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firestone tire recall tire replacement ford motor company explorer tires car auto traffic accident death lawsuit sports utility vehicles replace recalled bridgestone firestone new tires dangerous hazardous class action lawsuits oppenheim pilelsky miami florida suit

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Fla. Tire Suit Back in State Court

DAILY BUSINESS REVIEW
OCTOBER 20, 2000

RIDE 'EM COWBOYS

READY TO RIDE: Lawyers Bill McCarty and Roy Oppenheim surrounded by stacks of Ford and Firestone class-action files.

Along for the ride
The Ford-Firestone debacle is the latest vehicle local attorneys are using to turn South Florida into a class-action hotbed.

By Julie Kay

Darren Blum sits at the head of a polished oak table in the borrowed conference room of a lawyer friend in North Miami Beach.

"These offices are nicer than my Hollywood office," he explains to a visitor, his hand seemingly attached to the cellular phone on the table. The phone rings frequently - or rather, sounds a ditty frequently. "My clients know they can always get me on the phone. I give all of them my cell phone number," he says. "That's why they love me."

Blum, a 31-year-old solo practitioner, in August became one of the first lawyers in the country to file a class-action lawsuit against Bridgestone/Firestone and Ford Motor Co. He made sure to do so in Miami-Dade Circuit Court - the same place that Stanley and Susan Rosenblatt won a jury verdict of $145 billion against the tobacco companies.

"Miamians subscribe to the theory of punishment of corporations," says Blum. "If a jury is going to give $145 billion to someone who smoked, I think we can get twice that when they hear what Firestone and Ford did. They don't want the case here. They're terrified to come here. There are a lot of retires here, there are no huge corporations. South Florida is like the Wild, Wild West. It's crazy here."

If South Florida is the Wild Wild West of the class-action world, then the region's posses of plaintiff lawyers are the cowboys. Some of the wealthiest, most prominent power brokers in the community, these litigators have turned South Florida into a hotbed for class-action lawsuits. And they are busy lassoing their latest quarry: Ford and Firestone.

Consider:

  • Nearly 45 of the nation's top plaintiff law firms have filed suit against the nation's HMOs in Miami. Some of the big name barristers involved include David Boics of Microsoft fame: Richard Scruggs, the Mississippi lawyer who won $366 million in attorney fees from Big Tobacco and was featured in the film "The Insider". Aaron Podhurst, best known for winning huge verdicts for families of plane crash victims, and Stephen N. Zack, former president of the Florida Bar.
  • The $145 billion award won by the Rosenblatts, the largest in history, was handed down by a Miami jury, ruling in favor of thousands of sick Florida smokers.
  • Eight of 47 class-action suits against Ford and Firestone were filed in South Florida, more than in any other jurisdiction in the country, prompting some plantiff lawyers to suggest the cases be consolidated here. Ford and Firestone argued Tuesday before the Judicial Panel on Multi-District Litigation in Washington, D.C. that all the cases be consolidated in Chicago, near Firestone's main office. A decision is expected in two weeks.
  • Recognizing that Florida has become an important venue for litigation, Boles, whose main office is in Armonk, N.Y., recently opened offices in Fort Lauderdale, Hollywood, West Palm Beach and Orlando.
  • The national firm Milberg Weiss Bershad Hynes and Lerachi, the granddaddy of all class-action law firms, opened an office in Boca Raton two years ago.

"We came down here because of the number of class-action cases we were seeing in Florida, particularly South Florida," says Abe Rappaport, a partner at the Boca office. "South Florida has a high proportion of elderly residents who fall victim to financial and other types of scams."

Roy Oppenheim, a Weston lawyer who has filed a class action against Ford and Firestone in Miami, agrees.

"South Florida is perceived as a good place to file these kinds of actions. Dade County in particular", he says. "I think anti-corporate sentiment is in the wind now. People don't trust corporations. Even the New York firms are coming to town to file lawsuits."

Easy actions

Class-action lawsuits typically are brought by an individual or individuals - class representative - who file on behalf of a large group of people who share similar damage or injury claims. They are often confused with mass tort cases, which are filed on behalf of a specific number of injured parties, as in plane crashes. Once a class is "certified" by the court, other plaintiffs can join in.

Class actions have been around for decades, but the Internet has fueled them. Web sites such as www.firestoneattorneys.com draw in new clients, allowing them to sign up by computer; sites like www.notice.com and www.classaction.com catalog class actions as a resource for the public.

The Internet has also made it cheaper and easier for lawyers without deep pockets to file massive class action lawsuits. They can download mountains of discovery off the Internet without having to depose one $200-an-hour expert witness. Indeed, may lawyers suing Big Tobacco around the nation obtained discovery documents by downloading them from Internet sites devoted to the issue.

