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Personal Injury Law News & Recall Articles - Third Quarter 2006

2006 News - First Quarter | Second Quarter | Third Quarter | Fourth Quarter
 
September 30, 2006
Associated Press, "Brazil air force finds jetliner wreckage"
          Brazilian air force pilots spotted the wrecked fusilage of a jetliner that crashed deep in the Amazon jungle on Saturday, and an aviation official said it was unlikely any of the 155 people aboard had survived. The president of Brazil's airport authority, Jose Carlos Pereira, said the pilots searched for Gol airlines Flight 1907 through the night in the remote region. More...

Learn more about the legal rights of the families of victims of airplane crashes.
 
September 30, 2006
          Federal investigators say the tire failure of the van that crashed Sept. 26, 2005, killing eight Utah State University students and their instructor, has parallels to two 15-passenger van accidents in 2001. More...
 
September 30, 2006
New York Times, "FDA Says Bayer Failed to Reveal Trasylol Drug Risk Study"
          Bayer A.G., the German pharmaceutical giant, failed to reveal to federal drug officials the results of a large study suggesting that a widely used heart-surgery medicine might increase the risks of death and stroke, the Food and Drug Administration announced Friday. Bayer scientists even appeared at a public meeting called by the F.D.A. on Sept. 21 to discuss the possibility that the drug, Trasylol, might have serious risks. But they did not mention the study or its worrisome results. More...
 
September 29, 2006
Associated Press, "Brazilian Boeing 737 jet missing over Amazon jungle"
          A Brazilian jetliner with 155 people aboard was reported missing Friday over the Amazon jungle, aviation authorities said. Initially, the officials said they believed Gol airlines flight 1907 had collided with a smaller plane after the jetliner left the jungle city of Manaus in the remote south western region of Para state. News reports said the plane reportedly struck a Brazilian-made Legacy, a smaller executive jet. More...

Please visit Global Aviation Law.com to learn more about recent plane crashes and the rights of the families of victims.
 
September 28, 2006
Indystar News, "$700M Zyprexa deal OK'd by judge"
         A federal judge has given his blessing to Eli Lilly and Co.'s complex $700 million settlement with Zyprexa patients, who should see the money soon after lawyers and Medicare and Medicaid take their cuts. More...
 
September 28, 2006
Lexington Herald-Leader (Kentucky), "Blue Grass Airport Runway Examined for Evidence in Comair 5191 Crash"
          A private jet with a cockpit comparable to Comair's Bombardier CRJ 1000 went down the runway at 6:30 a.m. and taxied down part of it three times in an attempt to learn what the Comair Flight 5191 pilot and co-pilot saw on Aug. 27 before the 6:07 a.m. crash. More...

Learn more about the August 2006 Comair Flight 5191 plane crash and Lieff Cabraser's work on behalf of families of victims.
 
September 27, 2006
The Associated Press, "Expert, Blue Grass Airport Poses 'Unreasonable Risk'"
           A representative of an aviation safety investigating firm out of London, England said Blue Grass Airport offers "unreasonable risk" after a Wednesday morning tour of the site. More...
 
September 27, 2006
Los Angeles Times, "E. Coli Is Found in Third Bag of Dole Spinach; Another package has tested positive for the bacteria linked to the nationwide outbreak"
          The U.S. Food and Drug Administration reported Tuesday that the outbreak had expanded to 183 cases in 26 states and Canada. Ninety-five people have been hospitalized, and of those, 29 have developed a serious kidney complication called hemolytic uremic syndrome. An elderly Wisconsin woman has died. More...

Learn more about e. coli poisoning injuries and spinach contamination lawsuits.
  
September 27, 2006
Associated Press, "Comair crash survivor has surgery"
          Doctors want to stabilize James Polehinke's fractured spine. The co-pilot was the lone survivor of the Aug. 27 crash that killed 49 people. More...
 
September 24, 2006
Associated Press, "Study of Comair crash will likely show human error as lead cause"
         Experts who study airplane accidents say the errors that lead to crashes are similar to the common mistakes people make in their everyday lives, akin to locking keys in the car or forgetting an item on a grocery list. More...
 
