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Governor Vetoes Pro-Insurance Bills |
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Friday, February 10, 2012 |
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
February 10, 2012
CONTACT:
Carla Ferrucci; Executive Director
Minnesota Association for Justice
612-375-1707 Office
612-532-5060 Cell
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Governor Vetoes Pro-Insurance Bills
Governor rejects bills that limit the constitutional rights of Minnesotans.
ST. PAUL, MN – Governor Mark Dayton vetoed several bills today that he says would put ordinary Minnesotans rights at risk, only benefit big insurance companies and that would not create a single job in Minnesota.
The four bills were presented to the Governor individually, but represented a package of bills backed by the insurance industry. Governor Dayton’s individual vetoes can be summed up from the following veto message: “Eliminating Minnesotan’s rights to redress and trial by jury is not a jobs program. This bill would benefit those who commit fraud, negligently injure our citizens and businesses, or allow an unfair work environment. I will not agree to it.”
The four billed that made up the so called ‘reform’ and vetoed by Governor Dayton include:
• SF 149/HF 211 which would have eliminated the ability of consumers and business to hold companies accountable for fraudulent and deceptive acts and dramatically changes Minnesota’s long standing consumer protection legislation.
• SF 373/HF 654 would have robbed innocent victims, including victims of sexual violence of the time they need to recover for the damages they suffered.
• SF429/HF 747 would have restricted the ability of citizens to hold companies accountable for any discriminatory, fraudulent, and employment related wrongful conduct and would affect 300 statutes that require awards of attorney’s fees to prevent wrongful and/or illegal conduct.
• SF 530/HF 770 would have provided a windfall for insurance companies by creating an incentive to avoid paying claims owed to consumers and thereby increasing their profits.
Reacting to the veto message, Brian Wojtalewicz, President of the Minnesota Association for Justice, said “We are grateful that the Governor has seen through the flimsy arguments and justifications for these changes advanced by the insurance industry. There is no litigation explosion in Minnesota. In fact, personal injury case filings have gone down 40% since 1997; Minnesota has the lowest medical malpractice premiums in the country; Minnesota’s auto insurance premiums have gone down approximately 14% since 2003 and, our court rules and procedures are the envy of the every other state in the country.”
“By vetoing these bills Governor Dayton has preserved the ability of individuals to assert their constitutional rights,” said Rich Ruohonen Legislative Chair of the Minnesota Association for Justice. “Today the Governor has shown that he will support the rights of individual citizens and for that we thank him.” Ruohonen concluded.
The Minnesota Association for Justice (MAJ) is a professional association of attorneys who represent Minnesotans wrongfully harmed or injured in person, property or human rights. MAJ defends the rights guaranteed by the Constitutions and laws of the United States and Minnesota, foremost among them the right to a trial by jury and advocates for public policy to enhance consumer rights and protection.
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So Called ‘Reforms’ Put Consumer, Small Business Rights at Risk |
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Wednesday, February 01, 2012 |
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
February 1, 2012
CONTACT:
Brian Wojtalewicz, President
Minnesota Association for Justice
Wojtalewicz Law Firm
320-760-8416
OR
Carla Ferrucci; Executive Director
Minnesota Association for Justice
612-375-1707 Office
612-532-5060 Cell
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
So Called ‘Reforms’ Put Consumer, Small Business Rights at Risk
Bills to be heard in the legislature today that will take away the constitutional rights of Minnesotans in order to benefit the insurance industry, big business
ST. PAUL, MN – Legislators are moving swiftly to pass a package of bills that will have a devastating effect on consumers’ and small businesses’ ability to seek justice. Four bills to be heard today and tomorrow are sponsored by big insurance and big business special interests in the form of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), Minnesota’s legislators are introducing cookie-cutter bills written in D.C. and claiming them as their own.
“On the heels of the biggest economic downturn since the depression—fueled by fraudulent business practices which robbed Minnesota’s hardworking, honest consumers of their houses, jobs and pensions—our legislature wants to reward these wrongdoers by passing legislation that will allow companies to cheat consumers; hurt small businesses by shifting costs to private health insurers and remove Minnesotan’s constitutional right to remedy when harmed by negligent wrongdoers and fraudulent business practices,” said Brian Wojtalewicz, President of the Minnesota Association for Justice.
