Articles Posted in Personal Injury

A lawsuit has been filed against the New England Patriots and their coach Bill Belichick for $100 million. The plaintiffs, former St. Louis Rams football player Willie Gary, a Rams seat license holder, and two 2002 Super Bowl ticket holders, claim that the Patriots defrauded St. Louis players and fans when they allegedly taped the Rams practicing. The Patriots won the 2002 Super Bowl against the rams.

The lawsuit claims that the alleged taping helped the Patriots win the Super Bowl, which defrauded Rams players and fans of millions of dollars. A Patriots employee allegedly recorded a Rams walk-through practice the Saturday before the Super Bowl, which took place at the Louisiana Superdome.

The final score was 20-17, and the plaintiffs believe that the Rams might have won the Super Bowl if the alleged taping never happened. The Patriots deny that the taping ever happened.

Approximately 87,000 Massachusetts drivers have been in at least two motor vehicle accidents from 2002 through June 2007. 8,400 of these drivers have been in three crashes. Some 1,100 were in four auto collisions. Some 220 people have been in at least five accidents. Yet a number of these drivers continue to return to the roads. There are 4.7 million Massachusetts drivers.

The Boston Globe looked at 750,000 accident records from the Registry of Motor Vehicles. According to the study:

• Males are more frequently involved in motor vehicle accidents than females.
• Drivers 25 years of age and under are involved in 30% of the crashes.
• Fridays, after midnight, and after rush hour are the times when accidents are most likely to occur.

According to state and public safety officials, common causes of motor vehicle accidents in Massachusetts include:

• Negligence • Aggressive driving
• Driver inexperience • Bad road designs • Bad weather
In one recent deadly hit and run accident, the driver, Craig P. Bigos had at least six tickets and two motor vehicle crashes on his driving record. He was also driving with an expired license. Bigos allegedly hit a 13-year-old pedestrian while text messaging. He faces a motor vehicle homicide charge.

In 2004, a repeat offender heading to a methadone clinic struck a 55-year-old man in Kingston. In 2005, a 76-year-old Upton farmer, who has been in five accidents in six years, drove his tractor into a truck driven be an off-duty cop.

Accidents waiting to happen, Boston.com, February 10, 2008

Related Web Resources:

Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles

2004-2006 Massachusetts Crash Statistics
Continue reading

A jury in Massachusetts has awarded Louise Scialdone, a 58-year-old Somerville resident, $10 million in her personal injury lawsuit against the Massachusetts Transportation Bay Authority (MBTA). The total sum, interest included, is nearly $12.8 million.

Scialdone sustained a traumatic brain injury when an MBTA bus hit her on February 4, 2004. Scialdone used work with the Massachusetts Department of Transitional Assistance as a clerk.

Scialdone had a walker because she suffers from arthritis. She was struck while waiting for the bus at the stop on McGrath Highway.

Singer Trey Songz says he is thinking of filing a personal injury lawsuit against Springfield police officers because of his recent arrest at a club in Massachusetts.

The R & B singer was arrested on November 3 after his concert at the Hippodrome. Following his performance, a shooting took place outside the club’s parking lot. Songz was not involved in the shooting but he was arrested with two other members of his entourage.

Songz says police closed down the parking lot and prevented him and his entourage from leaving after gunshots were fired. He says police insisted on searching all of them and that they used excessive force to bring down his bodyguard. He claims that seven police officers assaulted his bodyguard and struck him with a nightstick, leaving bruises on his face and causing his arm to fall “out of place.”

Songz also claims that the police officers made crude and racists jokes and comments that they directed at Songz and his entourage. He says four police officers tackled him and assaulted him by kneeing his throat and kicking him in the ribs.

Springfield police deny the accusations and say that the officers acted appropriately and were responding to the verbally and physically abusive actions of Songz and his entourage.