In addition, lawyers suing over securities fraud can now learn everything they need to know about a company off its Web site and in investor chat rooms in a half day's time, says Tom Tew, a partner with Tew Cardenas Rebak Kellogg Lehman Demaria and Tague in Miami, which specializes in securities' classes. "You used to have to fly all over the country to get information about a company," notes Tew.

For years, attorneys focused primarily on securities class actions filed on behalf of mostly elderly investors defrauded by one scheme or another, which likely explains in part why there is such a strong plaintiff bar in South Florida. Says Bill McCarty, Oppenheim's partner, "In South Florida, you've got a bunch of hungry, shark attorneys - they smell blood and they go."

But legislation passed in 1995 made it more difficult to sue for securities fraud, so litigators turned their attention to product liability cases. And prospered mightily.

The big cases handed lawyers millions of dollars in attorney fees: carcinogenic asbestos, toxic breast implants, the diet drug fen-phen, the contraceptive Norplant, the pesticide Benlate and of course, tobacco. Healthy maintenance organizations, Ford and Firestone are the most prominent recent targets.

But while the lawsuits can make attorneys millionaires, the money often doesn't trickle down to the plaintiffs.

"Most class actions are for lawyers - that is, they are the only ones who will make money from the litigation," says Chuck Kline, executive partner of White and Case's Miami office. Case in point: According to the National Center for Policy Analysis, a nonprofit public policy research institute, attorneys in five cases involving Wells Fargo Bank received $14 million. The average award to class members was $9.07.

Legislation by another word

Stories like these spurred Congress and think tanks to cast a close eye on class-action reform. One bill proposed last year and now dormant called for all class action lawsuits to be tried in federal court. Not surprisingly, the Association of Trial Lawyers of America vigorously opposes the bill, which they say is being pushed by big business. Corporations, trial lawyers say, want to reduce their costs by consolidating suits in federal court under one set of rules and one judge instead of fighting a host of trials in state courts around the country. The trial lawyers also argue that business prefers federal judges to state court judges, who run for office and have constituencies to please.

Walton Olson, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, a conservative think tank funded by corporations, foundations and individuals, argues that lawyers are using class-action lawsuits to, in effect, pass legislation.

"Tobacco is one of the scandals of our era," he says. "Those lawyers manipulated various branches of government and carefully orchestrated a brilliant media campaign. What we got was a tax increase - not by legislation but by settlement. And it was only done behind closed doors."

Plaintiff's lawyers, however argue that class actions keep the courts from becoming clogged with masses of individual lawsuits and give average people the ability to extract justice from a large corporation. "You can't file a lawsuit for $85, no lawyer would take it." says Podhurst , one of the most prominent plaintiff's lawyers in the country, who is involved in several suits against Ford and Firestone - one on behalf of Venezuelan families - and has ongoing suits against Big Tobacco and numerous airlines. "There are some class actions that are bad, that are an embarrassment. But class-action lawsuits have a very good, positive effect besides money for lawyers.

Podhurst is one of the lawyers who have turned South Florida into a leading class action locale in the process becoming such a power broker in the community and he was among the lawyers representing the Miami relatives of Elian Gonzalez, the Cuban boy rescued at sea who sparked an international custody battle.

The HMO suits in which Podhurst is involved in Miami federal court - which allege health care companies have secretly offered doctors incentives to bypass procedures - could change the way HMOs do business and are turning the eyes of the nation on South Florida. The multi-district litigation panel already has consolidated numerous Humana lawsuits in Miami under U.S. District Judge Federico Moreno, and the plaintiff lawyers want cases against six other health care companies consolidated in Miami - something the defense lawyers have sought. A decision by the panel is pending. If the case in consolidated, it will cover 80 million subscribers.

Plaintiff lawyers say they want the cases in Miami because they like Moreno, who is known for keeping cases, moving quickly.

"We're known for having the best federal court system in the country," added Podhurst.

But corporate insiders believe the plaintiff lawyers want Moreno for another reason, another major class action before then - one against a grocery diverter that frauded investors out of $255 million resulted in a $141 million verdict. That one, along with other successful classes in South Florida, could be prompting the lawyers to file Ford and Firestone cases here, as well.

Take Oppenheim, the West Broward lawyer. He got involved when his hair stylist complained she could not get new tires for her Ford and didn't have $500.00 laying around or credit cards on which to charge them.

He got infuriated and agreed to help, he says, "It wouldn't make sense to file one suit. With a class action, we thought we could do well and do good at the end of the day." Oppenheim - who says that makes my blood boil and the hair on the back of my neck stand up" - his partner McCarty hadn't done any class action lawsuits and decided the prudent thing to do would be to team up with a firm that had. Besides, they are financing the case alone and it could be costly. They chose Kluger Peretz Kaplan, a larger firm in Miami that has had numerous class actions. You go in with your best cards," says Oppenheim. "You're going up against Ford and Firestone. Most plaintiffs have three, four, five law firms. It may be egotistical to think just two firms can do. The firms agreed to pair up after a conference call on Thursday, Aug. 10, worked like dogs all weekend and filed suit Monday morning, Aug. 14. They decided to be one of the first on the scene with the help of an aggressive public relations firm, held a press conference to uphold the suit. But Blum beat them to the punch and to the press, filing his suit Wednesday, Aug. 9, the day after the recall was announced, stopping at a newspaper office to deliver a copy before heading to the courthouse. He is upfront about his reason for filing so quickly. If the multi-district litigation panel does decide to consolidate the cases the lawyers who filed first and have the most number of people signed have the best chance of being named lead counsel. And the lead counsels are the ones who wind up with the fattest attorney fees.

