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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsAvenatti addresses the "ambulance chaser" accusations
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@MichaelAvenatti
To all of those that continue to try and discount me as an "ambulance chaser" or "porn lawyer" - take note. Here is a link to some of the results I have obtained as lead counsel (over $1B). Not a single one listed is a personal injury matter. #basta
Link to tweet
OnDoutside
(19,982 posts)ability as a lawyer.
el_bryanto
(11,804 posts)If he didn't say anything they would find a way to spin that.
Bryant
OnDoutside
(19,982 posts)in response to this hit piece
http://dailycaller.com/2018/05/13/michael-avenatti-past-history/
Many of the developments surrounding Stormy Daniels lawsuit against President Donald Trump have focused on the business dealings of attorney Michael Cohen, but an investigation by The Daily Caller News Foundation reveals that Daniels counsel, Michael Avenatti, has his own questionable history.
Avenattis past is littered with lawsuits, jilted business partners and bankruptcy filings. People who have worked with the lawyer described him to TheDCNF as ruthless, greedy and unbothered by ethical questions.
Dillanos Coffee CEO David Morris claimed last Tuesday that Avenatti never paid him for over $160,000 worth of coffee that Dillanos supplied to Avenattis company. So @StormyDaniels hot shot lawyer Michael owes my small company @Dillanos $160,179 for coffee, Morris wrote on Twitter. He talks a big talk about integrity. We trusted him.
SNIP
The Daily Caller News Foundation on Thursday interviewed Avenatti over the phone on several topics including Morriss accusations, which Avenatti denied. I dont owe Dillanos coffee anything. I personally dont owe them anything, he said. So thats nonsense.
But just three hours later, Morris announced that he had deleted his original tweet after working out an arrangement with Avenatti.
SNIP
Avenatti no longer owns Global Baristas LLC, and said he divested from the company in 2017, but he remains Tullys general counsel.
zaj
(3,433 posts)MaryMagdaline
(6,856 posts)Free advertising. More NDA signers. Perhaps even the woman who received the 1.6 million from trump, ur what's his name
ehrnst
(32,640 posts)at this very moment.
True Dough
(17,338 posts)If he has a single skeleton in his closet, it will soon be dragged out for all to see.
Orsino
(37,428 posts)I think Avenatti, and by extension Cohen, is a hornet's nest few are really willing to poke.
SonofDonald
(2,050 posts)Isn't that was Cohen was/is??
True Blue American
(17,994 posts)Gives him a chance to make Rudy seem out of touch.
Rudys rants are not helping.
LakeArenal
(28,858 posts)True Blue American
(17,994 posts)Making fun of Trump. trump goes to war as he fights for survival.
Dustlawyer
(10,497 posts)That is a term the insurance Lobby and RW think tanks use to describe attorneys who represent people injured through the negligence or intentional conduct of others. It is the same as their attacks that PI lawyers file all of these "frivolous" lawsuits which helped them to pass draconian tort reform that takes away individuals rights for redress against people/corporations who harm them. It is all part of their programming Americans with their propaganda to distrust and not seek out an attorney when harmed. It is also used to condition jurors not to award money to injured people.
Everyone old enough remembers the McDonald's coffee case, or at least the corporate media's version of the story which was, woman spills hot coffee, sues and wins millions. This case was used to pass tort reform all over the country. The truth was much different.
Stella Liebeck was severely burned trying to take the lid off of her coffee to add cream and sugar. The coffee spilled in her lap, but because McDonald's had decided to super-heat their coffee to get more coffee per bean and stay fresher longer, she almost died. Surgeons had to remove her labia and clitoris. McDonald's knew their hotter coffee was causing second and third degree burns and had confidentially settled several burn cases. Since it was very profitable they continued anyway. The jury awarded one day of coffee sales ($2 million) which the judge reduced to $900,000. McDonald's lowered the temperature of their coffee back to industry standard and the public was protected.
PI attorneys take cases on a contingent fee (percentage of money recovered) because most people cannot afford to pay an hourly rate. This means the attorney gets nothing and eats the money and time they spent developing the case. We represent people who need help. Much of our work helps to protect the public and keep corporations at least somewhat in check. It is getting more difficult to do every year as our rights to seek redress are continually eroded.
Are there disreputable attorneys out there? Absolutely, just as there are disreputable people in every occupation and job in this country. The vast majority are decent, hard working people who get lumped in with the minority to further the ends of the corporations/insurance companies.
Please keep this in mind next time someone throws out the "Ambulance Chaser" label, thanks!
Miles Archer
(18,837 posts)I've seen him in a suit and tie ONCE. He complained about it before, during, and after.
He focuses largely on elder law and wills / trusts.
He's helped me on more occasions than I can list here. He's hard-working, dependable, and has interesting listening skills. He normally has a deapan expression, and you think he's not listening, then months later repeats something you said to him, verbatim.
There's a lot more to it than that, of course, but yeah...it's not an easy job when it's done right.
BobTheSubgenius
(11,572 posts)PI attorneys give at least SOME pause to the actions of potential defendants who know they could end up in a tort case.
The McDonald's case is an excellent example, although I still think the woman deserved the original judgement and more.
Dustlawyer
(10,497 posts)The judge decided the jury awarded too much money and ordered a reduction. I wonder how much he would value his own bits & pieces if they had to be cut off?
I am really bothered by how much control corporations have over our media due too their advertising money. None of the media outlets reported the case fairly. They left the impression that it was a BS case because of how much money Mickey D's spends in ad dollars.
I watched the media put a blackout on BP oil spill victim stories and pump up BP due to the large amounts of money they spent on ads after the spill. Our country has a lot of serious problems that can only be addressed by Americans uniting to insist on truth in our media and a separation of the business side of the outlets from the content side.
Walter Cronkite we really miss you!
Jim Lane
(11,175 posts)One fact I'll add about the "hot coffee" case: McDonald's took an appeal and then settled with the plaintiff. McDonald's followed the common practice among corporate defendants in demanding, as part of the settlement, that the plaintiff and her lawyer agree to a gag order, preventing them from discussing the case publicly. Thus, one reason that the media gave such preferential treatment to the McDonald's side of the story was that media outlets couldn't get quotations from the people who were in the best position to present the other side.
Let's also recall the mass recall of cars with the ignition lock defect. That didn't occur because General Motors had a corporate conscience. It didn't occur because government regulators detected the problem. It occurred because one of us "ambulance chasing" lawyers, representing the parents of one of the victims, pressed the hell out of the case and laid the whole situation open. There's no telling how many lives that lawyer saved.
I understand why Avenatti wants the nature of his practice to be correctly understood. He doesn't want accident victims coming to him, because he's not experienced in handling those cases. It is unfortunate, though, that some people may read his comment as agreeing with the idea that lawyers who do represent accident victims are somehow disreputable.