Wojtalewicz added, “We have heard a lot about the constitution the last year and a half, but you can’t pick which parts of the constitution you like and which parts you don’t. These reform efforts are unreasonable, unfair and unconstitutional.”
Four of the so called ‘reform’ bills that reward the wrongdoer:
SF 149/HF 211 would eliminate the ability of consumers and business to hold companies accountable for fraudulent and deceptive acts and dramatically changes Minnesota’s long standing consumer protection legislation.
SF 373/HF 654 would rob innocent victims, including victims of sexual violence of the time they need to recover for the damages they suffered.
SF429/HF 747 would restrict the ability of citizens to hold companies accountable for any discriminatory, fraudulent, and employment related wrongful conduct and would affect 300 statutes that require awards of attorney’s fees to prevent wrongful and/or illegal conduct.
SF 530/HF 770 is a windfall for insurance companies by creating an incentive to avoid paying claims owed to consumers and thereby increasing their profits.
Reacting to the swift passage of this legislation, Carla Ferrucci, executive director of Minnesota Association for Justice, said the proposed changes in law are “frivolous ‘reform’ bills with pithy titles, flimsy facts and obscure the truth about the civil justice system.” She went on to say that “if the bill sponsors were truthful they would admit that personal injury and medical malpractice case filings have gone down 40% since 1997; Minnesota has the lowest medical malpractice premiums in the country; Minnesota’s auto insurance premiums have gone down approximately 14% since 2003 and, our court rules and procedures are the envy of the every other state in the country. Indeed, concerned Minnesotans will surely wonder why these bills are being brought forward. The only reasonable conclusion is to reward big insurance and big business at the expense of working families.”
Ferrucci said it is imperative that Minnesotans understand just how drastically these proposals will affect the rights of consumers and small business to obtain justice when unscrupulous business come into our state and prey on senior citizens and other vulnerable communities. “Minnesotans need to let their legislators know that these are not reforms; they are protectionist laws that will enable an unregulated insurance industry to charge excessive premiums and encourage bad businesses to operate freely in Minnesota,” she added.
The Minnesota Association for Justice (MAJ) is a professional association of attorneys who represent Minnesotans wrongfully harmed or injured in person, property or human rights. MAJ defends the rights guaranteed by the Constitutions and laws of the United States and Minnesota, foremost among them the right to a trial by jury and advocates for public policy to enhance consumer rights and protection.
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Myth busting HBO documentary Hot Coffee makes Twin Cities debut |
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Thursday, January 19, 2012 |
Press ReleaseJanuary 19, 2012
Myth busting HBO documentary Hot Coffee makes Twin Cities debut
Tonight’s Minneapolis screening of the 2011 Official Selection of the Sundance Film Festival tells the story of what really happened to the 79-year-old grandmother who was severely injured by McDonald’s hot coffee
Additional screenings of the jaw dropping documentary are planned for Fargo, Duluth, Rochester, International Falls, Bemidji and Alexandria
MINNEAPOLIS, MN –
The story is infamous. A woman buys a cup of coffee at a McDonald’s, spills it on herself and experiences insignificant burns. Claiming that McDonalds should have warned her that the coffee was “hot”, she gets an attorney to file a lawsuit suit against McDonald’s and, incredibly, a jury awards her millions of dollars.
Clearly, there is something terribly wrong with a justice system that would impose such an outrageous judgment against the most respected and adored hamburger joint in America--just because some lady couldn’t hold on to her coffee. Right?
Enter attorney Susan Saladoff: The producer and director of the critically acclaimed documentary Hot Coffee who will be featured at the Minneapolis screening of the myth debunking film tonight at the Parkway Theater.
Ms. Saladoff’s documentary reveals the unsavory public relations machine behind one of the most misunderstood civil trials in American history. Seinfeld mocked it. Letterman ranked it in his top ten list. And, more than fifteen years later, its infamy continues. Everyone thinks they know the McDonald’s case, but Hot Coffee reveals what really happened to Stella Liebeck, the Albuquerque woman who suffered scalding burns from McDonald’s coffee, and examines how and why the case garnered so much media attention, who funded that effort and to what end.