Police Brutality
Even though law enforcement officers are supposed to serve and protect people, there are police officers who abuse their position of authority and power and engage in unjustified shootings, deadly chokings, severe beatings, verbal abuse, sexual assault, and other unnecessary and illegal violent behavior, including making false arrests, unnecessary use of a TASER gun or nightstick, fabricating/planting evidence, speeding in a police cruiser unnecessarily while chasing a suspect, and illegal killings.

Boston, Massachusetts is one of a number of U.S. cities where the Human Rights Watch has documented incidents of police misconduct. There are thousands of cases of police brutality that occur-many of these cases go unreported.

Police Brutality, HRW.org

Trey Songz Responds To Arrest, Contemplates Lawsuit, Soundslam.com, November 9, 2007
Related Web Resources:

Trey Songz

Trey Songz to Cops: Don’t You Know Who I Am?, TMZ, November 5, 2007 Continue reading

A Leicester railroad company worker who says he was hit in the face by a hammer while working in an engine room three years ago has filed an injury complaint against Providence & Worcester Railroad Co. in Federal Court. He filed his work injury case under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (FELA). Dennis J. Madore is claiming that the railroad company did not provide a safe work environment and was negligent.

In his complaint, Madore was repairing railroad cars in the engine house on December 10, 2004 when his face was accidentally struck with a hammer. The Massachusetts resident says that he suffered great physical pain, and “was made sick, sore and lame.” He claims he has not been able to work since the injury accident and that his incapacitation will continue. Madore says he has been paying for medication for his injuries and that his doctors’ bills are growing.

FELA

Four people were injured today in Massachusetts today when a manhole exploded and let out a spray of steaming water that may have contained asbestos. The water hit all four injury victims.

The injury accident occurred in Boston near a building at the corners of Summer and Redding. Boston Emergency Medical Services appeared at the scene after it became known that a hazardous material was possibly involved in the explosion. EMS workers medically monitored and decontaminated the firefighters at the accident scene.

The four injured persons, three of them energy company workers, were also decontaminated before being sent to nearby hospitals for treatment of their injuries.

The Boston Fire Department say they think that it was a steam pipe and not a manhole that exploded.

Asbestos Exposure
Exposure to asbestos can lead to catastrophic injuries, such as lung cancer, mesothelioma, and asbestosis. Although the dangers of asbestos exposure increases the longer the exposure time, there have been cases where someone has briefly been exposed to it and ended up with malignant mesothelioma.

If you become sick because of exposure to asbestos on the job, you may not be able to file a personal injury claim against your employer because you are likely eligible for workers’ compensation benefits. An experienced personal injury attorney can make sure that you receive all the benefits that you are eligible for. Your personal injury lawyer can also help you determine if there are third parties that can be held liable for your illness.

According to Allasbestos.org, Massachusetts is ranked 11th in the United States among the 50 states and the District of Columbia for having the highest number of asbestos-related deaths- from 1,355 fatalities to 1,715.

Hub Steam Explosion Injures Four, Boston Herald, September 12, 2007
State Ranking of Asbestos Related Mortality Rate, Allasbestos.org

Related Web Resources:

Massachusetts Workers Compensation Law, Workers Compensation Insurance.com
Asbestos, EPA.gov Continue reading

Reports made to the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) show that the number of serious injuries and deaths caused by over-the-counter medicine and prescription drugs grew significantly between 1998 and 2005.

Out of the 467,809 drug-related injuries and fatalities, nearly half of these cases could be attributed to 51 drugs. Drugs that affect the immune system, and painkillers, such as oxycodone, reportedly caused a lot of the deaths. The drugs most frequently linked to serious complications that weren’t fatal included Vioxx, Paxil, Remicade, and insulin.

The death toll from using prescription and over-the-counter drugs was three times higher in 2005 than in 1998:

• In 2005, over 15,000 people died because of reactions to drugs.
• 5,519 people died from using prescription and over-the-counter drugs in 1998.
• In 2005, 89,482 injury cases were caused by serious side effects from drug treatment.
• There were 34,966 reported injury cases caused by side effects in 1998.
• There are at least 500 injury cases involving Estrogen every year.
• More women were affected by pharmaceutical drugs than men.

