Post-Tonsillectomy Complications Led to Child’s Brain Injury, Jury Awards $1.2 Million Award
By Dean I Weitzman, Esq. on July 28th, 2012
With their 11-month-old son regularly having breathing problems while he slept, his parents took him to a doctor for help. After a detailed sleep study to learn what was ailing the baby, the doctor then recommended and performed surgery to remove the baby’s tonsils and adenoids. Following the surgery, however, the infant stopped breathing while recovering in the pediatric unit at Harrisburg Hospital. The lack of oxygen that followed caused an anoxic brain injury, and...
Injured During Job Interview, Fall Victim Receives $8.25 Million Settlement
By Dean I Weitzman, Esq. on July 27th, 2012
Across the U.S., falls are the leading cause of worker fatalities in the construction industry, according to the Occupational Safety & Health Administration (OSHA) in the U.S. Department of Labor. About 150 to 200 workers are killed each year and another 100,000 are injured in falls at construction sites, the agency says. Not all such injuries actually occur when a worker is on a job, however. Recently, an $8.75 million settlement was reached in the...
Work Zone Crash Kills 6 in NY: What We Can Learn From Such Tragedies
By Dean I Weitzman, Esq. on July 20th, 2012
A tractor-trailer barreling down a work-congested highway in upstate New York failed to slow down and smashed into several vehicles July 19, killing six people and leaving lots of questions about what happened. The tractor-trailer caused a chain-reaction collision that prompted an SUV to burst into flames and at least two other vehicles to be struck, according to a story from The Associated Press (AP). Five people died in the SU, including the driver, Laurie...
Penalties Now Higher in N.J. for Distracted Drivers Involved in Crashes While Using Hand-Held Cell Phones
By Dean I Weitzman, Esq. on July 18th, 2012
Drivers in New Jersey should be forewarned – a new rule just signed into law adds operating a motor vehicle while using a hand-held cell phone to the list of contributing factors that can lead to criminal charges of reckless driving if you are involved in a vehicle accident. The new legislation "toughens penalties against drivers who kill or injure someone while the driver is using a hand-held cell phone," according to a story in...
On Court Radio – What You Need to Know As Tenants and Landlords – Listen in Sunday at 7 a.m.
By Dean I Weitzman, Esq. on July 14th, 2012
Disputes between landlords and tenants are among the most common legal situations that can occur in people’s lives. From a landlord who isn’t concerned about properly caring for their rental properties to tenants who fail to pay their rent on time, there’s a myriad of issues that can arise and cause tensions for both sides. These kinds of issues will be the topic on “Court Radio” at 7 a.m. this Sunday as Court Radio host...
Deaths of Three Children on Capsized Long Island Yacht a Grim Reminder for Vigilant Boating Safety
By Dean I Weitzman, Esq. on July 13th, 2012
The July 4 holiday was tragically marred on Long Island's Oyster Bay in New York when a 34-foot-long private yacht capsized following a holiday fireworks show, trapping and killing three children who were inside the boat's cabin. Since the disaster, investigators have pored over the wreckage of the yacht, which had to be pulled from a depth of about 60 feet after it sank in the bay, according to an Associated Press story in the...
Court Radio Sunday 7 a.m: How the Overbrook High School Mock Trial Team is an Inspiration in Philadelphia
By Dean I Weitzman, Esq. on July 7th, 2012
For the last 25 years, Phil Beauchemin has been teaching history and “street law” to some of the city’s most underprivileged students at Overbrook High School in Philadelphia. They’re African-American kids largely from poor families, from broken families and from neighborhoods where high test scores haven’t been the norm. But don’t tell that to the overachieving kids who have been participating for all of those years on the school’s Mock Trial Team, which Beauchemin coaches....
What Drivers need to Know About Hit-and-Run Pedestrian Accidents
By Dean I Weitzman, Esq. on July 6th, 2012
A 28-year-old Delaware County man was critically injured earlier this week when he was struck by a vehicle that fled after hitting him as he walked alone on a road in the darkness. The victim, Thomas Quercetti, of Boothwyn, was unconscious when he was found in the wee hours lying in the roadway by a passing motorist who alerted police," according to a story in The Delaware County News Network. "Quercetti was taken to Crozer-Chester...
Emergency Room Treatment Delay Leads to $55 Million Verdict in Birth Defect Case
By Dean I Weitzman, Esq. on June 28th, 2012
With the birth of her son imminent after several hours of labor at her home, a Waverly, Maryland, woman was rushed to a Baltimore hospital by ambulance for an emergency Caesarean section in March of 2010. But instead of being instantly taken into an emergency room for immediate surgery, she had to wait for more than two hours until the procedure was started. That delay, according to a lawsuit she filed against Johns Hopkins Hospital,...