What Really Happened? The Hollywood Reporter’s review of the Hot Coffee showing at Sundance captures the essence of the story McDonalds and other corporate interests, with the help of the media, were able to keep from the average citizen: “In this heady presentation, Saladoff presents a compelling case on how corporate America has utilized sensationalized lawsuit settlements to curry public opinion against “frivolous” lawsuits…Saladoff also includes numerous man-in-the-street interviews, which clearly indicate that the general public's uninformed view of the case was that it was outrageous for someone to sue over hot coffee.”
“Filmmaker Saladoff pinpoints that case, interviewing the elderly plaintiff, as well as showing graphic medical photographs of the burns she suffered in her private areas that are so jarring and horrific that one must look away. Saladoff also presents vividly McDonalds' arrogant and dismissive treatment of the woman when she initially sought just to have her medical bills covered. All the while, McDonald's had in its files numerous other reports where McCustomers had been injured by their overly hot brew.”
Why this story is Important. The timing of the twin cities screening is no accident. On January 24th, Minnesota’s legislators will gather in St. Paul for the start of the 2012 legislative session and on their ‘unfinished’ agenda from last year will be an effort to pass a package of bills that put consumer and small business owners rights at risk. With legislation written by the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) in Washington D.C., and backed by big insurance companies, Minnesota’s legislators are being asked to approve corporate cookie-cutter bills that would use mythical examples such as the McDonalds hot coffee case in an effort to take away Minnesotan’s rights to fair and equitable access to our justice system.
Brian Wojtalewicz, President of the Minnesota Association for Justice (MAJ) MAJ is one of several sponsors of the Hot Coffee screenings across the state, said “These anti-consumer bills have been promoted based on the myth that our Minnesota courts are broken and that job creation is hampered by the current law. But, removing Minnesotans legal rights is not a jobs program. The documentary, Wojtalewicz added, “Exposes the truth behind the public relations effort by big business and big insurance to demonize our legal rights as citizensj to their benefit, thereby putting consumers in harm’s way.”
Although the documentary is anchored by the infamous McDonald’s care, the film goes much further into the debate about our civil justice system. Stella Liebeck’s story serves as a vehicle for people to rethink their long held beliefs - and whether they are no longer valid.
“Stella Liebeck’s true human story is a powerful way to see the truth behind complicated legal theory and hard to read statutory language.” said Carla Ferrucci, executive director of the Minnesota Association for Justice. “This documentary shows the real life impact of these insurance industry attacks on the rights of individual citizens to hold wrongdoers accountable. We are confident that after people see this film, they will see who really profits from these reform bills and will join us in our effort to stop them.”
Ferrucci continues that, ”It is imperative that Minnesotans understand just how drastically these proposals will affect the rights of consumers and small business to obtain justice when unscrupulous business come into our state and prey on senior citizens and other vulnerable communities.”
More Hot Coffee screenings. “This screening and others held throughout the state in the next two months will help us to debunk the myths about frivolous lawsuits in Minnesota. Personal injury and medical malpractice case filings have gone down 24% in the last decade; Minnesota has the lowest medical malpractice premiums in the country; Minnesota’s auto insurance premiums have gone down approximately 14% since 2003 and, our court rules and procedures are the envy of the every other state in the country. Indeed, concerned Minnesotans will surely wonder why these bills are being brought forward. The only reasonable conclusion is to reward big insurance at the expense of working families.” Ferrucci said.
For more information on additional Hot Coffee screenings in Minnesota: http://hotcoffee.mnaj.org
For more information on the Hot Coffee documentary: www.hotcoffeethemovie.com
Carla Ferrucci/Exec. Dir, MAJ
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
(Office) 612.375.1707 (Mobile) 612.532.5060
[The Minnesota Association for Justice (MAJ) is a professional association of attorneys who represent Minnesotans wrongfully harmed or injured in person, property or human rights. MAJ defends the rights guaranteed by the Constitutions and laws of the United States and Minnesota, foremost among them the right to a trial by jury and advocates for public policy to enhance consumer rights and protection.]
