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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: January 24, 2001
CONTACT: Joanne Doroshow or Emily Gottlieb, 212/267-2801
CENTER FOR JUSTICE & DEMOCRACY FIGHTS "TORT
REFORM"
NEW YORK -- With the Bush administration threatening to make federal
"tort reform" a front burner issue and with many state
lawmakers under pressure to do the same, the Center for Justice
& Democracy (CJ&D) announced today that it will be "releasing
a series of new studies to 'set the record straight' about lawsuits,
juries, injured consumers and the attorneys who represent them."
According to CJ&D Executive Director Joanne Doroshow, "CJ&D's
campaign is aimed at heading off efforts by state and federal lawmakers
to restrict the legal rights of innocent Americans. Outrageous myths
and falsehoods propagated by corporate lawbreakers and other wrongdoers
have for years been driving the movement to limit injured consumers'
rights to go to court. The way to start fighting back is with the
truth."
HYPOCRITES OF "TORT REFORM." CJ&D's "MYTHBUSTER!"
campaign begins today with the release of Not in My Backyard
- Hypocrites of "Tort Reform," a White Paper that
examines cases where individuals and corporations have sued sometimes
for millions of dollars while at the same time championing damages
caps and other severe liability restrictions for others. Included
are cases brought by George W. Bush, several lawmakers and a number
of corporations.
JURY VERDICTS AND THE MEDIA. Also released today is Reading
Between the Headlines - The Media and Jury Verdicts.
The study examines media coverage of civil jury verdicts and finds:
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Large jury awards are mentioned with such frequency in the
print and electronic media that their occurrence is significantly
exaggerated.
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More often than not, articles emphasize the monetary aspect
of cases rather than what prompted a jury to make the award.
The severity of the harms suffered by plaintiffs and corporate
responsibility for those injuries are often buried within the
text of news stories, if mentioned at all.
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Empirical evidence demonstrates that civil juries are competent,
responsible and rational, and that their decisions reflect continually
changing community attitudes about corporate responsibility
and government accountability.
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Media coverage of jury verdicts has played a significant role
in molding the opinions of both the public at large and lawmakers
about the civil jury. Over the past 15 years, juror attitudes
have shown increasing antagonism toward injury victims, and
lawmakers in most states have taken significant power and authority
away from civil juries.
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