Posts Tagged ‘personal injury’

Insurance Company Discovers Client’s FaceBook Page - Reduces Offer by $20,000

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

 

Seattle attorney Christopher Davis has recently decided to make absolutely certain that his clients understand a seemingly obvious fact about popular social networking sites like Myspace and Facebook: if you post it, anyone can see it.

 

This is a lesson one of Mr. Davis’ clients learn the hard way. As a result of the client posting a video of himself snowboarding on the Internet, the insurance adjuster involved in the client’s personal injury case–brought as the result of a car accident in which a client sustained injuries–decided reduce the offer of compensation by $20,000. The justification, of course, is that the snowboarding video suggested that the client’s injuries were not as debilitating as they were initially represented.

 

For more information on this cautionary tale, including a video of Mr. Davis explaining the facts of the case to a TV host, click here:

 

http://thelegalbroadcastnetwork.squarespace.com/the-lbn-blog/2009/8/18/clients-facebook-page-costs-him-20000.html

 

For Mr. Davis’ article, click here:

 

http://www.submityourarticle.com/articles/Christopher-Davis-2363/settlement-devalued-64817.php

 

 

9-Year-Old Boy Suffers Severe Burns, Coleman Heater Blamed

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

 

On Tuesday, May 19, an appeals court judge in Orange County, California will decide whether to release key documents to the lawyers representing a young boy who was severely burned at the hands of a faulty Coleman heater. This decision could prove pivotal in the case, in which the victim’s attorneys are arguing that Coleman knowingly violate California law by packaging one of their heaters in a way that suggested it could be used indoors.  On December 30, 2005, Trevor Dennis and his parents were camping at the Octillo Welles Desert Recreation area in southern California. That evening, Trevor was in the camping trailer alone when the heater — a Model 5053 ProCat™ PerfectTemp™ – exploded, causing severe burns over much of Trevor’s body.

“This appears to be a case of the manufacturer using faulty design, subpar critical parts and inadequate quality control leading to the catastrophic injury of a then seven-year-old boy,” said Orange County personal injury lawyer John Bisnar, founding partner of the Bisnar/Chase law firm. 

“When the family bought the heater, it was packaged in a box showing its use in a house with a mom holding a baby on her lap,” noted Brian Chase, a parter at Bisnar/Chase. “The statute clearly states that nonvintage portable heaters cannot be sold for use indoors. On the side of the box, and on the top of the box, the copy indicated it was safe for home use.”