September 23, 2006
San Francisco Chronicle, "5 more E. coli cases blamed on spinach; Total number sickened raised to 171 in 25 states, CDC reports"
          The outbreak of E. coli linked to fresh spinach was blamed for another five cases of illness Saturday, raising the number of people sickened to 171, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported. More...

Learn more about e. coli poisoning injuries and spinach contamination lawsuits.
 
September 23, 2006
Los Angeles Times, "Drug Safety Overhaul Is Urged"
          The government's drug safety system is seriously out of balance, devoting too much attention to approving new medications and not enough follow-up to uncovering risky side effects, a blue-ribbon scientific panel concluded in a major report released Friday. More...
 
September 22, 2006
Associated Press, "Health officials still can't track new drug safety; Panel says labeling, advertising restriction needed and FDA needs resources"
          Two years after the withdrawal of the painkiller Vioxx, federal health regulators still lack the resources necessary to track the safety of new drugs and respond quickly to any problems that might crop up, a panel of experts said Friday. More...
 
September 22, 2006
Los Angeles Times, "Government Oversight of Prescription Drugs Needs Overhaul"
          A blue-ribbon scientific panel convened after the Vioxx debacle has concluded in a report released today that the government's system for protecting the public from dangerous side effects of prescription drugs needs a sweeping overhaul to better monitor risks and provide early warnings to doctors and patients. More...
 
September 22, 2006
Associated Press , "Two more deaths possibly linked to e. coli tainted spinach"
          Two more deaths were under investigation Friday for possible links to tainted spinach, one in Maryland and one in Idaho. The Herald-Mail of Hagerstown, Maryland, reported an 86-year-old Hagerstown woman died last week after becoming infected with E-coli. More...

Learn more about e. coli contaminations and poisoning injury lawsuits.
 
September 22, 2006
Los Angeles Times, "Blue Cross Faces Fine for Voiding Policy"
          In the first sanction of its kind, California's top HMO regulator fined Blue Cross on Thursday for illegally canceling a woman's medical policy because she did not disclose corrective surgery she had 23 years earlier. More...
 
September 22, 2006
San Francisco Chronicle, "Spinach contamination crisis continues"
Thursday's developments:
-- The number of people sickened by E. coli climbed to 157. Of those, 83 have been hospitalized and 27 have suffered a form of kidney failure. One person has died. More...

Learn more about e. coli poisoning injuries and spinach contamination lawsuits.
 
September 21, 2006
San Jose Mercury News, "E. coli spinach contamination outbreak reveals lapses in food inspection"
          The expanding E. coli spinach outbreak, which now has sickened 146 victims in 23 states, is prompting calls for an overhaul of how food inspection is done in the United States, with a focus on getting rid of a patchwork approach that leads to loopholes and leaves the industry mostly policing itself. More...

Learn more about e. coli spinach contaminations and poisoning injury lawsuits.
 
September 21, 2006
Los Angeles Times, "Lab Definitively Links E. Coli Outbreak to Contaminated Spinach"
          A New Mexico laboratory was able to isolate potentially deadly bacteria in a bag of spinach that had sickened a resident -- a step hailed Wednesday as a significant break in the search for the source of a nationwide E. coli outbreak. More...

Learn more about e. coli spinach contaminations and poisoning injury lawsuits.
 
September 21, 2006
E. Coli Spinach Contamination Case: Sacramento Bee, "Spinach firm has permit troubles"
No evidence of link between wastewater woes, E. coli outbreak

          The spinach-packaging company in the cross hairs of an investigation into a nationwide E. coli outbreak has struggled to manage its wastewater and is in violation of a state water disposal permit, according to public records and state officials. More...

Learn more about e. coli spinach contaminations and poisoning injury lawsuits.
 
September 21, 2006
Los Angeles Times, "E. Coli Pervades Salinas Harvest Area"
          The bacterium that has sickened people across the nation and forced growers to destroy spinach crops is so pervasive in the Salinas Valley that virtually every waterway there violates national standards. More...

Learn more about e. coli contaminations and poisoning injury lawsuits.
 
September 20, 2006
Lexington Herald-Leader (Kentucky), "Comair Gives List of Passengers: Avoids Contempt Citation"
        After Fayette Circuit Judge Pamela Goodwine threatened to hold Comair in contempt of court, the airline yesterday provided contact information for relatives of Flight 5191 victims. More...
 
