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GM
fight wins honor for Portland attorney
Trial
Lawyers for Public Justice says Larry Baron took a case that almost no
one else would have pursued
J. Todd Foster
of The Oregonian
Larry
Baron of Portland has been named "National Trial Lawyer of the Year,"
beating attorneys who won billion-dollar judgements, uncovered international
civil rights violations and attacked corporate polluters for causing birth
defects.
"I never
thought I would win," says Baron, 47, who was honored for forcing
General Motors Corp, to settle a product liability case.
Baron and
Seattle co-counsel Paul Whelan won a confidential out-of-court settlement
for Madras resident Anne Kirkwood, who was critically burned when a GM
truck with a sidesaddle fuel tank swerved into her lane and exploded on
impact.
Before Baron
even filed his $263 million lawsuit, he and a lobbyist had to sell the
Oregon Legislature on an exemption to a state law governing product-liability
lawsuits.
The Washington,
D.C. based Trial Lawyers for Public Justice, meeting July 22 in San Diego
at its 15th annual convention, honored Baron over nine other finalists
from Los Angeles to New York, Miami to New Hampshire.
Baron took
on a case that virtually no one else would have pursued, the trial lawyers
group said. The award is given each year to the trail lawyer or firm with
the "greatest contribution" to the public interest by winning
or settling a precedent-setting case.
"Larry's
work on this case illustrates the ability of trial attorneys to bring
justice to those who need representation to fight the most powerful and
wealthy corporations in this country," says William Snead, the group's
outgoing president.
A practicing
attorney for 22 years, Baron says the GM settlement gave him extra satisfaction
because he is a Detroit native. GM is based in Detroit.
He has joined
a cadre of plaintiff's attorneys nationwide who contend that GM full-size
pickups from 1973 through 1987 are prone to explode from side-impact accidents.
GM Lawyers
deny the accusation but have settled more than 200 cases.
"They're
absolute firebombs," Baron says. "I don't know how GM executives
sleep at night, justifying keeping these vehicles on the road."
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