The last few years have revealed an ugly underbelly to the plaintiffs' bar, and some of the biggest trial lawyers across the country have been brought down in criminal prosecutions for their sharp practices.
Bill Lerach and Mel Weiss, two legal eagles who made a fortune in bringing security fraud class actions against publicly traded companies, pleaded guilty in October 2007 and April 2008, respectively, for their roles in an alleged decades-long conspiracy pursuant to which serial plaintiffs were paid kickbacks from their court-awarded attorneys' fees in the cases.
Mass tort lawyers William Gallion and Shirley Cunningham Jr. were convicted in April 2009 for fraudulently taking $94.6 million from a $200 million settlement in the fen-phen litigation that should have gone to their clients.
Tobacco and asbestos lawyer Dickie Scruggs pleaded guilty in 2008 and 2009 in separate schemes to bribe Mississippi judges to rule in his favor.
The above are just a few of the higher profile names in an otherwise long list of plaintiffs' lawyers who have been convicted and sent to prison. What the heck is going on? These men -- all now disbarred -- were officers of the court, and crusaded with self-righteous indignation against corporate wrongdoers. Their convictions now suggest that they were motivated less by principle and more by greed.
Although the plaintiffs' bar no doubt has many law-abiding practitioners it is time for Congress to hold investigative hearings to determine the extent to which corruption pervades the lawsuit industry.
Indeed, in May 2008, Representatives John Boehner and Lamar Smith sent a letter to Rep. John Conyers, the then-Chair of the House Judiciary Committee, requesting an inquiry after Bill Lerach admitted that his conduct was an "industry practice," and said that "everybody was paying plaintiffs." In this letter Rep. Boehner writes:
If in fact Mr. Lerach's crimes are an "industry practice," then the Milberg Weiss scandal has revealed a clear and present threat to our nation's prosperity. The United States Congress has an obligation to take action -- by holding hearings to determine the extent of the trial lawyer scandal and the threat to our economy, identifying appropriate legislative remedies, and sending them to the President without delay.
Rep. Boehner's request at the time went nowhere. Perhaps it was because Rep. Conyers was distracted by the criminal investigation into his wife -- Detroit, MI councilwoman Monica Conyers -- who was convicted on federal corruption charges in June 2009. Or maybe the inaction was because the Democrat Party gets a lot of campaign contributions from the trial lawyers. For example, lawyers from the class action law firm Milberg Weiss which was indicted with Bill Lerach and Mel Weiss "contributed more than $7 million to the party's candidates since the 1980s." Rep. Conyers and his fellow Democrats probably did not want to bite the hand that feeds them.
Of course, that was then, and this is now. Republicans control the House, Lamar Smith is the Chair of the Judiciary Committee, and the time has come for the investigation which was requested three years ago. Although Reps. Boehner and Smith focussed on class action securities fraud cases in their May 2008 letter, any hearings should include the full spectrum of the lawsuit industry and cover policy issues in addition to corruption allegations.
Here are a few additional topics Congress should explore based on recent headlines:
*** The Dubious "Confidential Sources"
Class action lawyers frequently bolster their complaints with allegations attributed to "confidential sources" within the company they are suing in the hopes of avoiding outright dismissals by the courts. Except it's increasingly turning out that these "confidential sources" never were company insiders nor made the allegations attributed to them.
Last August federal judge Robert P. Patterson Jr. sanctioned Milberg LLP and its co-counsel with a public reprimand after allegations attributed to "confidential sources" were not supported by their deposition testimony. And last month federal judge Suzanne Conlon dismissed a case filed by Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd LLP after allegations attributed to a "confidential source" were not supported by his deposition testimony. Ironically, Milberg LLP is the successor to the firm founded by convicted felon Mel Weiss, and Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd LLP is the successor to the firm founded by convicted felon Bill Lerach.
It's one thing to make allegations; it's quite another thing to attribute allegations to "confidential sources" who later claim they never said any such thing.
*** The Public Pension Fund Plaintiffs
In securities fraud class actions the trial lawyers frequently rope in a large public pension fund to serve as a plaintiff, and the relationship raises a host of issues.
Why is the public work being farmed out to a private firm in the first instance? Government attorneys are more than qualified to handle the cases, and by farming them out to private firms the pension funds lose billions in dollars that are awarded as attorneys' fees rather than included within the settlement recovery. Given that many public pension funds are woefully underfunded it seems reckless to leave billions of dollars on the table for the taking by the plaintiffs' lawyers.
And what is the criteria by which the outside firms are selected? In many cases the retained firms have provided campaign contributions to the elected official responsible for making the decision. For example, former New York comptroller Alan Hevesi long had been criticized for retaining his campaign donors to represent the state's State Common Retirement Fund in securities fraud class actions, and he took $100,000 from Milberg Weiss for his 2002 campaign. Although it's all perfectly legal it just looks unseemly.
Ironically, last October Hevesi pleaded guilty for steering more than $250 million in pension fund business in exchange for $1 million of improper benefits including campaign contributions, and the dirt bag is set to be sentenced on April 15.