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THE MINNESOTA ASSOCIATION FOR JUSTICE ELECTS NEW PRESIDENT – BRIAN WOJTALEWICZ |
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Tuesday, October 04, 2011 |
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
October 4th, 2011
CONTACT:
Brian Wojtalewicz, President
Minnesota Association for Justice
Wojtalewicz Law Firm
(320) 289-2363 Office
(320) 760-8416 Cell
OR
Carla Ferrucci, Executive Director
Minnesota Association for Justice
(612) 375-1707 Office
(612) 532-5060 Cell
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THE MINNESOTA ASSOCIATION FOR JUSTICE ELECTS NEW PRESIDENT – BRIAN WOJTALEWICZ
With a theme of “Speak the Truth ” Brian Wojtalewicz becomes new President of the Minnesota Association for Justice.
MINNEAPOLIS, MN – Appleton attorney Brian Wojtalewicz has been elected as the Minnesota Association for Justice President at the association’s annual convention in Alexandria, Minnesota. With a theme of “Speak the Truth,” Mr. Wojtalewicz pledged to use his term as President to debunk unfair myths about the civil justice system in Minnesota and fight efforts to slash citizens’ constitutional rights.
The Minnesota Association for Justice is dedicated to the Constitution’s guarantee of justice for all and promotes that mission in all of its work. As President, Mr. Wojtalewicz will lead efforts ensure that the constitutional right to a trial by jury is not undermined. “Last legislative session a number of bills were introduced that take away the right of individuals to seek redress under our civil justice system when they have been wrongly harmed,” said Mr. Wojtalewicz. “These bills aren’t written in Minnesota, but the proponents claim they are written with Minnesota facts in mind. In reality, these are cookie-cutter bills written by big insurance and big business special interests in Washington DC in the form of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) and are based on myths about the civil justice system that are simply not true in Minnesota.” According to the Minnesota Court Administration, personal injury and malpractice cases have gone down almost 40 percent in the last decade. “We must ‘Speak the Truth’ that our Constitutional rights, guaranteed to us as citizens of this great state and nation, are at serious risk from the forces of greed.” Mr. Wojtalewicz said.
Mr. Wojtalewicz has over 30 years of trial experience, recovering substantial settlements for life and health losses caused by the negligence of others. Brian also has over a decade of experience successfully representing citizen whistleblowers reporting corporate fraud against the federal and state governments, under the federal False Claims Act (Lincoln's Law). His advocacy has achieved settlements in over 90% of his cases. Brian is an emeritus member of the Board of Governors of the MN Trial Lawyers Association. He is among 2% of lawyers who are certified as a civil trial specialist by both the Minnesota State Bar Association and the National Board of Trial Advocacy, and 6% of lawyers who were selected as a Leading Atty. and a Super Lawyer in surveys of MN lawyers. He has been a guest speaker at the American Association for Justice. annual conventions in New York City and Boston, the Florida Academy of Trial Lawyers in Miami Beach and for many trial lawyer seminars in MN. He was honored as one of ten Attorneys-of-the-Year for 2001 by Minnesota Lawyer Magazine, and as the 2002 Member-of-the-Year by the Minnesota Trial Lawyers Association.
The Minnesota Association for Justice (MAJ) is a professional association of attorneys who represent Minnesotans wrongfully harmed or injured in personal, property or human rights. MAJ defends the rights guaranteed by the Constitutions and laws of the United States and Minnesota, foremost among them the right to a trial by jury, and advocates for public policy to enhance consumer rights and protection.
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CONSUMER’S LOSE, WHEN ‘CHEESEBURGER’ WINS |
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Friday, May 20, 2011 |
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
May 20, 2011
CONTACT:
James Carey, President
Minnesota Association for Justice
Sieben, Grose, VonHoltum, and Carey
612-860-4929
OR
Carla Ferrucci; Executive Director
Minnesota Association for Justice
612-375-1707 Office
612-532-5060 Cell
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
House bill has nothing to do with obesity and everything to do with putting consumers’ rights at risk
ST. PAUL, MN – Unable to resolve important budget bills to address the state’s $5.2 billion deficit, the Minnesota Legislature has resorted to passing bills that eliminate the responsibility of corporations when their products cause ill health effects to consumers.
