Warning: Declaration of AVH_Walker_Category_Checklist::walk($elements, $max_depth) should be compatible with Walker::walk($elements, $max_depth, ...$args) in /home/seonews/public_html/wp-content/plugins/extended-categories-widget/4.2/class/avh-ec.widgets.php on line 62
West Side | SEONewsWire.net http://www.seonewswire.net Search Engine Optimized News for Business Tue, 26 May 2015 23:58:20 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.0.8 “A code of silence”: Lawsuit filed over teen’s death at police hands in 2014 http://www.seonewswire.net/2015/05/a-code-of-silence-lawsuit-filed-over-teens-death-at-police-hands-in-2014/ Tue, 26 May 2015 23:58:20 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/2015/05/a-code-of-silence-lawsuit-filed-over-teens-death-at-police-hands-in-2014/ The mother of a teenager who was shot and killed by police on Chicago’s West Side has filed a federal wrongful death lawsuit against the force. Roshad McIntosh was killed in August 2014. At a news conference, his mother, Cynthia

The post “A code of silence”: Lawsuit filed over teen’s death at police hands in 2014 first appeared on SEONewsWire.net.]]>
The mother of a teenager who was shot and killed by police on Chicago’s West Side has filed a federal wrongful death lawsuit against the force.

Roshad McIntosh was killed in August 2014. At a news conference, his mother, Cynthia Lane, said that police have not revealed the names of the officers who fired the shots that killed him, nor whether they have been disciplined or are still on duty. The lawsuit alleges that McIntosh was killed without provocation, and it further claims that authorities have since tried to cover up the incident.

According to the lawsuit, which names as defendants two “John Doe” police officers as well as the city of Chicago, McIntosh was unarmed when police officers chased him with weapons drawn. The lawsuit claims that officers chased McIntosh into a backyard, where he surrendered, but the officers shot and killed him without response.

Police claim that McIntosh had a 9mm handgun that he pointed at officers, leaving the officers no choice but to fire their weapons. McIntosh was pronounced dead at Mount Sinai Hospital.

The lawsuit also claims civil rights violations, alleging that policies of the Chicago Police Department have led to racially-motivated shootings of black men and a “code of silence” when it comes to investigating and disciplining officers.

Paul Greenberg is a Chicago work accidents and wrongful death lawyer with Briskman Briskman & Greenberg. To learn more call 1.877.595.4878 or visit http://www.briskmanandbriskman.com/.

The post “A code of silence”: Lawsuit filed over teen’s death at police hands in 2014 first appeared on SEONewsWire.net.]]>
ConAgra Fights Largest Punitive Claim in Illinois History http://www.seonewswire.net/2014/02/conagra-fights-largest-punitive-claim-in-illinois-history/ Mon, 17 Feb 2014 10:42:53 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/2014/02/conagra-fights-largest-punitive-claim-in-illinois-history/ The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals has heard arguments over a $180 million jury verdict in a personal injury case, the largest punitive claim in Illinois history. The defendant companies urged the court to overturn a district court’s judgment or

The post ConAgra Fights Largest Punitive Claim in Illinois History first appeared on SEONewsWire.net.]]>
The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals has heard arguments over a $180 million jury verdict in a personal injury case, the largest punitive claim in Illinois history. The defendant companies urged the court to overturn a district court’s judgment or lower the damages award in the grain elevator explosion case.

The case stems from an April 2010 incident in which three men were injured when a grain bin exploded at ConAgra Food Inc.’s grain processing facility in Chester, Illinois. The injured men, Robert Schmidt, John Jentz and Justin Becker, were hired to clean out the bin. The plaintiffs claimed that the container had not been cleaned in 17 years and had begun to smolder.

Becker was an employee of West Side Salvage, a company that ConAgra hired to clean the bin. Schmidt and Jentz were employed by A & J Bin Cleaning, a company that was hired by West Side to help with the cleaning. A & J was not named as a defendant in the lawsuit.

The plaintiffs each filed lawsuits in federal court in southern Illinois, which were later consolidated. The plaintiffs claimed that ConAgra knew the bin was dangerous but failed to take action to make it safe. ConAgra filed a cross-claim for contribution against West Side, claiming that the smaller company was the proximate cause of the plaintiffs’ injuries, in part because a foreman sent Becker and Jentz back into the bin — after it was evacuated but before the explosion — in an attempt to reclaim tools left inside.

All three men suffered severe injuries in the explosion. Jentz sustained serious burns to over 70 percent of his body, and Schmidt suffered second-degree burns on his hands, face and neck.

After a month-long trial, the jury returned a verdict of approximately $180 million in damages, including large punitive damages awards. West Side was ordered to pay about $20 million of the damages ConAgra owed and to pay Jentz $1 million in punitive damages independently.

An attorney for West Side argued before the appeals court that Jentz’s claim for punitive damages against West Side should not have been presented to the jury, because there was no evidence of willful or wanton conduct on the part of West Side.

One of the judges on the appeals panel noted a problem with that argument, stating that a reasonable jury could find that the West Side foreman engaged in willful and wanton conduct in ordering the plaintiffs to go back into the bin to retrieve tools before it exploded, since the container presented an obvious danger.

An attorney for ConAgra, meanwhile, said that the foreman’s decision to send the workers back into the bin broke any chain of causation between ConAgra and the defendants. He argued that, as such, the award against ConAgra should be reversed.

An attorney for the plaintiffs, meanwhile, argued that the trial judge and the jury made the right decision. The award was not excessive, he said, for a case that resulted in “two people burning alive, essentially.”

The post ConAgra Fights Largest Punitive Claim in Illinois History first appeared on SEONewsWire.net.]]>

Deprecated: Directive 'allow_url_include' is deprecated in Unknown on line 0