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MLR – Silica Litigation Revisited: Wall Street Journal Credits Wrong Guy

By: Magnolia Tribune - May 4, 2009

Silica Litigation Revisited: Wall Street Journal Credits Wrong Guy

The Saturday edition of the Wall Street Journal contained an article on the rise and fall of silica litigation. WSJ writer Kimberly Strassel credits U.S. Silica CEO (and former attorney) John Ulizio with single-handedly exposing silica litigation as a fraud. The truth is more complicated and a lot different.

Plaintiffs began filing silica cases in Mississippi in approximately late 2001. By 2003, there were hundreds of cases on file in Mississippi involving thousands of plaintiffs. Mississippi’s jackpot justice era was dying by this time, but mass tort plaintiff lawyers did not yet know it.

In the typical silica cases many plaintiffs sued many defendants under Mississippi’s formerly liberal joinder rules. At its height, there were in the neighborhood of fifty defendants sued in most silica cases, from national manufacturers to local paint and hardware stores. Many depositions were held where there were thirty or more defense lawyers appearing, all representing a different client. Even more lawyers attended MDL hearings in Corpus Christi, Texas, where the courtroom was packed with lawyers. Most of the lawyers were from Mississippi, since it was where the majority of the cases were filed.

Keeping the numerous clients and attorneys on the same page was like herding cats. The law firms that appeared to take the lead in this difficult task were (in no particular order): Forman Perry, Brunini, Bradley Arant and Dogan and Wilkinson. There was a defense steering committee with five attorneys on it. I can’t recall who they all were, but they all made significant contributions. The one lawyer who I saw doing the most to organize defense meetings where cooperation and coordination was discussed was Cheri Green at Brunini.

U.S. Silica’s Mississippi counsel was Watkins Eager. I never saw them organizing or presiding over joint defense meetings, boisterously urging joint defense positions, or otherwise trying to keep all the defendants on the same page. I’ve never heard of John Ulizio. When I bounced his name off a lawyer who was more involved in silica litigation than me, he hadn’t either.

Philip Thomas
MS Litigation Review
5/3/9

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Magnolia Tribune

This article was produced by Magnolia Tribune staff.