Marler Blog

May 12, 2026

Hey, FDA Commissioner Makary, AI has a wild idea – perhaps a Hallucination?

I asked our AI friends – What are the pros and cons of replacing FDA Commissioner Makary with me – here is the response? This is a very timely question — Makary resigned as FDA Commissioner today, May 12, 2026, amid reports of internal tensions and policy clashes, with the vaping dispute reportedly being a […]

November 12, 2004

E. coli and the Fair

There’s nothing more American than the local fair. Countless millions visit them each year for the rides, the delectable goodies, and for some up close and personal — sometimes even hands on — time with the farm animals. What fair-goers are finding out though, and often through devastating illness rather than education, is that the […]

November 11, 2004

112 cases of E. coli infection suspected

The Charlotte Observer in an article this week said cases of E. coli infection have tripled since last week to 112 as N.C. health officials narrowed their search for the source of bacteria to last month’s State Fair. State epidemiologist Dr. Jeffrey Engel told the media that they’re investigating all areas where people have contact […]

November 08, 2004

Hepatitis still hurts

Christopher Snowbeck of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette did a story yesterday about my clients Richard and Linda Miller, two of the 660 people sickened with hepatitis A in last year’s Chi Chi’s outbreak. Snowbeck’s article Hepatitis still hurts reports: Tomorrow marks the single day on which the greatest number of outbreak patients — more than 50 […]

November 04, 2004

E. coli cases keep increasing

As Sarah Avery reported for newsobserver.com, E. coli cases keep increasing in North Carolina. So far, 24 cases have been confirmed and 33 cases are being studied to see whether the cases are related. The most common link among the people who are sick is a trip to the State Fair last month — in […]

November 04, 2004

Fighting big beef

I had a nice chat with Mike Keefe-Feldman of the Missoula Independent about John Munsell, the owner of Montana Quality Foods meat packing plant, who is suing the USDA. As the Independent puts it, it’s a lawsuit which “if successful, could bring about the most significant changes to America’s meat-inspection system since the Federal Meat […]

October 25, 2004

A Penny for Education

I-884, the Education Trust Fund Initiative, raises the sales tax from 6.5 to 7.5%. Sure, no one likes taxes, but there are times when we really need to invest in our kids’ future, and that time is now. The Trust Fund creates 10,000 high-quality preschool places, so poor kids get a good start. In kindergarten […]

October 22, 2004

The Truth About the Civil Justice System

Supporters of so-called tort ‘reform’ bills in Congress claim that too many lawsuits have led to excessive costs and delays. They also charge that juries can no longer be trusted to render fair verdicts. But the truth belies these assertions. Tort ‘reform’ — really ‘deform’ — would gut our system’s ability to force wrongdoers to […]

October 22, 2004

McDonald’s Callousness Was Real Issue, Jurors Say, In Case of Burned Woman

The Wall Street Journal article “McDonald’s Callousness Was Real Issue, Jurors Say, In Case of Burned Woman” sheds some much-needed light on the McDonald’s coffee case. When a law firm here found itself defending McDonald’s Corp. in a suit last year that claimed the company served dangerously hot coffee, it hired a law student to […]

October 22, 2004

THE “MCDONALD’S COFFEE CASE”

The Center for Justice & Democracy has published a story called MYTHBUSTER! THE MCDONALD’S COFFEE CASE” AND OTHER FICTIONS to tell the true story of the often misunderstood and misrepresented case of the 79-year-old woman who sued McDonalds after she received third-degree burns over 16 percent of her body from spilled coffee. The “McDonald’s coffee” […]

October 22, 2004

Tomato supplier for Sheetz ceases operations, blames bad publicity

In a Pittsburgh Post-Gazette story Tomato supplier for Sheetz ceases operations, blames bad publicity, Joe Fahy and Jerome Sherman reported today that Coronet Foods, tomato distributer for sandwiches sold at Sheetz convenience stores, was ceasing operations today at its plant in Wheeling, West Virginia, leaving 220 workers without jobs. The company blames its going out […]

October 22, 2004

What She Ate Almost Killed Her

In a tragic story of how our food system fails families, Madeline Drexler’s article “What She Ate Almost Killed Her” for Good Housekeeping paints the painful tale of one little girl’s battle with death, all because she ate a hamburger. On June 30, 2002, ConAgra recalled 354,200 pounds of ground beef. On July 16, Kristi […]

October 22, 2004

The Essential Summer BBQ Accessory

Going to a BBQ? Bring your meat thermometer, The Essential Summer BBQ Accessory. “The only safe hamburger is one cooked to 160 degrees,” says Nancy Donley, president of the nonprofit Safe Tables Our Priority, a food-safety advocacy group. “Research has shown color is not a reliable indicator.” Donley learned about food safety the hard way […]

October 22, 2004

Swinging from the Chandeliers

Here at Marler Clark, we like to take swinging from the chandeliers to a whole new level, especially when the swinging is for a good cause like the BRIBE committee. Like Tennessean Andrew Jackson’s drunken supporters swinging from chandeliers at the rowdy 1829 White House inauguration bash that signaled the defeat of the snobbish East […]

October 22, 2004

The Puzzle of the Jury Room

In the article “A New Day In Court” published in CFO Magazine, Steven L. Mintz writes: Awards often seem mysterious to Chris Campos, whose Teaneck, New Jersey based CPA firm, Campos & Stratis, investigates product- liability claims on behalf of insurance companies. He finds even favorable outcomes puzzling, when emotions in the jury room overwhelm, […]

October 22, 2004

Lawsuit juries harder to find

“fen-phen” Houston Texas juries

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