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Posts Tagged ‘attorney’

Insurance Policies: Are Your Family Members Really Covered?

Thursday, August 7th, 2008

You walk into your local State Farm office and say “I need full coverage insurance to protect me and my family should I ever get in an accident.” Your agent sells you a policy with every bell and whistle. You think that your family is well protected.

Now imagine the worst: Dad, Mom and toddler son are in a Dayton car accident when Dad takes his eyes of the road to answer his cell phone. The car runs off the road and strikes a tree. Mom is severely and permanently injured. Dad was negligent in causing the accident. (more…)

Personal Injury Myths

Thursday, July 3rd, 2008

The general public is exposed to many myths concerning personal injury and medical malpractice lawsuits. The insurance industry lobby is responsible for the perception that personal injury and medical malpractice cases are clogging the judicial system and wasting the courts’ valuable time and resources. The Ohio Supreme Court released a summary for 2007 concerning cases that have been filed across Ohio that debunks this myth. (more…)

Fireworks Becoming More Dangerous

Monday, June 16th, 2008


This Fourth of July be extra cautious with the use of consumer fireworks. The legal limit of the amount of pyrotechnic material allowed in consumer fireworks has been increased. Most of these fireworks can be purchased at temporary roadside tents and set off in your backyard or driveway. According to the American Pyrotechnics Association, the use of backyard fireworks has more than doubled since 2000. That has caused concern among some public safety groups that the rise in both popularity and firepower could prove dangerous and result in injury or property damage. (more…)

Organs of Deceased Not Property of Next-of-Kin

Friday, June 13th, 2008

The Ohio Supreme Court has ruled that the next-of-kin do not have a right to organs removed by county coroners after autopsies are completed, according to a 6-1 ruling by the Ohio Supreme Court.

The decision is a win for coroners and medical examiners in 87 of Ohio’s 88 counties who are facing a federal class-action lawsuit.In writing the decision, Justice Evelyn Lundberg Stratton went beyond the typical law library materials and consulted the Post Mortem Technique Handbook and The Color Atlas of the Autopsy.  In about 5 percent of autopsies, brains are removed, hung upside down in a large container of fixing solution for up to six weeks, and then dissected after they’ve hardened. Dissection of the brain can yield information about tumors, strokes or contusions that may have led to death. (more…)

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