Being first has another benefit, too: It ropes in clients. Blum says he received "hundreds of calls" from new clients after he appeared on TV and in the newspapers.

Like Oppenheim, Blum says he got involved when a friend with a Ford Explorer contacted him. Unlike Oppenheim, he decided to go solo on the lawsuit.

Blum, who's been practicing law only five years, says he is certain he can handle the case. He was experience with only one other class-action lawsuit filed against Sprint on behalf of cell phone users in Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties who allegedly received inferior service. The $25 million case is awaiting class certification in Broward Circuit Court.

But Blum assures his clients he has enough of his own money to finance the Firestone case - although he is unsure of how much it will cost - and says he has two clerical workers who are devoted full time to the matter and is hiring a third.

"Some of my clients have said, "You're not a big law firm, are you sure you can handle this?" he says. I say, "Absolutely". My clients love me 'cause guys like me live to stick it to companies like Firestone. Its like David and Goliath".

But others aren't so sure. They see young lawyers, visions of Stanley Rosenblatt in their heads, jumping into the Firestone frenzy unprepared. And that's simply irresponsible they say.

"I would never try a products liability or personal injury case, for instance", says attorney Mark Raymond with the Tew Cardenas law firm. "I would refer it to another lawyer. It's not my area of expertise. If it were my family that was injured, I would ask the lawyer, how many class actions have you done? And how will you finance this? As a result of the tobacco case, people are saying "Me, too." Well "Me, toos" can be dangerous. We need a better-informed consumer."

Podhurst agrees that Big Tobacco successes have spurred on a new class of lawyers who might get in over their heads.

"What Stanley Rosenblatt did was a remarkable undertaking," he says. "But it would be a mistake for a young lawyer to try to emulate Stanley Rosenblatt. He was well established and had resources. You can get into seven figures in costs."

Get the word out

While some Miami lawyers are just getting into class actions, Louis Robles has specialized in them since 1974. He's raked in millions in fees by finding his own class-action lawsuits and getting in on the ground floor, not by following the pack and then fighting to become lead counsel. Robles was among the leading lawyers in the 100,000-case asbestos class action, the largest in history, handling 1,000 claims before moving on to fen-phen and then Norplant. Now he is turning this attention to Rezulin, a diabetes drug pulled off the market by the Food and Drug Administration, and Propulaid, a remedy for severe indigestion that in some cases can cause heart damage and death.

Robles' recipe for success: Find a good case - he won't reveal exactly how, calling the proprietary information - spend hundreds of thousands of dollars advertising on daytime television and in the National Enquirer, set up a Web site and sign up masses of clients.

While some lawyers won't advertise - "I'm not a sophisticated ambulance chaser," sniffs Oppenheim - Robles has no problem with it. "If people are injured and don't know they are injured, I'm doing a public service in letter them know," he says.

Marvin Dunn, chairman of the Psychology Department at Florida International University and an expert on South Florida communities, doubts it.

"Just look at the demographics here," he says. "You tend to get more sympathy from plaintiffs in minority communities. Sixty percent of Miami-Dade County is Hispanic or black. Plus, there are no corporations here. That's another factor."

Darren Blum agrees:
A former pit broker on Wall Street, he deliberately chose South Florida when he decided to become a lawyer. Though he was far from the top of his class at Nova's law school, and spent summers toiling in the pit rather than at law firm internships, he knew that it was turf where even a self-described "kid from New Jersey" could become a millionaire legal cowboy.

"I think we get larger awards in South Florida," he says. "It's the style of Miami. There are not too many places in the country where you see Rolls-Royces and Ferraris on the street, and a Sylvester Stallone mansion. A lot of the action is down here.

# # #

Oppenheim is a partner in the firm, along with his wife Ellen Pilelsky. Oppenheim & Pilelsky, the oldest law firm in Weston, is a general practice concentrating in real estate, litigation and consumer related matters. The firm is suing Firestone Tire & Rubber Company on behalf of all Florida residents who have been subject to the recall of defective tires. The law firm of Oppenheim & Pilelsky is located at: 1290 Weston Road, Suite 300, Weston, FL 33326 (954) 384-6114.

/Contact: Todd Templin or Christine Manna at Boardroom Communications, 954-370-8999, for Oppenheim & Pilelsky.