A rare form of aggressive, terminal cancer sweeps across the
industrialized world over the course of several decades, caused by
exposure to asbestos produced by businesses that know the risks, yet
continue to use it anyway.
Those who are diagnosed die young - in their 40s, 50s and 60s, with
the cancer having manifested years after exposure and then progressing
rapidly, leaving their spouses, children and loved ones a matter of a
couple years or a few months to say good-bye. It's estimated that by the
time the incidence of this cancer peaks in two years in the U.S., some
500,000 people will have died from it, despite the fact that
transparency and enforced safety regulations could have prevented scores
of unnecessary early deaths.
Who would you say is the victim in all this? Our mesothelioma lawyers know most would answer the patients or the loved ones who are now left behind to face the rest of their lives alone.
But apparently, insurance companies feel they are the ones who have suffered.
When a ratings firm recently came out with an estimation that
insurance companies are going to need to set aside another $11 billion
over what was previously budgeted (bringing the total to $85 billion, or
$170,000 per mesothelioma patient), insurance companies went on the
offensive.
Rather than conceding that this was a horrible chapter of corporate
history that should be righted (to the extent that it can be) and never
repeated, the insurance companies are instead pushing legislation that
would make it more difficult for victims and their families to file
mesothelioma litigation actions. Specifically, the American Legislative
Exchange Council is fighting for this measure using the argument that
much of these lawsuits are fraudulent. Rather than acknowledging the
widespread suffering and deaths, insurance firms are contending that
people must be making it up.
ALEC is pressing Republican lawmakers in particular to enact measures
that will protect corporations from claims of toxic exposure, namely in
West Virginia, Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Ohio and at the federal
level.
It's worth noting that this position is in opposition to the beliefs
of most Americans. Insurance firms are among the industries least
trusted by the public, with fewer than 40 percent voicing trust. The
only two industries that garnered less public support were financial
service firms and the federal government.
And yet, measures protecting these insurance firms are fast gaining a
great deal of support due to the powerful influence of insurance
lobbyists.
Rather than placing the blame where it belongs - with the companies
that perpetuated this exposure and then schemed to cover it up - ALEC
and other industry advocates are blaming plaintiff attorneys. They want
to paint a picture depicting lawyers as the root of the problem, when in
reality, the root of the problem is that people are suffering and dying
because of the actions of those firms they agreed to insure.
We can understand that perhaps these insurance companies weren't
aware of the extent to which their clients where being negligent when
they signed on with them. They most certainly didn't expect the sheer
volume of asbestos-related claims to be filed decades later. But that
doesn't take them off the hook and it most definitely doesn't make them
more of a victim than those who are losing their lives and their loved
ones to this horrible disease.
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