September 20, 2006
Associated Press, "Lawsuit over Comair crash cites airport signs, taxiway names"
          The family of a Canadian woman killed in a central Kentucky plane crash last month filed a lawsuit citing inadequate airport signs and confusing taxiway names and alleging that pilots were negligent in taking off from the wrong runway. More...

Learn more about the Comair Lexington Kentucky airplane crash and lawsuits filed by families of victims of the tragedy.
 
September 20, 2006
MSNBC.com, "Concentrated produce industry highlights risks; Company at heart of E. coli outbreak works with vast network of suppliers"
          It appears the competitive advantages of the Salinas Valley produce industry have spawned outsized risks. In the latest case of produce-related food poisoning, deadly pathogens apparently traveled from the fertile valley to supermarkets across the country, sickening at least 146 people in 23 states, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. One person has died and 76 others have been hospitalized, some with kidney failure. More...

Learn more about e. coli contaminated spinach and bacteria poisoning injuries and lawsuits.
 
September 20, 2006
MSNBC.com, "Ortho Evra Birth-control patch label warns of blood clots"
Oral contraceptives may be a safer option for some women, FDA says

          Women were warned Wednesday that their risk of blood clots in the legs and lungs may be higher if they use the birth-control patch instead of the pill. More...

Learn more about ortho evra injuries and lawsuits.
 
September 20, 2006
Associated Press, "Investigators find E. coli in spinach package"
          The E. coli outbreak spread to two more states Wednesday, and investigators reported finding contaminated spinach in the refrigerator of one victim. Learn more...
 
September 20, 2006
Associated Press, "Third Baby Dies From Heparin Drug Overdose in Indiana"
          A third premature infant has died after being accidentally given an adult-sized dose of heparin, a blood thinner medication, at a hospital last week. "We are all saddened by this news and our hearts are with this family, and all the families who have been affected," Methodist Hospital spokesman Jon Mills said in a news release Wednesday. More...
 
September 20, 2006
Los Angeles Times, "E. Coli Tainted Spinach Scare May Have Wider Impact"
          Much food lore has sprung from the Salinas and nearby valleys, this fecund farm country that stretches from oak-studded hills to the fertile bottom land and packing plants of Salinas and King City. This is Steinbeck country, and the National Steinbeck Center on Salinas' Main Street pays homage to the farming themes of "The Grapes of Wrath" and "Cannery Row." More...

Learn more about tainted spinach and e. coli injuries and lawsuits.
 
September 19, 2006
News Inferno, "Louisiana Man Files Lawsuit Against Eli Lilly Alleging Zyprexa Caused Diabetes"
        A Louisiana man filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court against Eli Lilly and Co., claiming he developed diabetes as a result of using the popular atypical antipsychotic drug Zyprexa. More...
 
September 19, 2006
Associated Press , "Comair Air Crash: Lexington, Kentucky tower chief was criticized in FAA e-mails"
          The day after the plane crash that killed 49 people, high-ranking officials with the Federal Aviation Administration suggested that the Lexington air traffic manager was a "renegade" and speculated he would be fired for having only one controller on duty at the time. More...

Learn more about the Comair Disaster and the rights of families of victims of the crash.
 
September 19, 2006
The Boston Globe, "Couple sues over illness linked to spinach"
          A couple who say their teenage daughter became ill after eating bagged fresh spinach has sued Chiquita Brands International. The parents, referred to as John and Jane Doe in the suit, claim their daughter contracted an E. coli infection after eating spinach sold under Chiquita's Fresh Express brand two weeks ago. The girl remains hospitalized in stable condition after undergoing dialysis. More...

More about e. coli contaminations and injury cases...
 
September 19, 2006
San Francisco Chronicle, "Spinach growers were warned about produce safety"
State, federal officials concerned by 20 reports of tainted greens

          Just 10 months before fresh spinach started sending people to the hospital, state and federal officials warned Salinas Valley growers and packers to clean up their act after a decade of deadly E. coli bacteria breakouts. More...

Learn more about e. coli and injuries from tainted spinach and spinach injury lawsuits.
 
