New lawsuit filed in fatal Wedgwood apartment fire

Today’s post was shared by The Workers’ Injury Law & Advocacy Group and comes from www.ksat.com

SAN ANTONIO – A lawsuit was filed Wednesday morning against the Wedgwood Senior Living Apartments in the aftermath of the fatal fire that killed six residents and injured many more.

The suit claims apartment management neglected to take basic fire safety precautions in order to keep tenants safe by failing to install or maintain certain safety measures.

The suit cites a list of issues, including the lack of fire sprinklers inside the 11-story building, failing to install or maintain smoke detectors, smoke alarms and fire extinguishers, and failing to adequately notify elderly residents of how to evacuate in the event of a fire.

“There was confusion, yes,” said 87-year-old Tony Escamilla. “This couple that was coming when I opened the door to my apartment, they asked me ‘Where do I go?’”

Escamilla is one of seven Wedgwood residents involved in the suit. They range in age from 59 to 87.

911 callers conveyed to dispatchers their own confusion about how to react during the emergency.

“Should I dress or what? I don’t know what to do,” one woman told a Castle Hills dispatcher.

“There’s so much smoke in the hallway that we can’t go out there,” said another caller. “What should we do?”

Others, some in wheelchairs, asked if they could use the elevator to evacuate.

“It’s fundamentally wrong to take a building that can be used for multiple purposes and use it to house seniors and fail to provide these safety…

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Lawsuit: Cover-up took place after jailed teen died from overdose

Today’s post was shared by The Workers’ Injury Law & Advocacy Group and comes from www.abqjournal.com

SANTA FE — Alleging that an untrained Santa Fe County jail guard engaged in a cover-up and took no action to have a teenager who’d overdosed on heroin checked after she was released from a local hospital while still “out of it,” the girl’s estate has sued the county, guards, the hospital and the hospital doctor who allowed her release.The lawsuit was filed Friday on behalf of Desiree Gonzales, who was sent to the jail after being released by the local hospital following her overdose the night of May 7.

“Because she took drugs and had an outstanding warrant for a probation violation, she was treated as a prisoner who deserved to be pushed out of the hospital as fast as possible, thrown into a cell and left to die,” says the lawsuit.

The lawsuit says a guard initially told hospital personnel that 17-year-old Gonzales was not checked for 2½ hours at the jail before she was found unresponsive with no pulse and not breathing. But the guard later changed his story on orders from a supervisor, saying Gonzales was checked every 15 minutes at the jail, including by waking her up, the lawsuit alleges.

The suit quotes medical records showing that hospital personnel reported that the purported every-15-minutes checks on Gonzales at the jail were “a change from his (the guard’s) original story” in the emergency room, the lawsuit says.

The alleged cover-up also “includes records made after the fact for…

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Judge denies ISU’s motion to dismiss students’ lawsuit

Today’s post was shared by The Workers’ Injury Law & Advocacy Group and comes from www.desmoinesregister.com

In November 2012, Josh Montgomery, then-president of the Iowa State chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, shows a shirt that has the Cy logo and a pot leaf on it.(Photo: Register File Photo)Buy Photo

A federal judge Tuesday refused to dismiss a lawsuit filed by students in Iowa State University’s chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws.

The lawsuit claims the university has improperly barred the pro-marijuana group from using ISU logos on T-shirts. Cy the Cardinal was on shirts members displayed in a photo in The Des Moines Register in 2012.

Judge James E. Gritzner ruled Tuesday that the complaint by NORML leaders Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh “alleges sufficient facts to support claims” for free speech violations.

The university had argued the lawsuit should be dismissed because the case has to do with trademark protection issues and not constitutional violations and the students “failed to exhaust their administrative remedies.” The university also claimed its administrators have qualified immunity.

Gritzner said the administrators did not have qualified immunity because the students brought forward sufficient facts for a constitutional right violation. He also found the university’s claim that the students violated procedural due process was without merit.

Iowa State updated its trademark policy to prohibit any uses of the mascot’s image tied to “drugs and drug…

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Jameis Winston’s accuser files federal lawsuit against FSU

Today’s post was shared by The Workers’ Injury Law & Advocacy Group and comes from www.orlandosentinel.com

The woman who accused Jameis Winston of rape has filed a federal civil lawsuit against FSU trustees, arguing the university violated her Title IX rights by refusing to properly investigate the incident.

Winston’s accuser demanded a trial by jury and in damages from Florida State University for Title IX violations of a “clearly unreasonable response” and allowing a “hostile educational environment,” according to the lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Orlando Wednesday and obtained by the Orlando Sentinel.

“Florida State University is disappointed to learn of this lawsuit.,” FSU president John Thrasher said in a statement. “The University has not yet been served and will need time to review the complaint fully before we respond in detail.

“After a year of selective news leaks and distorted coverage, Florida State looks forward to addressing these meritless allegations in court. Evidence will show that through its confidential Victim Advocate Program, FSU did everything the plaintiff asked for and that the assertions FSU shirked its Title IX obligations are false.”

