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Verdicts & Settlements
  • $15.0 million involving man who was left a ventilator dependant quadriplegic as result of broken neck during intubation

  • $12.5 million involving a suicide

  • $10.75 million settlement with physicians and hospital in case involving infant who suffered permanent brain injuries at birth

  • $8.1 million wrongful death verdict in case involving an outpatient suicide, highest verdict in the United States in a suicide case

  • $7.1 million verdict represented the first medical malpractice verdict ever in Guilford County, highest medical malpractice verdict in North Carolina at the time, the second highest punitive damages verdict in the state

  • $7 million awarded by jury in medmal verdict

  • $4.5 million involving a child who suffered significant brain injury as result of medical treatment received for heart condition

  • $3.5 million verdict involving infant who suffered permanent brain injuries

  • $3.25 million for the wrongful death of husband and father of 4 children who died due to a failure to see and appreciate a brain aneurysm by a radiologist performing an MRA (Magnetic Resonance Angiogram)

  • Confidential settlement in 2002: $2.3 million for the wrongful death of a 38 year-old, wife and mother of 2 children who died following a routine thyroidectomy

  • Cumberland County: $1.5 million settlement in a car accident involving a 31 year-old wife and mother of 2 children which resulted in a closed-head injury and permanent brain damage

  • Macon County: $800,000 wrongful death verdict in case involving throat cancer

  • Gore, Bradley to visit state during presidential campaign

    The News & Observer Raleigh, NC

    Copyright 1999

    Monday, April 26, 1999

    News

    Under the Dome

    Gore, Bradley to visit state during presidential campaign

    Jena Heath and Rob Christensen
    Staff Writers

    Overheard:

    'Would you mind if I follow up while I still have the brain
    cells?'

    Rep. Sam Ellis. The Garner Republican was struggling to put a
    thought together during a committee meeting at the end of another
    interminable legislative day.

    * * *

    POLITICAL SCORECARD:

    UP: Health insurance and small-business lobbies. The House
    Insurance Committee has parked in a study committee a bill requiring
    equal treatment for mental health and physical ailments.

    DOWN: The pork industry. Senate Democrats are calling for a two-
    year extension of a moratorium on new and expanded corporate-type hog
    farms.

    UP: Rep. Bob Hensley. The Raleigh Democrat and chairman of the
    Alcoholic Beverage Committee pushed to the House floor a bill to make
    liquor-by-the-drink statewide and to spotlight the legislature's many
    special permits allowing a privileged few to skirt local drinking
    rules.

    * * *

    The two major Democratic presidential candidates, Vice President
    Al Gore and former Sen. Bill Bradley, are scheduled to make their
    first campaign swings through North Carolina early next month.

    Gore will hold fund-raisers May 13 in Charlotte and Raleigh. The
    Charlotte event will be at the home of Cameron Harris, and the one in
    Raleigh will be at the home of former Ambassador Jeannette Hyde and
    her husband, Wallace, both long-time friends of the vice president.

    So far Gore has raised $135,000 in North Carolina, according to
    Raleigh businessman Tom Hendrickson, a former state Democratic Party
    chairman.

    Among the people helping Gore are former state Sen. Tom Taft,
    former White House Chief of Staff Erskine Bowles, former Lt. Gov.
    Bob Jordan, former Glaxo Chairman Charles Sanders, Harnett County
    businessman George McCotter, state House Speaker Jim Black, former
    state Democratic Chairman Libba Evans, Fayetteville lawyer Wade Byrd,
    High Point businessman Jake Froelich, Frank Daniels Jr., the former
    publisher of The News & Observer, and state Sen. Larry Shaw of
    Fayetteville.

    Two days after Gore is in the state, Bradley will come through on
    May 15, according to Ed Turlington, a former Raleigh lawyer who is
    his deputy campaign manager. He will hold a Charlotte fund-raiser at
    the home of broadcast executive Jim Babb and his wife, Mary Lou, and
    a Raleigh fund-raiser at the home of lawyer and former state
    Democratic Chairman Wade Smith and his wife, Ann.

    Among those who are on Bradley's host committee are former
    Carolina coach Dean Smith, Terry Sanford Jr., the son of the late
    senator; Durham developer Clay Hamner, Raleigh lawyer Sam Poole,
    former Gov. Bob Scott, former Raleigh Mayors Smedes York and Tom
    Bradshaw, Greensboro business executive Chuck Hayes, and former state
    chairmen Lawrence Davis and Jim Van Hecke.

    On Sunday, May 16, Bradley will be the commencement speaker at
    UNC-Chapel Hill, where he will receive an honorary degree.

    * * *

    White House to honor Sanford:

    The late Sen. Terry Sanford is expected to be honored this week at
    a White House signing ceremony for a bill naming the federal building
    in Raleigh after him, according to U.S. Rep. Bobby Etheridge.

    Details are still being worked out. But the White House is
    expected to invite the former governor's family as well as Tar Heel
    members of Congress to the ceremony. Such a White House signing is
    very rare for routine bills, and it shows the high regard in which
    President Clinton held Sanford, Etheridge said.

    Also honoring Sanford was Maryland Lt. Gov. Kathleen Kennedy
    Townsend, the eldest daughter of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. At
    the Jefferson-Jackson Day breakfast in Raleigh on Saturday, Townsend
    noted that Sanford was the first notable Southern politician to
    endorse John F. Kennedy for president in 1960 and also seconded his
    nomination at the Los Angeles convention. She said Sanford's
    endorsement "made a critical difference" in JFK's winning the
    nomination.

    "Our family doesn't forget our friends, and I thank North
    Carolina," Townsend said.

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