On Friday, in the waning days the session, one of those bills passed was the so-called “Cheeseburger Bill.” The bill, branded the “Cheeseburger Bill” because it would provide immunity to food manufacturers when their products cause “adverse health conditions”. The legislation is promoted as a response to lawsuits – however no such case has ever been filed in Minnesota. This bill sets a dangerous precedent for Minnesota’s consumers.
Jim Carey, President of the Minnesota Association for Justice, reacted to the passage saying that “the ‘Cheeseburger Bill’ may sound humorous – but the language in the bill is far from funny. This bill is a dangerous proposal with broad immunities for any adverse health condition in response to fictional cases that have never been filed. Branding the bill as the ‘Cheeseburger Bill’ is a fraud in itself. In reality the bill puts Minnesota’s consumers at risk by allowing food manufacturers to be immune when their products cause ‘ill-health effects’ under any circumstances. We have opposed various versions of this bill for almost a decade and this version is the worst by far.”
Responding to the floor vote Carla Ferrucci, executive director of the Minnesota Association for Justice, said the ‘Cheeseburger Bill’ is just one bill in a package of anti-consumer bills that have been moving through the legislature. Adding that, “most have pithy titles and are based on flimsy facts – but most frighteningly, remove important constitutional protections for consumers, reward wrongdoers and demonize our system of civil justice.”
Ferrucci went on to say that “the ‘Cheeseburger Bill’ isn’t just harmful to consumers – it is harmful to our system of justice because it creates the false perception that there are hundreds – if not thousands - of these lawsuits being filed in Minnesota, which is simply not true. These cookie-cutter bills are written by special interest groups in Washington DC , chiefly the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), and are an attempt to exploit myths generated by the insurance industry and big business. Consumers aren’t clogging the courts with lawsuits about eating one too many cheeseburgers – in fact lawsuit overall are down 40% over the past ten years.”
Concerned Minnesotans should wonder why legislators are spending the precious few hours left in the legislative session passing bills that harm the public and reward special interests rather than addressing the needs of Minnesota’s hard working families and small businesses.
Ferrucci said Minnesotans need to hear about these drastic legislative proposals that, if signed into law, would remove their constitutional rights and consumer protections. “Minnesotans need to let their legislators know that it is time for them to focus on the very real issues facing Minnesota’s families rather than the fictional problems created by special interests in Washington DC that simply protect their profits” she added.
According to the Minnesota Court Administration personal injury cases have gone down almost 40 percent in the last decade and Minnesota law already addresses lawsuits that are filed without merit and include sanctions for the filing attorney up to and including disbarment.
The Minnesota Association for Justice (MAJ) is a professional association of attorneys who represent Minnesotans wrongfully harmed or injured in person, property or human rights. MAJ defends the rights guaranteed by the Constitutions and laws of the United States and Minnesota, foremost among them the right to a trial by jury and advocates for public policy to enhance consumer rights and protection.
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So Called ‘Reforms’ Put Consumer, Small Business Rights at Risk |
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Friday, April 29, 2011 |
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
April 28th, 2011
CONTACT:
James Carey, President
Minnesota Association for Justice
Sieben, Grose, VonHoltum, and Carey
612-860-4929
OR
Carla Ferrucci; Executive Director
Minnesota Association for Justice
612-375-1707 Office
612-532-5060 Cell
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
So Called ‘Reforms’ Put Consumer, Small Business Rights at Risk
Package of bills moving through the legislature are a gift to insurance & big business just in time for fundraising season
ST. PAUL, MN – In the last four weeks of the legislative session, just before the political fundraising season, legislators are moving swiftly to pass a package of bills that will have a devastating effect on consumers’ and small businesses’ ability to seek justice. Sponsored by big insurance and big business special interest in the form of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), Minnesota’s legislators are introducing cookie-cutter bills written in D.C. and claiming them as their own.
“On the heels of the biggest economic downturn since the
depression—fueled by fraudulent business practices which robbed
Minnesota’s hardworking, honest consumers of their houses, jobs and
pensions—our legislature wants to reward these wrongdoers by passing
legislation that will allow companies to cheat consumers; hurt small
businesses by shifting costs to private health insurers and remove
Minnesotan’s constitutional right to remedy when harmed by negligent
wrongdoers and fraudulent business practices,” said Jim Carey, President
of the Minnesota Association for Justice.
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