September 19, 2006
Los Angeles Times, "Number of E. Coli Cases Rises to 114"
Some growers decry what they call the government's too-strict advisory on spinach consumption, citing financial losses

          California farmers voiced frustration Monday at the government's continuing advisory that consumers avoid all fresh spinach. But federal authorities defended their action, as the tally of those sickened in a nationwide E. coli outbreak rose to 114. More...

Learn more about e. coli and injuries from tainted spinach and spinach injury lawsuits.
 
September 18, 2006
San Francisco Chronicle, "FDA Says Spinach Tampering Not Suspected"
          Tampering is not suspected in an outbreak of E. coli linked to fresh spinach, federal health officials said Monday as they probed for a source of the contamination and warned consumers not to resume eating uncooked spinach products. More information on e. coli spinach contamination and injuries...

Learn more about e.coli spinach contamination, injuries and lawsuits.
 
September 18, 2006
Tampa Bay 10 News, "E-Coli spinach narrowed to at least one manufacturer"
          So far, one company has been positively linked to an outbreak of e-coli in spinach. One person has died and nearly 100 others sickened by the bacteria in 19 states. More...
 
September 18, 2006
San Francisco Chronicle, "Spinach probe of Salinas Valley; Feds tracking cause of E. coli outbreak"
          The number of people connected to an outbreak of the bacteria E. coli across the country rose to 109 Sunday, and federal authorities announced they will investigate farms in Salinas Valley seeking evidence of what caused the outbreak. More...
 
September 18, 2006
Associated Press, "Spinach E. coli outbreak spreads"
          The number of people sickened by an E. coli outbreak traced to tainted spinach rose to 109, as federal officials announced more brands recalling their products. More...
 
September 18, 2006
News24 [South Africa], "U.S. Spinach E. coli outbreak spreads"
          Popeye ate it all the time, but now millions of bags of spinach are being pulled off supermarket shelves, including right here in the Coastal Empire. This, after an outbreak of E. coli was linked to the vegetable. Grocery stores started pulling the bags off the shelves Friday morning. More...

Learn more about e. coli spinach injury lawsuits.
 
September 17, 2006
News3 Memphis, "E-Coli spinach infects 60 people; Spinach pulled from grocery stores"
          Supermarkets across the country are pulling bagged spinach off their shelves after an e-coli outbreak. Ten states have reported e-coli outbreaks from tainted spinach bringing the number of infected to 60 cases total, including one that proved to be fatal. More...
 
September 16, 2006
WTOC11 [Savannah, GA], "Spinach Scare Shocks Country"
          Popeye ate it all the time, but now millions of bags of spinach are being pulled off supermarket shelves, including right here in the Coastal Empire. This, after an outbreak of E. coli was linked to the vegetable. Grocery stores, like the Kroger off Mall Boulevard, started pulling the bags off the shelves Friday morning. More...

Learn more about e. coli spinach injury lawsuits.
 
September 16, 2006
CBS2 Chicago.com, "Answers Are Being Sought For E. Coli Spinach"
          There's still not a case of E. Coli E. Coli reported in Illinois, but the spinach scare is certainly having an impact on restaurants in Chicago. At the Bella Bacino restaurant on Wacker Drive, patrons can enjoy pastas, sandwiches and even pizzas -- but not this one. More...

Learn more about e. coli injuries and lawsuits.
 
September 14, 2006
San Francisco Chronicle, "Anti-Rollover Tech Required by 2012"
          New automobiles will be required to have anti-rollover technology by the 2012 model year, which should save thousands of lives annually, the government's traffic safety agency said Thursday. More...
 
September 13, 2006
Los Angeles Times, "Vioxx-Like Risks Linked to Another Pain Pill"
A report says diclofenac increases the chance of a heart attack. The FDA calls for further review.

          The widely used pain reliever diclofenac poses the same cardiovascular risk as the withdrawn drug Vioxx and should not be used by people with heart disease or high blood pressure, researchers reported Tuesday. More...
 
September 13, 2006
Los Angeles Times, "Comair Says It Had Outdated Airport Chart"
          Comair was using an outdated chart of Lexington's Blue Grass Airport when one of its planes took off on the wrong runway and crashed, killing 49 people, and the airline is now urging pilots to use "extreme caution," according to an e-mail obtained by the Associated Press. More...
 