This analysis can be read in the latest issue of Archives of Internal Medicine.

If you or someone you love has become seriously ill while using a prescription drug or over-the-counter medication, you should speak with a personal injury lawyer right away.

It can be very hard to prove that an illness, serious injury, or wrongful death was caused by a pharmaceutical drug. An experienced personal injury attorney will know how to investigate and prove your products liability case.

Although the FDA is supposed to prevent drugs that are not safe from entering the marketplace, sometimes, the problems with a drug are not discovered until after people have started to get sick or die. Illness, injury, or death caused by a defective drug can be grounds for a products liability claim or lawsuit against the drug manufacturer and/or distributor.

Even if a drug has been pulled off the shelf, you could still be entitled to compensation via pharmaceutical litigation if you are an injury victim.

Here is a list of some other drugs that have been the subject of drug litigation cases:

• Ephedra • Fen-Phen • Prempro • Accutane • Serzone
Analysis: Deaths from drug reactions up, Boston.com/AP, September 11, 2007
Reports of Drug Side Effects Rise, U.S. Study Finds, Bloomberg.com, September 10, 2007

Related Web Resources:

U.S. Food and Drug Administration

Archives of Internal Medicine
Continue reading

A North Easton man who was seriously injured last Friday after a metal grate flew through his Toyota’s windshield while he was driving on route 128 is still in the hospital and is in stable but critical condition.

Pawel Swierzcynski, 39, had to be flow to Boston and taken to Brigham and Women’s Hospital after the accident that occurred early on the morning of July 27 in Westwood.

Massachusetts highway engineers are trying to figure out what caused the steel grate to become dislodged and fly into the car windshield.

Worried citizens had recently expressed concerns to that they were worried that one of the 24 grates on the storm drains could come loose. SPS New England, a contractor, had been ordered to secure all of them. Officials say they don’t know why the problem was not resolved.

The grates, also called steel catch basins, usually weigh approximately 250 pounds each and sometimes they are not held in place by anything but their own weight.

After the accident, MassHighway personnel spent the day welding the remaining grates in the area to prevent similar accident from occurring again. Construction had been taking place in the area, and officials are now going to be looking at other construction zones to see if a similar problem could occur.

Usually, catch basins are placed next to highways and roads. The basins were relocated to high-speed lanes because of the construction work in the area.

When a person is seriously injured because another party was negligent, the injured person may have grounds to file a personal injury claim.

Massachusetts law holds negligent persons responsible for the injured persons:

• Pain and suffering • Past, ongoing, and future medical and recovery costs • Any lost wages
• Expenses incurred to hire help while the injured person recovers • Rehabilitation costs • Property damage • Permanent disfigurement • Disability resulting from the accident • Other costs resulting from the accident
Man still hospitalized after accident, Easton Journal, August 2, 2007
Catch Basin Cover Crashes Windshield, Injures Driver, The Boston Channel, July 27, 2007
Repairs On Loose Grate Ordered Before Accident, WBZTV.com, July 27, 2007

Related Web Resource:

SPS New England
Continue reading

Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick says that the state has 27 steel truss bridges that are similarly designed to the Minneapolis Bridge that collapsed on Wednesday but that none of them are in danger of collapsing.

Authorities in Minnesota continue to search for survivors, following the collapse of the eight-lane interstate bridge that injured at least 79 people, trapped up to 50 motor vehicles in the Mississippi river, left at least 20 people still missing, and killed at least 4 people.

The bridge took less than 4 seconds to fall 60 feet into the river, and the water under the collapsed structure is about 7 feet deep. The river currents are pushing around blocks of pavement and twisted steel and making it very difficult for divers to search for survivors.