The former FSU student listed as Jane Doe in the complaint was allegedly raped by Winston – FSU’s star quarterback who reportedly is leaving for the NFL – at his off-campus apartment in December 2012, but Winston has maintained that the sexual encounter was consensual.

The state attorney’s office did not charge Winston with a crime…

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Lawsuit says NBCUniversal, Caltrans broke law in offramp closure

Today’s post was shared by The Workers’ Injury Law & Advocacy Group and comes from www.latimes.com

NBCUniversal and Caltrans broke state law by inadequately studying the environmental effect of a plan to close a major 101 Freeway offramp, according to a new lawsuit filed by residents.

The southbound Barham Boulevard exit ramp is set to permanently close, probably in the coming year, as part of NBCUniversal’s $1.6-billion Evolution plan to expand its Universal Studios theme park.

After two-year delay, construction on California’s bullet train is set to start

The planned offramp closure has infuriated neighbors who say the area is already gridlocked and that closing the busy exit will only make it worse. A group of residents calling itself Keep the Barham Ramp Assn. filed suit in Los Angeles County Superior Court on New Year’s Eve.

The lawsuit, which seeks to halt the Barham closure until further study is done, names Universal City Studios and the California Department of Transportation, as well as the city and county of Los Angeles — both of which approved the plan.

As part of NBCUniversal’s expansion plan, a new southbound 101 Freeway onramp is to be built on Universal Studios Boulevard, allowing departing park guests to get directly onto the freeway, bypassing the neighborhood.

In an emailed statement, NBCUniversal said: “The new southbound 101 onramp was fully vetted in the public through a seven-year environmental review process. We are confident that the courts will stand by the city, county and Caltrans approvals.”

Caltrans determined last year that the…

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Judicial Elections

Along with the election of local judges and intermediate appellate Judges, the 2015 election features openings on three of the seven seats on the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. It is unprecedented that three of seven seats are open in one election, and the stakes are high. Control of the Court is up for grabs.

This situation has developed because one Justice was removed from office after having been convicted of election-related crime, while another resigned under the cloud of inappropriate communications and the use of public property in that process. The last seat is up due to the retirement of another Justice.

The fact that control of the Court is at stake has generated a great deal of interest in this election. In addition, the need to replace two Justices who departed under such tawdry circumstances has again brought to the forefront the question of whether it is better to elect or appoint judges. Pennsylvania judges are elected. Federal judges are appointed. Other states vary. 

The knock against elected judges is that the public is likely to elect people who may be great, partisan politicians, but who are ill-suited to serve in what is supposed to be the neutral and dispassionate role of a judge. The judicial candidate must wade through the same political system as any other candidate for office, but be expected to be that special sort of person who can put his or her personal views aside, and decide cases solely upon the facts and the law. That is difficult enough for any person to do, let alone one who has sprung from the ideological, partisan and dealmaking world of politics.

On the plus side is the belief that the elected judge may be closer to the people, and that his or her serving as judge derived from a fair and open election rather than as the result of backroom, undisclosed deals which were made by politicians.

The argument against the appointment of judges is just that. It always comes down to politics in one way or another. Consider that many people believe that the most enduring thing that a President of the United States achieves while in office is the appointment of federal judges from his own party, who are expected to reflect the principles of that party in future judicial decisions. If that is how the appointed system really works, what is the point? If the public is left with judges who put their personal beliefs above their obligation to serve as impartial and disinterested arbiters, how could this system suit a representative democracy such as the United States?

On the plus side of appointed judges, is the fact that the credentials and background of a candidate for appointment as a judge are subject to public scrutiny during the appointment process. It is argued that appointing judges results in a bench composed of more academic and professional jurists. Election results tend to be related to party affiliation or name recognition, neither of which relates to a candidate’s qualifications, character, or ability to serve as a judge. In an appointment system there is the hope that those best suited to serve are appointed.

Things do not always turn out as expected when it comes to judges. American history is replete with examples of judges who have surprised and disappointed those who appointed them. The most notable are probably Chief Justice of the Supreme Court Earl Warren, who was at the helm during a period of great change, and his latest successor, Chief Justice John Roberts, who cast the deciding vote upholding Obamacare. Both of these Judges sorely disappointed the Presidents who appointed them. The courts of Pennsylvania are full of hard working, honest, elected judges who have taken their oaths seriously, who dispense justice in accordance with the law, and who have grown into the office they hold notwithstanding the fact that they had to cross the quagmire of Pennsylvania elective politics to achieve it.

Most judges, like most lawyers, doctors and other professions, seek the post for all of the right reasons, and they perform the job admirably once they have it. Most judges, whether appointed or elected, possess the integrity and talent to do the job properly and well.
Since we are in a state in which judges are elected, it is incumbent upon the voters to familiarize themselves with the candidates before they go to the polling place. Obtaining information about candidates is far easier today than in the past. So, do a little homework, and regardless of your political affiliation, take the time to vote in this and all elections.

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