Monthly Archives: October 2018

17 10, 2018

Interesting Approach

By |2021-04-08T13:48:10+00:00October 17, 2018|

Recently I became aware of an interesting experiment by the SCIF, the State Compensation Insurance Fund. Titled the “Injured Worker Incentive Program”, this SCIF program (see link below) promised certain monetary incentives to those who it deemed in compliance with certain benchmarks. This apparently was a small SCIF program, and inquiries by some of my [...]

17 10, 2018

Three Girls Settle $4M for Molestation in Police Explorer Program

By |2021-04-08T14:12:04+00:00October 17, 2018|

Three Southern California girls molested by a police officer while in a police explorer program have settled their civil suit against the Irwindale Police Department and Learning for Life, the company that runs the program, for a record $4 million. The settlement comes on the heels of another settlement against the same defendants last year for [...]

16 10, 2018

Harry Potter Amusement Park Ride Lawsuit Settles

By |2021-04-08T14:19:58+00:00October 16, 2018|

Tommy Fry was stuck on the Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey ride at Universal Studios Orlando for about an hour back in 2015, when the ride he and his two sons were on malfunctioned. Fry claimed to have been suspended upside down for this time, though the facts are unclear, since the ride technically does not [...]

13 10, 2018

Top 5 Legal Concerns About Common Carrier Liability

By |2021-04-08T14:02:11+00:00October 13, 2018|

In the wake of the deadliest U.S. transportation-related accident in almost a decade, the operator of the limousine company whose “Frankenstein vehicle” was involved in the crash was arrested and charged with criminally negligent homicide. And while he is facing criminal liability for the 20 deaths as a result of the accident, he and the limo company [...]

12 10, 2018

Fitzpatrick and 4662(B)

By |2021-04-08T12:49:17+00:00October 12, 2018|

“Two roads diverged in a wood, and I- I took the one less traveled by, And that has made all the difference” -Robert Frost The paths one chooses can make a big difference. That’s the ultimate takeaway from a September 2018 California Court of Appeal (Third Appellate District) decision, Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation v. Workers’ [...]

11 10, 2018

After Dynamex, What?

By |2021-04-08T12:59:31+00:00October 11, 2018|

Will the 2018 California Supreme Court decision in Dynamex actually have less impact on California workers’ comp than some might have believed? Dynamex Operations West, Inc. v. Superior Court  (83 CCC 817) adopted a simpler but more broad definition of employment status, but arose only in the context of litigation over California wage orders. However, there has been [...]

11 10, 2018

Foster Agency Sued for Fatal Pit Bull Attack in Kansas

By |2021-04-08T14:24:40+00:00October 11, 2018|

A Kansas foster care agency is being sued in federal court after a foster child, who was placed back into her father’s home, died from being attacked by pit bulls that lived in the home. The lawsuit is against the Department for Children and Families (DCF) and KVC Behavioral Healthcare, a private not-for-profit foster care contractor, and [...]

10 10, 2018

Florida Man Claims ‘Free Alcohol’ at Music Fest Led to Fall, Injuries

By |2021-04-08T13:00:33+00:00October 10, 2018|

Like any experienced music festival attendee, Michael Ryan, of Panama City Beach, Florida, purchased VIP tickets for the Gulf Coast Jam country music festival in 2014. That gave Ryan access to unlimited quantities of free alcohol in the VIP area. And like any experienced litigant, Ryan doesn’t explicitly admit to consuming any of that free [...]

10 10, 2018

‘Frankenstein Vehicles,’ Limo Accidents, and Legal Liability

By |2021-04-08T14:01:54+00:00October 10, 2018|

A tragic limousine accident last weekend killed 17 passengers, the driver, and two pedestrians, rocked the small town of Schoharie, New York, and raised new questions about limo safety, licensing, and legal liability. According to reports, the modified 2001 Ford Excursion had recently failed a state safety inspection, the driver did not have the proper license to [...]

3 10, 2018

Costco Shopper Hit by Falling Steel, Sues for Brain Damage

By |2021-04-08T14:12:56+00:00October 3, 2018|

A Costco customer was hit by a steel rod while reaching for a package of paper towels, prompting a host of medical interventions. The 62-year-old North Salem, New York resident suffered irreversible brain damage at a Brookfield Costco in 2016, and has filed a federal lawsuit against the wholesale chain for monetary damages claiming unsafe, dangerous, or [...]

Go to Top