Investigators say they will try to determine the cause of the collapse. A 2001 study by the Minnesota Department of Transportation discovered several “fatigue problems” in the bridge and that certain areas, if cracked, could cause a collapse.

In 2005, the U.S. Department of Transportation’s National Bridge Inventory database determined that the Minnesota Bridge was structurally deficient and it received a 4 rating on a scale of 0 to 9, signifying deterioration and advanced section loss.

A school bus filled with over 50 children (ages 5 to 14) that had just finished a summer field trip was one of the many motor vehicles on the bridge when it fell. Eight of the children were hospitalized and treated for their personal injuries as a result of the bridge accident.

In Massachusetts, Governor Patrick has asked state transportation officials to look at bridge inspection records to make sure that there wasn’t anything about the conditions of the current 27 bridges to trigger alarm. In 2006, former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney announced a plan to spend $1 billion over a five-year period to fix over 600 crumbling bridges in the state.

Massachusetts has 506 bridges that are “structurally deficient,” meaning that they received the same rating as the bridge that collapsed in Minneapolis. The rating means that a bridge is reaching the end of its lifespan.

After an accident as serious as a bridge collapse occurs, an investigation will have to take place to see who acted negligently or carelessly so that the accident occurred. The party or parties can be held liable by filing personal injury claims or wrongful death lawsuits against them. It is not uncommon for there to be more than one negligent party, and a good personal injury lawyer can help you file a successful injury claim.

Relatives hope, pray as river search continues, CNN.com, August 2, 2007
Patrick: 27 Mass. bridges similar in design to Minn. bridge, Boston.com, August 2, 2007

Related Web Resource:

National Bridge Inventory, U.S. Department of Transportation, IRE.org Continue reading

9-year-old Yaritza Diaz is not very responsive and is in critical condition at Franciscan Hospital for Children in Boston after being seriously injured in a boating accident involving two Sea-Doo watercrafts last May.

Carlos Lopez, 21, and Jose M. Cruz Delgado, 30, have both been charged with negligent driving of a watercraft, failing to follow inland navigation rules, failing to file a written boat accident report, and driving a personal watercraft in excess of headway speed.

Investigators say that Yaritza was riding on the back of the family’s Sea-doo, which had been driven by Lopez. Another Sea-doo, driven by Delgado, was driving on the same course but coming from the opposite direction. The two watercrafts collided. Yaritza was thrown at least 15 feet into the air and was struck by part of one of the vessels. She sustained serious head injuries in the crash.

An investigator on the case says that the vessels were moving at 31 mph, which is way over the 6mph speed limit.

Charges have been filed against the drivers of both vessels-one of them is a family friend of the Diaz family.

Antonia Diaz, the mother of Yaritza, believes that more severe charges should be made against the men. She thinks that misdemeanor charges are not enough to hold the men responsible for what happened to her daughter, who is unable to stand or sit on her own. Yaritza uses a feeding tube and has not been responsive to treatment.

Felony charges, however, can only be made if the two men had been drinking while driving a watercraft and if someone had been killed during the accident.

Yaritza will soon be transferred back to U Mass Memorial Medical Center in Worcester. Her mother says that a full-time nurse will be needed to take care of her daughter.

The CDC offers a number of 2005 boating accident statistics on its Web site, including the following:

*In 2005, the U.S. Coast Guard received reports for 4,969 boating incidents; 3,451 participants were reported injured and 697 died in boating incidents.

*Open motorboats were involved in 45% of all reported incidents and personal watercraft were involved in another 26%.

*The number of reported nonfatal injuries (1,007) involving personal watercraft (PWC), such as Jet Skis® and WaveRunners®, increased for the first time since 1996. PWC-related fatalities (65) also increased in 2005.

Watercraft drivers face charges in accident, Telegram.com, July 23, 2007
Boating Safety, Center for Disease Control and Prevention
Related Web Resources:

Sea-Doo

Your Resource Center for Boating Safety, USCGboating.org Continue reading

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