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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

  • FAYETTEVILLE (AP) _ Fayetteville lawyer Wade Byrd knows a little ...

    The Associated Press Political Service

    Copyright 1997. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved

    Sunday, April 27, 1997

    FAYETTEVILLE (AP) _ Fayetteville lawyer Wade Byrd knows a little ...

    Associated Press

    FAYETTEVILLE (AP) _ Fayetteville lawyer Wade Byrd knows a little
    about soft money campaign contributions.

    Last year, he gave $75,000 to the national Democratic
    Congressional Campaign Committee and another $20,000 to the national
    Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee.

    He also gave thousands of dollars to the state Democratic Party
    and to candidates such as Gov. Jim Hunt, Attorney General Mike Easley
    and Supreme Court Chief Justice Burley Mitchell. He contributed to
    congressional and Senate races from North Carolina to Wyoming.

    Byrd gave so much money, in fact, that he lost count before the
    year was over.

    It was about $150,000, according to state and federal campaign
    finance records.

    "I want to be a player," Byrd says. "I want to be involved. I
    want to be part of the process."

    Byrd is a player in the soft money game, the unregulated flow of
    money to party committees to help individual candidates.

    He gave $20,000, for example, to the Democratic Senatorial
    Campaign Committee to help former Charlotte Mayor Harvey Gantt in his
    race against U.S. Sen. Jesse Helms. Under federal law, people cannot
    give more than $2,000 directly to an individual candidate.

    "That's the way Harvey wanted it rather than it going directly to
    Harvey," Byrd says.

    Byrd is one of the leading medical malpractice lawyers in the
    country. Despite the prevalent view that soft money gives the
    wealthy access not afforded to middle-class voters, he looks at it
    his donations differently.

    "I represent little people," he says. "My clients are workers and
    injured people and brain-damaged babies, and those people don't
    really have a voice. They're not IBM and they're not the phone
    company and they're not the banks and the chambers of commerce, and
    they need a voice.