September 12, 2006
Associated Press, "Controllers Raised Concerns Before Crash"
          Months before the Comair jet crash that killed 49 people, air traffic controllers at the Lexington airport wrote to federal officials complaining about a hostile working environment in the tower and short-staffing on the overnight shift, according to letters obtained by The Associated Press. More...
 
September 12, 2006
Courier-Journal (Louisville, Kentucky), "Comair: Airport diagrams incorrect; Pilots urged to be extremely cautious"
          Diagrams of Lexington's Blue Grass Airport issued to Comair pilots last week did "not accurately reflect actual airport signage," the company said in a memo to pilots in which it urged them to use "extreme caution." More...
 
September 12, 2006
Guardian Unlimited (UK), "Comair Warns Pilots About Airport Signs"
          Comair has begun warning pilots to use "extreme caution" when navigating runways at the airport where a crash killed 49 people last month, saying some diagrams aren't accurate, according to an e-mail obtained Monday by The Associated Press. More...
 
September 12, 2006
Lexington Kentucky Herald-Leader, "Victim's family sues Comair"
          The family of a 39-year-old man from Lafayette, La., has sued Comair Inc. over the crash of Flight 5191. Bryan Keith Woodward, an electrician, had gone to Kentucky with Jamie Hebert and their two daughters, Lauren Hebert, 15, and Mattie-Kay Hebert, 11, attorney David Wise of Chicago said yesterday. More...
  
September 8, 2006
Associated Press, "FAA imposes 'no nap' policy for air controllers"
National directive comes after crash in Ky. killed 49 out of 50 on board

          Air traffic controllers who nap during break times could be suspended for up to 10 days under rules the Federal Aviation Administration has begun enforcing nationally since the deadly crash of Comair Flight 5191. Learn more...
 
September 8, 2006
Kansas City Star, "Pilot may have called the wrong flight number before Lexington, Kentucky crash of Comair Flight 5191"
          In addition to departing from the wrong runway and initially getting on the wrong plane, one of the pilots on Comair Flight 5191 to Atlanta might have made a third mistake: In talking to the control tower before the fatal crash, one of the pilots called out the wrong flight number and city. More about problems leading to the crash of Comair Flight 5191...
 
September 6, 2006
San Francisco Chronicle, "Group says children's lunch boxes still tainted with lead"
          Lab test results announced Tuesday by an environmental group found that several national chain stores continue to sell lead-tainted children's lunch boxes a year after the group sued more than a dozen lunch box makers over the toxin. More...
 
September 6, 2006
Los Angeles Times, "34 Are Hurt When Bus Rolls Over on Off-Ramp"
          A bus traveling from New York to Boston rolled over on an interstate offramp in Auburn, injuring 34 people, authorities said. More...
 
September 5, 2006
USA Today, "Airport construction projects have created dangers before"
          Dan Silverthorn had just touched down when his single-engine Beech C23 jolted violently and careered off the runway on its belly in a shower of sparks. From the air, the veteran pilot couldn't tell that the runway at Higginsville, Mo., had a fresh layer of pavement that ended abruptly, creating an 8-inch ledge that ripped the landing gear from his plane like the pull-tab from a sardine can. More...
 
September 2, 2006
USA Today, "1st victims of Ky. Comair Flight 5191 plane crash buried"
          Clark and Bobbie Sue Benton were supposed to be vacationing in the Caribbean. Instead, they were buried in this south-central Kentucky town, five days after they were killed when Comair Flight 5191 crashed. More...
 
September 2, 2006
Louisville Courier-Journal, "Suits filed in Comair crash; Millions might be paid in each death"
          As the first lawsuits were filed yesterday by families of Comair Flight 5191 victims, aviation law experts said plaintiffs can expect to recover several million dollars each, depending on earnings and life expectancies of those who died. More...
 
September 1, 2006
Cincinnati Enquirer, "First Comair suit filed"
          A lawsuit blaming Comair for a deadly crash at the Lexington airport was filed Friday, less than a week after the nation's deadliest airline disaster in five years. More...
 
