Evidence for the hypothesis that modern life in the USA is increasingly Dickensian: Big Retail Chains Dun Mere Suspects in Theft. Incredible. And right here in Florida…
When the law is a tool used by the wealthy to control and hurt the poor.
We as consumers have been been sliced up into tranches and sold off. Its really as simple as that.
Posted by: LACJ at February 21, 2008 10:16 AMDoes this kind of predatory legal practice appear on the ethics exam? (I thought not).
Posted by: Joe at February 21, 2008 11:05 AMAs the article makes clear the Florida Bar Association has yet to take any of the complaints about predatory lawyering, including harassing telephone calls, seriously. Zealous advocacy is one thing, but this type of behavior goes beyond the norms sanctioned by the rules of professional conduct.
Posted by: John Flood at February 21, 2008 05:15 PMDown in the WSJ story we read that several of those who were wrongly accused and threatened later won suits against the retailers. Great, but what bugs me is that the settlements are secret. Big contradiction to the ideal of transparency, and it's all over the place.
Posted by: Larry at February 21, 2008 05:37 PMWell... I understand the concept of zealous representation, but this is pretty over the top. The FL Bar really needs to address this.
@ Joe--- Good point!!
Posted by: DUI at February 21, 2008 10:48 PMIn the UK the handyman could sue Home Depot for slander by deed. The precedent is a case involving W.H.Smith. Accuse a person of theft and get it wrong and you stand to loose rather more than the $3000 being demanded by Home Despot.
I don't see why the same principle should not apply here. I have no problem with the stores being able to sue rather than bring criminal charges. But they have to be accountable for errors.
Posted by: PHB at February 22, 2008 09:18 AM Nobody's Safe - Jan 25, 2008
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