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Post Info TOPIC: Largest FELA Award in History


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Largest FELA Award in History
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FELA award taps UP for $48 million

A Federal Employers' Liability Act (FELA) award in the amount of $48.5 million was awarded by a jury Oct. 31 to a 30-year-old Union Pacific signalman, Eric Doi of Los Angeles, who became a quadriplegic following an automobile accident.

Lawyers say the award, to be paid by UP, is the largest FELA award in history.

Doi, who was working in Arizona at the time of the accident, said he was being driven to work, although UP contended he was on a "personal errand" unrelated to work. The jury agreed the accident was a work-related injury under the FELA.

UP said it is considering an appeal.

November 13, 2008


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Purveyor of Positive Attitudes

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Wow!!! Those fuckers may think that they are paying a lot but I'm willing to bet he's paying more.

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Now he can get a gold plated wheelchair and Gucci colostomy bag.

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Geheime Staatspolizei

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Hoghead Bob wrote:

Now he can get a gold plated wheelchair and Gucci colostomy bag.




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Judge upholds $48-million jury award to quadriplegic railroad worker

(The following story by Joanna Lin appeared on the Los Angeles Times website on November 26.)

LOS ANGELES A judge on Tuesday approved a $48-million jury award to a former Union Pacific Railroad employee who was left a quadriplegic after a work-related car accident last year.

The Los Angeles County Superior Court jury award to Eric Doi last month was the largest verdict ever awarded to a plaintiff under the federal law that covers railroad workers injured on the job. Railroads and their employees are not covered by state worker's compensation laws.

Union Pacific spokesman Tom Lange said in a statement today that the railroad company would "pursue further judicial review."

Eric Doi, 30, was the passenger in a company truck last year when a co-worker behind the wheel became distracted and lost control of the vehicle. The truck rolled over down an embankment, crashed through a fence and into oncoming traffic on a highway, said Donald Britt, an attorney for Doi.

"In that split second -- it happened so fast -- my life changed," said Doi, a railroad signalman who had traveled from his home in the San Gabriel Valley to Tucson for work.

A certified emergency medical technician, Doi said he knew immediately what had happened to him in the car accident.

"I couldn't move my legs, and my arms were kind of flailing," he said today in a phone interview. "I knew what the injury was, but at the same time I was hoping I was just in spinal shock . . . I was hoping for the best."

Doi now needs round-the-clock care and physical rehabilitation. He relies on other people for everyday activities, from using the bathroom to eating a meal -- "all the little things we all take for granted," he said.

Doi, who lives with his parents and younger sister in El Monte, said he has always been an optimist whose "every day is better than the day before." He said his injury was "the first time where I don't know if things will be better."

With his verdict finalized, Doi said he will move onto the next hurdles: He hopes to someday drive a car again, go back to school to finish his MBA and marry his fiance, Sarah. Still, he said, "I wonder if things will ever be better than before, before the accident."

Wednesday, November 26, 2008



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I believe that the railroad didn't like the first appeal being decided so fast.

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Freddie Krueger wrote:

I believe that the railroad didn't like the first appeal being decided so fast.




I believe you are right.



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