September 1, 2006
Associated Press, "Family Sues Over Deadly Comair Crash"
          The family of a woman killed when Comair Flight 5191 took off on the wrong runway and crashed in flames sued the airline Friday, blaming it for the nation's deadliest airplane disaster in five years. More on the Lexington Kentucky Comair/Delta Airplane Disaster...
 
August 31, 2006
Associated Press, "Delta extends deadline for Comair to bid on regional contracts"
         Delta Air Lines Inc. has agreed to extend the deadline for its Comair subsidiary to bid on regional jet service as Comair continues to cope with the crash of Flight 5191 that killed 49 people, Comair's top executive said on Thursday. More...
 
August 31 , 2006
USA Today, "Comair Flight 5191 jet crash spotlights controllers' shifts"
          Democratic lawmakers are demanding an investigation into the practice of allowing air-traffic controllers to work two shifts in 24 hours, a practice denounced by sleep experts. More...
 
August 31, 2006
USA Today, "Comair controller slept only 2 hours"
          Two congressmen called for an investigation into the staffing at airport control towers after investigators revealed that only one controller was on duty when Comair Flight 5191 crashed in Kentucky and that he had had just two hours of sleep between shifts. More...
 
August 31, 2006
Seattle Post-Intelligencer, "Kentucky -- Cockpit warning system could have prevented crash"
          A cockpit warning system used by only a few commercial airlines might have prevented the deadly Comair jet crash last weekend if the plane had been equipped with the $18,000 piece of technology, a former top federal safety official says. More...
 
August 30, 2006
Baltimore Sun, "Potential hazards to consumers from flavoring agent unchecked"
Agencies yet to assess risk of inhaling vapors of chemical linked to workers' lung disease

          Millions of Americans are exposed regularly to vapors released when they heat products containing the same synthetic butter flavoring blamed for destroying the lungs of workers in popcorn and flavoring factories. But public health activists say no one in government has stepped up to assess whether consumers are at risk. More...
 
August 30, 2006
FDA MedWatch, "Alaris SE Infusion Pumps recalled due to risk of overinfusion at ten times intended infusion rate"
          FDA and Alaris Products notified healthcare professionals of a recall of defective infusion pumps due to a design defect called "key bounce" that may cause potential over-infusion of medications and result in an infusion rate at least 10 times the intended infusion rate. More...
 
August 29, 2006
Associated Press, "US Investigator:Controller Turned Away Before Comair Crash"
         The lone air traffic controller on duty the morning Comair Flight 5181 crashed cleared the jet for takeoff, then turned his back to do some "administrative duties" as the aircraft veered down the wrong runway, a federal investigator said Tuesday. More...
 
August 29, 2006
Washington Post, "Group Says FDA, Advisory Panels Show Bias Toward Drug Approvals"
          The panels of experts assembled by the Food and Drug Administration to advise it on whether to approve new drugs and medical devices are often biased in favor of recommending approval, according to a consumer group's analysis released yesterday. More...
 
August 29, 2006
WHIO-TV, "Kentucky Fatal Plane Crash May Prompt Delay By Delta"
          Delta Airlines has announced that because of the crash investigation in Lexington, Ky., it might ease up on Comair. More...
  
August 29, 2006
CNN: "FAA: Tower staffing during plane crash violated rules"
          The Federal Aviation Administration on Tuesday acknowledged that only one controller was in the tower, in violation of FAA policy, when a Comair jet crashed Sunday while trying to take off from the wrong runway in Lexington, Kentucky. More...
 
August 28, 2006
Free Internet Press, "49 Killed, 1 Survivor In Kentucky Plane Crash"
          Forty-nine of the 50 people aboard Delta Flight 5191 were killed when the aircraft crashed Sunday morning shortly after takeoff from Blue Grass Airport in Lexington, Kentucky, according to Fayette County Coroner Gary Ginn. More...
 
August 28, 2006
Associated Press, "Kentucky Crash May Imperil Comair's Survival"
          The deadly Kentucky crash involving a Comair flight could make the regional carrier's survival even tougher. More...
 
August 28, 2006
WFMZTv.com, "Pilot Took Wrong Runway in Plane Crash"
          The sole survivor of a commuter plane crash in Lexington, Kentucky is in critical condition this morning. Comair jet co-pilot James Polehinke was the only survivor pulled from the burning wreckage of a crash that killed 49 people yesterday. The plane crashed after attempting to take off from a runway that was too short for commuter planes. A witness described what he saw. More...
 