The relationship between public pension funds and class action law firms certainly deserves a look but in 2009 then New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo -- a recipient of trial lawyer campaign largesse -- took a pass on the issue.
*** Attorneys' Fees For Non-attorney Work
Plaintiffs' cases are vehicles by which to earn lucrative attorneys' fees. Except sometimes the performed work could have been done by someone other than an attorney.
Last year U.S. District Judge Richard M. Berman rebuked Milberg LLP in a ruling on its request for additional attorneys' fees in the securities fraud case In re Nortel Networks Corp. Securities Litigation because of, among other issues, "improper staffing": "'It is clear that a significant portion of the work done by senior attorneys could have been performed by more junior attorneys or paralegals at lower billing rates,' Berman said."
A substantial portion of the attorneys' fees generated in class actions is through the review of voluminous document productions, and much of this work often is performed by temporary attorneys whom the plaintiffs' firms obtain from staffing agencies.
The document review process involves both objective and subjective coding components. The objective component simply entails inputting bibliographical data from the document -- such as date, title, author, recipients -- onto a coding sheet or into a database, and the subjective component involves substantive analysis which includes issue spotting, determining relevancy, and providing comments for the document.
It is questionable whether temporary attorneys should be used for the objective coding of documents which seemingly is little more than clerical work. Indeed, some law firms outsource the objective coding portion of a document review to data entry service providers, and perhaps appropriately use the temporary lawyers with their much higher billing rates only for the subjective coding component; however, some plaintiffs' class action firms in many cases -- including Milberg in In re Tyco International, Ltd. Securities Litigation -- have used temporary attorneys for both the objective and subjective coding portions of the document review.
*** The Coupon Settlement Cases
In consumer fraud cases the class members increasingly get "nearly worthless" coupons for their purported injuries, and yet the plaintiffs' attorneys get millions in cash for their efforts.
For example, St. Louis, MO Judge Angela T. Quigless approved a class-action settlement last year against A.G. Edwards "that rewards lawyers at Milberg and other firms $21 million in cash while their clients get mostly coupons they can use over three years to obtain discounts on mutual funds."
Ted Frank, a founder of the Center for Class Action Fairness, is crusading against these coupon settlement cases. Frank "says the coupons are nearly worthless because so few of the intended beneficiaries will find it worthwhile to fill in all the necessary paperwork." Indeed, why would a consumer want a coupon for future goods or services from the very company which allegedly defrauded them in the first instance? In fact, the overwhelming majority of class members never redeem their coupons, and the only ones who really win are the plaintiffs' lawyers.
It's long past time for Congress to take a hard look into the lawsuit industry: the very credibility of our legal system is at stake.
Further reading that may be of interest:
Business Judge Blasts Trial Lawyers
Confirmed: Most Class Actions Are An Unfortunate Legal Joke
Trial Lawyer Sentenced For Case Fixing
Moreland Commission Should Examine Ties Between State Business And Law Firms
Federal Judge Slashes Fee Request Over Use Of Temp Lawyers In Class Action
Sheldon Silver Strikes Gold With Law Firm
Irony Lost On Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver
BP: Deepwater Horizon Settlement Program Paying Claim Submissions For Fictitious Losses
Federal Judge Spares Mel Weiss From More Jail
Corporate Counsel Trade Group Challenges Use Of Temp Lawyers By Plaintiff Class Action Firms
The Shame: Stanley Chesley Gets Disbarred
From Convicted Racketeer To Drunk Driver
Federal Appellate Courts Continue Crackdown On Plaintiff Attorneys' Fees In Class Action Cases
Lawrence Schonbrun No Fan Of Lawsuit Industry
Convicted Racketeer Mel Weiss Faces DUI Charge
Quid Pro Quo Ethics Complaint Filed Against New York Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli
The Public Rebels Against Trial Lawyers
Feds Bust Paul Ceglia Over Facebook Claim
Increasing Problem: Confidential Sources Deny Allegations Attributed To Them In Class Actions
Lawyer Barons: What Their Contingency Fees Really Cost America
Federal Appellate Courts Rejecting Lower Court Awards Of Attorneys' Fees In Class Actions
Federal Judges School Plaintiffs Lawyers
Milberg Gets Sloppy Seconds In Facebook Case
A Good Plaintiff Is Hard To Find
Judge Awards Lawyers $35,000 An Hour
Convicted Lawyer Raises Democrat Money
Class Actions Are Good Gigs For Trial Lawyers
Appeals Court Reverses Rule 11 Sanctions On Class Action Firms In Sony Corporation Case
Congress Holds Hearing On Asbestos Litigation
Judge Approves $13M Payout To Trial Lawyers
Federal Appeals Court Casts Critical Eye On Lawsuit Industry Settlement Practices
Lawsuit Industry Trembles Before Rick Perry
Rail Company Accuses Law Firm Of Racketeering
Delaware Judges Push Back Against Trial Lawyers
President Obama Picks Lawsuit Industry Tool To Head New Consumer Agency
Trial Lawyers Profit From M&A Suits
Class Action Settlements Sink To New Low
Convicted Trial Lawyer Looks For Second Act
Class Action Lawyer Faces Disbarment Hearing
Recent Comments