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Trials and Deliberations: Inside the Jury Room (Trial Practice Series)

Amy Singer, Pat Maloney

Trials and Deliberations: Inside the Jury Room (Trial Practice Series) Amy Singer, Pat Maloney List Price: $295.00
By: Shepards/Mcgraw-Hill
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Unbelievably Good Trial Lawyer's Resource 5 out of 5 stars.
1 of 1 people found this review helpful.

I don't know why this hasn't been done before or since. Three volumes - over 2300 pages of transcriptions and analysis of jurors' actual discussions and analysis in every conceivable civil trial setting, including many different medical malpractice areas, but also getting into defamation, slip and fall, products liability, commercial disputes, and on and on... The insights into both the rabbit trails and the insightful thinking that really goes on on the jury room is fascinating and helpful, not just to trial lawyers, but to social scientists, politicians, writers, and curious people.Written by a well respected trial lawyerr and a P:h.D. social scientist. Great stuff.

The Rule of Lawyers: How the New Litigation Elite Threatens America's Rule of Law

Walter K. Olson

The Rule of Lawyers: How the New Litigation Elite Threatens America's Rule of Law Walter K. Olson List Price: $25.95
By: Truman Talley Books
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 15 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Biased, unbalanced, conservative...complete garbage 1 out of 5 stars.
3 of 6 people found this review helpful.

This book is terrible on multiple levels. Rather than discuss tort litigation with a balanced approach, and then leading to a "tort litigation is bad" conclusion, it starts with the premise that tort litigation is bad and goes downhill from there.

Everything, including facts, discussion, opinion, and analysis, is biased. For example, attorney generals who are true consumer advocate hawks (e.g., Eliot Spitzer) are deemed "hyperactive"; referring to an associate of Ralph Nader as the "chief pot stirrer" who has a "relentlessly accusatory public persona" and is "always on the attack." His bias is also subtle. In one instance, he sings the praises of the American College of Rheumatology (ACR), which found evidence that silicon [...] implants do not expose patients of rheumatic disease. This is a subtle slight of hand because Olson conveniently forgets to point out that the ACR has a vested interest in funding and/or publishing research that leads to this conclusion (there is NO way the ACR would publish a paper leading to the conclusion its practictioners have been partially responsible for the poisoning of thousands of women; it is a peer group made up of practictioners!!!).

Olson demonizes specific targets that suspiciously reflect those of conservatives. The media, trial lawywers, consumer watchdogs, etc., are deemed evil. The media (read: the "liberal" media) perpetuates tort scares, and serves as the unwitting (or witting) accomplices to the plaintiff's bar. Apparently, Olson has never watched Fox "News" or "far and balanced" idiots like O'Reilly. Ralph Nader is also attacked endlessly. Nader made his mark in the 1970's bringing the Pinto class action against Ford. Olson mentions the suit, but fails to look into the deeper issues of corporate responsibility, the fact that individual claimants cannot individually match the resources of Ford in bringing the suit, etc. Consumer advocates are painted as being in the pocket of the plaintiff's bar, needlessly aggressive, unscrupulous, etc. Olson's ideology defies common sense. Does he actually believe Enron was a good thing, or that Consumer Reports is a bad thing? His approach inescapably leads to this illogical conclusion.

What becomes evident are those things that are "good." Corporations are revered, and good for America; their executives would never choose profits over ethics. In Olson's world, there is no such thing as inequality of resources in bringing suit (which the class action suit can help remedy). In his world, medical malpractice damages caps are welcome, but liability premium caps by insurers (to doctors) are not.

Perhaps the most infuriating aspect of his ideological approach to "tort reform" is his failure to recognize what tort law does, and that many tort lawyers are ethical and truly care about the well-being of their clients. For example, he fails to discuss that products, although made by responsible individuals and/or corporations, sometimes have defects that when the conditions are right, can lead to truly disasterous results. Instead, he pontificates about how products like the Pinto had a comparatively safe record. This is NOT the point. The point is that the single defect that makes it hideously dangerous should be corrected. If the defect is not fixed (e.g., not cost effective), the ONLY avenue to remedy this problem is to bring suit. In Olson's world, this is a bad thing; a person who is harmed by a corporation that produces a dangerous product should not be able to bring suit against that corporation. Olson fails to realize that the corporation saves money for not correcting the product, while the person harmed may be straddled with debilitating injuries and medical bills. Apparently, in his world, this inequity is a just result; "buyer beware" is the only warranty that should be permitted. Likewise, in his world, a lawyer who brings a suit against the corporation is, by default, greedy and evil. Again, he fails to know (or discuss) that bring suits are VERY expensive, and plaintiff's lawyers take enormous financial risks to bring such suits. It never seems to dawn on Olson that damages plaintiff lawyers receive are offset by costs to bring suit, similar to "net profits" to a company. In Olson's world, such lawyers should be paupers and should take any such risks without any form of compensation. His logic is moronic.

In short, Olson is a tool of the insurance industry and conservative ideology. He only presents a one-sided view of the issues, and does not give the discussion (or the plaintiff's bar) any form of respect. If you would like a meaningful discussion of tort law and litigation, avoid this book, and its author, like the plague.