August 28, 2006
WMCTv.com, "Runway Mistake Caused Fatal Crash"
          NTSB investigators confirmed Sunday night that the crash of a Delta-Comair commuter flight from Lexington, Kentucky to Atlanta came after the jetliner took off on the wrong runway. 49 people died. More...
August 27, 2006
Reuters, "Kentucky plane crash kills 49, co-pilot survives"
          A Comair jet crashed and burned in a Kentucky pasture on Sunday after a failed takeoff on a short runway, killing all but one of the 50 people aboard, authorities said. More...
 
August 27, 2006
New York Times, "Unraveling the Mystery of Ford’s Fire-Prone Switches"
        In a suit, Mr. Mohlis charged that a faulty cruise switch caused the fire, which killed his wife. More...
 
August 27, 2006
Bloomberg News, "Delta Air Regional Jet Crashes in Kentucky; 49 Dead"
          A Delta Air Lines Inc. Comair commuter plane crashed shortly after takeoff at Blue Grass Airport in Lexington, Kentucky, killing 49 and critically injuring one. More information...
 
August 27, 2006
Associated Press, "Newlyweds Among Plane Crash Victims"
          A newlywed couple starting their honeymoon, a Habitat for Humanity board member and a businessman who took an early flight to get home to his children were among the victims of Comair Flight 5191, friends and relatives said Sunday. More...
 
August 23, 2006
Metro Times, "Of Lice and Libel"
          You might say it's a real head-scratcher: Why would the United States ban the use of a highly toxic pesticide on crops and animals yet allow the same substance to be rubbed into the scalps of children? It's a question that has no good answer, say the folks at Ann Arbor's More...
 
August 23, 2006
New York Times, "Lens Care Solution Is Faulted"
          Federal disease control experts and leading eye doctors have formally concluded that ReNu With MoistureLoc from Bausch & Lomb was the only contact lens solution contributing to an outbreak of potentially blinding fungal eye infections earlier this year.
 
August 22, 2006
Reuters, "Recall of Bausch & Lomb ReNu with Moisture Loc curbs outbreak of rare eye infection"
          Bausch & Lomb Inc.'s global recall of a popular contact lens solution in May appears to have stopped the spread of a serious eye infection but U.S. scientists still don't know what caused the outbreak, according to a study released on Tuesday. More...
 
August 22, 2006
13Wham.com (Rochester, NY), "CDC: Bausch & Lomb's ReNu with MoistureLoc Contact Lens Solution Caused Infections"
          After a months-long investigation, federal scientists have determined that Bausch & Lomb's ReNu with Moisture Loc contact lens solution caused an outbreak of a fungal eye infection. No other product was implicated in their report. More...
 
August 22, 2006
         U.S. traffic deaths hit a 15-year high in 2005 with more people killed while riding motorcycles and in larger vehicles, government figures released on Tuesday confirmed. More...
 
August 22, 2006
New York Times, "Ritalin, other stimulants to carry cardiac warnings"
          Federal drug regulators have ordered that strong warnings be put on the labels of stimulants like Dexedrine and Ritalin to caution against their use in adults or children with heart problems and to alert doctors that the drugs cause 1 child in 1,000 to experience hallucinations. More...
  
August 16, 2006
Associated Press, "Merck suffers 2 setbacks in Vioxx cases"
          Merck & Co. suffered two major legal setbacks over the withdrawn painkiller Vioxx on Thursday when a federal jury here ordered the drug maker to pay $51 million to a heart attack victim, and a state judge in New Jersey overturned a November verdict favoring the company. More...

Learn more about Vioxx injuries and Vioxx heart attack lawsuits.
  
August 14, 2006
The Baltimore Sun, "Banned pesticide allowed as medicine: U.S. bars lindane, except to treat lice"
After more than a half century of use and thousands of reports of illness and deaths blamed on the pesticide, the federal government has banned all uses of lindane -- except by those who rub it on their scalps and bodies to kill lice and mites. More...
 
August 14, 2006
Lawyers USA, "Missi