants about himself," Giampietro said. "The idea that you can be sued because perhaps they don't like what you wrote, for whatever reason, is absurd." 

    Lawyers for Mortenson and Penguin Group plan to argue that very point before U.S. District Judge Sam Haddon. They are asking Haddon to dismiss the lawsuit, which seeks triple the amount of total books sales, plus punitive damages. The lawsuit is asking a judge to order that everybody who bought the books be refunded. Whatever money is left over would go to a humanitarian organization selected by the plaintiffs' attorneys and approved by the court 

    That promises to be several million dollars. "Three Cups of Tea" alone sold about 4 million copies. 

    The hearing comes less than two weeks after Mortenson and the Montana attorney general announced a $1 million agreement to settle claims that Mortenson mismanaged the Central Asia Institute and misspent its funds. The agreement removes Mortenson from any financial oversight and overhauls the charity's structure, but it did not address the contents of the books. 

    That's where the civil lawsuit comes in. The four plaintiffs allege that Mortenson, Relin, Penguin, the Central Asia Institute and Mortenson's consulting group, MC Consulting, were involved in a conspiracy to promote and sell the books based on lies. 
    "The enterprise's fraudulent scheme was to make Mortenson into a false hero, to sell books representing to contain true events, when they were false, to defraud millions of unsuspecting purchasers out of the purchase price of the books and to raise millions of dollars in charitable donations for CAI," their lawsuit alleges. 

    The claims cite a laundry list of alleged fabrications. They include Mortenson's recollections about holding Mother Teresa's hand while her body was lying in state in 2000, when Mother Teresa actually died three years earlier. 

    Those and several other alleged fabrications in the lawsuit were first brought to light last year by author Jon Krakauer and a "60 Minutes" story that questioned the truth behind Mortenson's writings and whether he was benefiting from his charity. Those reports prompted the Montana attorney general's investigation and also the civil lawsuit whose original plaintiffs dropped out months ago. 

    One of the lawyers in the case is Larry Drury, who also represented plaintiffs in a class-action lawsuit against James Frey, who admitted on the "Oprah Winfrey Show" that he lied in his memoir "A Million Little Pieces." 

    That lawsuit ended in a settlement that offered refunds to buyers of the book. 

    Drury and fellow plaintiffs' attorney Alexander Blewett say the Mortenson and Frey cases "are stunningly close." 

    Mortenson and Penguin don't argue that the events in the books are true, though the publisher says that nobody can rely on the truth or accuracy of autobiographies because they are based on the authors' own recollections. 

    Both Mortenson and Penguin argue that the plaintiffs can't prove that they were actually injured by anything that was written in the books and that this lawsuit amounts to a threat to free speech. 

    Penguin attorney F. Matthew Ralph says that if a publisher were required to guarantee the truth and accuracy of everything an author says, the costs of publishing books would be prohibitive. 

    "No standards exist for drawing the line where 'fiction' becomes 'nonfiction' or vice versa; and the courts are not a proper place for developing such standards or policing that line," Ralph wrote.

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    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    54 comments

    Is it just me, or are there just way too many people lurking around just itchin' for a chance to sue somebody? And, as a party in the second part, way too many lawyers who just barely passed the bar on their 18th attempt that are just lookin' for that one big case to come along that will be their ve …

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  • 17
    Apr
    2012
    8:25pm, EDT

    $30 million lawsuit: Police planted shell casings in Baltimore shoot-out

    By Isolde Raftery, msnbc.com

    Brad Hallwig, the lawyer for a man whose conviction was overturned, thought news headlines should read: “Bad police shooting turns into cover-up.”

    Hallwig’s client, Darryl A. White, Jr. of Baltimore sued two police officers for $30 million, for the shooting deaths of his cousin and friend and his wrongful imprisonment. The families of the two who died joined White in the lawsuit. A judge declared a mistrial Monday, WBALTV.com reported.

    The lawsuit stems from a shootout on July 4, 2008, when three police officers in a marked cruiser responded to an Independence Day party at a union hall where gun shots had been heard.


    The officers – James L. Brooks and Christopher D. Ahearn – claimed they were targets, according to the Baltimore Sun. They said they were fired at from within the white Ford Taurus. The lawsuit says they responded with more than two dozen shots.

    White’s cousin, Heywood White, 18, and friend, Raemond White, 21, were both killed. A bullet also pierced Darryl White’s hand. Officers said they recovered handguns from the Taurus.

    Following the shooting, Darryl White was charged on 20 counts, including attempted murder. He was ultimately convicted on handgun violation charges and sentenced to 12 years.

    In prison, White continued to claim his innocence, saying that he didn’t have a weapon that night. On appeal, testimony revealed that the officers did not see him with a handgun and that police had not tested him for gunshot residue.  A Maryland Court of Special Appeals overturned his conviction last March.

    White then sued, saying that the shots heard were celebratory, and that the officers opened fire in response.

    White’s lawyers say police planted evidence by placing a shell casing inside the Taurus.   

    "Why the cover-up? Why the plan?” Mark Herman, an attorney for the plaintiff told the court on Monday. “The defendants knew they had a problem. They had killed two innocent people and shot a third."

    Paul M. Blair, Jr. president of the city’s police union, defended the officers.

    "You carry guns ... nowadays on the street, and you start shooting at police, then the police are going to return fire," Blair said, according to the Baltimore Sun.

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    9 comments

    Cops are good about shooting an arrow and painting the target around it.

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