Editorial Review:

Big-ticket litigation is a way of life in this country. But something new is afoot--something typified by the $246 billion tobacco settlement, and by courtroom assaults that have followed against industries ranging from HMOs to gunmakers, from lead paint manufacturers to "factory farms." Each massive class-action suit seeks to invent new law, to ban or tax or regulate something that elected lawmakers had chosen to leave alone. And each time the new process works as intended, the new litigation elite reaps billions in fees--which they invest in fresh rounds of suits, as well as political contributions.

The Rule of Lawyers asks: Who picks these lawyers, and who can fire them? Who protects the public's interest when settlements are negotiated behind closed doors? Where are our elected lawmakers in all this? The answers may determine whether we slip from the rule of law to the rule of lawyers.

The Jury : Tool of Kings, Palladium of Liberty

Lloyd E. Moore

The Jury : Tool of Kings, Palladium of Liberty Lloyd E. Moore Amazon Price: $19.50
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Race and Justice: Rodney King and O. J. Simpson in a House Divided

Jewelle Taylor Gibbs

Race and Justice: Rodney King and O. J. Simpson in a House Divided Jewelle Taylor Gibbs Amazon Price: $25.27
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By: Jossey-Bass
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 2 Average rating: 3.0 of 5

Unreadable rubbish 1 out of 5 stars.
4 of 7 people found this review helpful.

The only reason to read this book is to appreciate the level of fantasy of the author.

Take, for example, the way she describes Rodney King getting ready to rob a store by threatening the Korean owner with a tire iron: "perhaps it was the need for money, perhaps it was the stress, perhaps it was the feeling of helplessness and hopelessness over his lack of options". For God's sake! How about "perhaps it was his being high on alcohol and PCP, perhaps it was his antisocial nature, perhaps it was his disregard for anyone else but himself"!

And, after he gets away in his car, the Korean owner is able to get the license number so King can get arrested. Gibbs describes this arrest as King being "luckless as usual". For God's sake, he deserved to get arrested -- she makes it sound like it was yet another example of him being victimized by an uncaring society!!

Such leftist excess is pathetic and offensive. The whole book is rife with this kind of drivel. A stomach-turning read, to be sure.

Editorial Review:

Puts the Rodney King and O. J. Simpson trials under the microscope

Reviews the turbulent events of the Rodney King and O. J. Simpson trials from a social and political framework of race relations and police misconduct. This thought-provoking book shows that the issue of race was at the very heart of both of these emotionally charged cases.

Psychologist and scholar Jewelle Taylor Gibbs shows how King and Simpson have been transformed by their trials into symbols of the different worlds inhabited by blacks and whites in America. Gibbs's compelling analysis of the issues that permeated these trials will challenge even the most cynical observer to rethink any previously held assumptions about race and the criminal justice system.

Business on Trial: The Civil Jury and Corporate Responsibility

Valerie P. Hans

Business on Trial: The Civil Jury and Corporate Responsibility Valerie P. Hans Amazon Price: $43.00
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Total reviews: 3 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

The Best Study of Jurors and Business 5 out of 5 stars.
3 of 3 people found this review helpful.

Valerie P. Hans's assessments of misinformation and disinformation about the civil jury may do little to overcome the propaganda of tort reformers except among well-informed citizens, but citizen who cares to learn more about courts and law than about rhetoric will profit from her book. Hans, a professor of sociology and criminal justice at the University of Delaware, tests claims about how juries treat businesses in civil cases. She assembles myriad charges, and then she acquits the civil jury system of nearly every specification. She often establishes a preponderance of evidence opposite to criticisms of civil juries.

The author proceeds so methodically and dispassionately as to win over every informed and open-minded reader. If there are no "Perry Mason" moments at which witnesses break down and admit that they were making it up as they went along, the "testimony" of purported experts is discredited all the more effectively by Professor Hans's fastidious craft and consistent fairness. (The author does establish that jurors tend to believe horror stories that have been discredited and sloganeering against litigants and lawyers, so jurors might still be derided for gullibility, just not by those who fabricate the tales and spread the slanders.

Professor Hans's findings diverge from common beliefs because she undertakes to replace anecdotes and assumptions with information and evidence. Her results, almost always consistent with research to date, issue from three methods of inquiry. The author interviewed 269 jurors from 36 civil cases that involved businesses or corporations and were tried to a verdict or a hung jury. She conducted a statewide survey of respondents' views of business regulation and civil litigation. In addition, she designed experiments with mock juries to focus on telling variables and contexts. Given this methodical and methodological resourcefulness, her findings must instill great confidence.

Hans finds that jurors are suspicious and even dismissive of victims and their grievances. Critics who assumed or asserted the ignorance of jurors may thereby have overlooked what jurors know well: everyday realities and everyday people. Because jurors believe that they understand what reasonable persons will or should do, plaintiffs often find civil juries a tough audience. Mindful that whiners and chiselers abound, jurors often begin cases presuming the plaintiff's culpability and become persuaded of the defendant's liability only slowly, reluctantly, and judiciously.

