âItâs not about your job. Itâs about my job. When you fight for people, you make life harder for the people in charge, and guess what, the people in charge then try to go after you. The Republicans are out to show plaintiffsâ lawyers how much power they have, and the government found someone whoâs telling them that weâve done some illegal things, that weâve made some illegal, ah, illegal offers.
âNow, you have sat in the courtroom as Iâve argued case after case. You have listened to the witnesses, the expert witnesses. You have listened to the judge. You know how the whole process goes. Why did I bring up expert witnesses? Well, we need those witnessesâoften doctorsâto explain to the jury the effects that some of the drugs can have on our clients.â
âRight,â said Evelyn, wary.
âDo you remember the Oney case, Peg Oney out of Cresheim? Remember her, the Wallen Pharma case?â
âYes,â Evelyn said. She had been in middle school then, and she and Barbara had traveled to Pennsylvania to watch her father give opening arguments in the case. The lawsuit was over Wallen knowing but not disclosing side effects for one of its drugs. The case was complicated, full of chemistry and drug-development procedures, but her father made it simple. He had started by describing how Peg lost feeling in her fingertips as a result of taking the drug. âNow, fingertips mightnât seem like much,â he said in his thick Carolina accent. âItâs not a leg. Not an arm. Not even a hand. But when Peg holds her hand in front of a candle, she doesnât feel warmth. When she goes to pat her dog Scout, she canât feel his fur. When she touches her one-year-old babyâs cheek, she doesnât feel his soft skin. Fingertips are just the tips, but fingertips are also the world.â He had made every juror feel just what it was like to be Peg, and then he left the podium, walking close enough to the jury box that the jurors in front could touch him. âRight here, in this courtroom, you people of Pennsylvania get to say today to this huge conglomerate, âWeâve had enough. You donât get to take our senses from us. You donât get to tell us we canât feel warmth, we canât pat our dog, we canât touch our baby. Weâve been misled enough, weâve been fooled enough, weâve been lied to enough. It stops here. It stops today.ââ It took jurors fewer than three hours to award Peg Oney an enormous sum.
âPegâs injuries, the effect on her body, were complicated,â Dale was saying now as he neatened his stack of papers. âTo hold Wallen responsible, we had to have experts tracing exactly what Wallen had tested, exactly what they knew, exactly what the effects were on Peg and the other plaintiffs. Youâve got to have good experts and we searched high and low for the right ones, a doctor and a chemist, who offered very compelling trial testimony. The award in that case, Evie, was significant for the Oneys. Very significant.â
And for us, Evelyn thought; she remembered overhearing her parents discussing the millions her father had won as his portion in that case, and her mother had hired an interior designer to revamp Sag Neck, from wallpaper to chandeliers, just after that. âSo whatâs the issue?â she said.
âPegâs husband, ex-husband by then, later asked us to look into another pharmaceutical case. I donât think he saw much of the verdict money, and he was angry. He was hurt. He, I now believe, was seeking revenge on Peg, and he chose us for his revenge. He told us at the time that he was doing some pharmaceutical investments and uncovered what he thought were questionable quality-control policies at one of the big firms and came to us with the hopes that we could make a case out of it. We looked into it and filed a case, and it ended up settling
Charles Sheehan-Miles
Patrick Gale
Nikita King
Jessica Sorensen
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L. A. Witt
Billy Bennett
James L. Craig
Sarah Rayne
Phoenix Sullivan