A few of Professor Hans's findings may pleasee tort reformers, however. Professor Hans shows that jurors expect more of corporate defendants than they do of ordinary individuals. Business defendants are expected to measure up to norms that physicians and other professionals must meet to avoid charges of malpractice. Dr. Hans reminds her readers that this tendency may be true outside the United States: Japanese jurors too tend to expect corporations to anticipate and to avert what less knowledgeable and less organized defendants might be forgiven for not having foreseen.

Hans concludes that juries simply are not pro-plaintiff as a general matter. She concedes that sympathy for civil plaintiffs and civil complaints may vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. On the whole, however, she finds too little evidence for any pro-plaintiff biases among civil jurors. The evidence that Professor Hans and others have discovered, then, runs decidedly opposite to the common assertion that juries favor Davids over Goliaths.

Nor are most jurors anti-business, as those sympathetic to Goliath (or other Philistines) have insisted. When jurors expressed hostility towards business defendants, their judgments were explicitly based on outrages in particular cases.

The myth of "Robin Hood" juries that use trials to redistribute wealth found little support as well. However useful political invocations of "Robin Hood" juries may be, in practice such juries turn out to be about as fictitious as their namesake.

By taking critics seriously, Professor Hans has undermined their criticisms and credibility in a concise and compelling manner. Her labors need not, of course, affect attacks on civil juries or civil justice, since many or most of those attacks depend so little on valid premises and so much on expedient presuppositions. Nonetheless, Professor Hans has made it harder for the well-informed to claim that their opinions of the civil jury are based on expertise or experience rather than expedience.

Editorial Review:

Jury verdicts in business trials are considered by many to be influenced less by a corporation's negligence than by sympathy for the plaintiffs, prejudice against business, and a belief in the corporation's "deep pockets." This book assesses these assumptions in the first systematic study of how juries make decisions in typical business cases. Surprisingly, says the author, the assumptions are either false or exaggerated.

Courts, Law, and Judicial Processes

Courts, Law, and Judicial Processes List Price: $22.95
By: Free Press
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The Language of Jury Trial: A Corpus-Aided Linguistic Analysis of Legal-Lay Discourse

Chris Heffer

The Language of Jury Trial: A Corpus-Aided Linguistic Analysis of Legal-Lay Discourse Chris Heffer Amazon Price: $57.92
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By: Palgrave Macmillan
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Editorial Review:

Drawing on representative corpora of transcripts from over 100 English criminal jury trials, this stimulating new book explores the nature of 'legal-lay discourse', or the language used by legal professionals before lay juries. Careful analyses of genres such as witness examination and the judge's summing-up reveal a strategic tension between a desire to persuade the jury and the need to conform to legal constraints. The book also suggests ways of managing this tension linguistically to help, not hinder, the jury.

King of the Mountain: The Rise, Fall, and Redemption of Chief Judge Sol Wachtler

John M. Caher

King of the Mountain: The Rise, Fall, and Redemption of Chief Judge Sol Wachtler John M. Caher Amazon Price: $34.98
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Editorial Review:

King of the Mountain covers the juicy details of the 1992 scandal that besmirched New York State Court of Appeals chief judge Sol Wachtler: the astonishing discovery that he had sent obscene, harassing, and ultimately threatening letters to a former lover. But journalist John Caher also thoroughly documents Wachtler's brilliant legal and political career, arguing persuasively that the traits that sparked his success (an analytical, often manipulative intelligence and a huge ego) also prompted his downfall. Here's one tell-all biography that you can relish without hating yourself in the morning.

Deciding to Decide: Agenda Setting in the United States Supreme Court

H.W., Jr. Perry

Deciding to Decide: Agenda Setting in the United States Supreme Court H.W., Jr. Perry Amazon Price: $70.50
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Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Editorial Review:

Of the nearly five thousand cases presented to the Supreme Court each year, less than 5 percent are granted review. How the Court sets its agenda, therefore, is perhaps as important as how it decides cases. H. W. Perry, Jr., takes the first hard look at the internal workings of the Supreme Court, illuminating its agenda-setting policies, procedures, and priorities as never before. He conveys a wealth of new information in clear prose and integrates insights he gathered in unprecedented interviews with five justices. For this unique study Perry also interviewed four U.S. solicitors general, several deputy solicitors general, seven judges on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, and sixty-four former Supreme Court law clerks.

The clerks and justices spoke frankly with Perry, and his skillful analysis of their responses is the mainspring of this book. His engaging report demystifies the Court, bringing it vividly to life for general readers--as well as political scientists and a wide spectrum of readers throughout the legal profession. Perry not only provides previously unpublished information on how the Court operates but also gives us a new way of thinking about the institution. Among his contributions is a decision-making model that is more convincing and persuasive than the standard model for explaining judicial behavior.

Patent Litigation: Model Jury Instructions

American Bar Association

Patent Litigation: Model Jury Instructions American Bar Association Amazon Price: $77.36
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By: American Bar Association
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Editorial Review:

This addition to the Model Jury Instruction series provides clear and balanced instructions for presentations to juries in patent litigation.

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