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Raynes McCarty News & Events

The following is a list of our most recent events. Click on the links for more information or contact us at events@raynesmccarty.com

01/28/2009
Jim Mundy and Gerald McHugh Make "Report 100" List for Third Year in a Row
The Pennsylvania Report, a premier news source on Pennsylvania politics, for the third year in a row listed Jim Mundy and Gerald McHugh among the Top 100 Most Influential People in State Public Affairs....Details >>

12/01/2008
Pennsylvania Superior Court Rules in Favor of Raynes McCarty Client
Mother, who during her pregnancy, was misled by doctors as to the health of her baby, may hold the doctors responsible for the distress caused her by not being emotionally prepared for a child with severe disabilities....Details >>

11/12/2008
Martin Brigham selected as one of the World’s Leading Product Liability Lawyers.
Marty was nominated by a survey of other prominent attorneys to appear in the 2009 Guide to the World’s Leading Product Liability Lawyers....Details >>

10/29/2008
Raynes McCarty paralegal Donna M. Colarulo, R.P. serving on the Board of Advisors for Widener University’s paralegal training program.
As a member of the Board of Advisors Legal Education Program, Ms. Colarulo participates in panel discussions regarding decisions affecting the curriculum for Widener University’s paralegal training programs....Details >>

10/20/2008
Five Raynes McCarty lawyers recognized by Best Lawyers in America
Best Lawyers in America selected Marty Brigham, Roy DeCaro, Harold Goodman, Jerry McHugh and Stephen Raynes for inclusion in its 2009 edition....Details >>

10/20/2008
Jerry McHugh featured speaker at Pennsylvania Association for Justice Masters Series
Raynes McCarty lawyer Gerald A. McHugh, Jr. was the featured speaker at a PaAJ Masters Series continuing legal education program titled Perspectives on the Critical Components of a Trial....Details >>

10/20/2008
Tim Lawn featured speaker at Philadelphia Trial Lawyers Association’s Luncheon Lecture Series
Raynes McCarty lawyer Timothy Lawn will speak at the Philadelphia Trial Lawyers Association’s November 3, 2008 continuing legal education program titled Proving Difficult Medical Malpractice Issues. ...Details >>

09/01/2008
Philadelphia jury awards Raynes McCarty client $950,000.00 for eye injuries caused by defective plastic flying disc.
After a two-day trial, a jury awarded the Raynes McCarty client $950,000.00 for a laceration to his eye caused by a shard of plastic that splintered from a broken flying disc....Details >>

09/01/2008
Philadelphia jury awards Raynes McCarty client $950,000.00 for eye injuries caused by defective plastic flying disc.
After a two-day trial, a jury awarded the Raynes McCarty client $950,000.00 for a laceration to his eye caused by a shard of plastic that splintered from a broken flying disc....Details >>

04/16/2008
Gerald McHugh and wife Maureen Tate were honored by Friends for Effective Education (FFEE) at the Tribute Medallion Award Dinner on April 16, 2008
The Award recognizes McHugh and Tate’s lifelong dedication to community service, while at the same time raising funds for the St. Francis de Sales Elementary School, in keeping with FFEE’s purpose of providing monetary support to schools that exhibit educational leadership....Details >>

03/31/2008
Regina M. Foley appointed to Philadelphia Bar Association Board of Governors.
Regina M. Foley was appointed to serve a one year term on the Board of Governors of the Philadelphia Bar Association by Chancellor Michael A. Pratt....Details >>

03/21/2008
Regina M. Foley spoke April 9, 2008 at Continuing Legal Education seminar.
Ms. Foley updated plaintiffs’ and defense attorneys alike on recent developments in products liability law at The Dispute Resolution Institute’s Personal Injury Potpourri....Details >>

03/20/2008
Jenimae Almquist named co-chair of the Philadelphia Bar Association’s Advancing Civics Education (A.C.E.) program.
Raynes McCarty’s Jenimae Almquist and co-chair Barbara Potts, are leading members of the Bar Association in a program to provide supplemental civics education to Philadelphia area public school students starting in the Fall of 2008. ...Details >>

02/08/2008
Jim Mundy and Gerald McHugh Make Pennsylvania Report 100
The Pennsylvania Report, a premier news source on Pennsylvania politics, for the second year in a row listed Jim Mundy and Gerald McHugh among the Top 100 Most Influential People in State Public Affairs....Details >>

01/29/2008
Jenimae Almquist serves on Philadelphia Bar Association panel on work-family balance.
Raynes McCarty attorney Jenimae Almquist spoke at the program titled “How to Have It All - The Career and the Family,” organized by the bar association’s Women in the Profession Committee. ...Details >>

01/24/2008
Roy DeCaro Speaks at Philadelphia Trial Lawyers
On January 24, 2008, Roy DeCaro spoke to fellow trial attorneys about the steps he took to help secure the $5,000,000.00 verdict his client received in a recent product liability trial. ...Details >>

11/28/2007
Jury Awards $2.9 Mil. for Death Stemming from Blood Clot
A Philadelphia jury awarded $2.9 million to the wife of a bariatric surgery patient who died from a blood clot that traveled to his lungs after his post-surgical leg blood clots allegedly went untreated for 10 days. The verdict was in the Legal Intelligencer’s list of the Top 50 Verdicts and Settlements of 2007....Details >>

11/06/2007
$5 Million Verdict Upheld in Phila. Infant Tylenol Case
A Philadelphia judge has upheld a $5 million verdict rendered over a 1-year-old’s death allegedly due to liver failure from an overdose of Infants’ Tylenol....Details >>

09/12/2007
Raynes McCarty Distinguished Lecture in Health Law scheduled for October 9, 2007
Professor Michele Bratcher Goodwin, visiting professor of Law at the University of Chicago, will be the featured speaker at the Raynes McCarty Distinguished Lecture in Health Law which is jointly sponsored with Widener University School of Law. ...Details >>

09/10/2007
Best Lawyers ranks Raynes McCarty #1 In Philadelphia Personal Injury Litigation Firms
Best Lawyers in America is the oldest and most widely respected peer-review publication in the legal profession. It has announced its results for 2008, ranking Raynes McCarty as the Number 0ne personal injury litigation firm in Philadelphia, PA. Recognized for individual inclusion in Best Lawyers were: Marty Brigham, Roy DeCaro, Harold Goodman, Jerry McHugh and Stephen Raynes....Details >>

09/09/2007
Marty Brigham presenting at Visual Legal Advocacy Roundtable at Penn Law on October 19, 2007
Marty Brigham will be a featured speaker at the "Visual Legal Advocacy Roundtable" being held at Penn Law School. Marty will discuss his pioneering work on videotape settlement presentations....Details >>

05/04/2007
Federal Judge Lauds Firm’s Donation to Support Center for Child Advocates
Describing it as “an example of our Bar at its best”, United States District Court Judge, Stewart Dalzell commends Raynes McCarty’s $10,000.00 donation to the Support Center for Child Advocates....Details >>

05/01/2007
Marty Brigham honored in world-wide survey
The Legal Media Group ("LMG"), based in London, England, has just announced the selection of Raynes McCarty's Marty Brigham for inclusion in its "2007 Guide to the World's Leading Product Liability Lawyers." ...Details >>

03/15/2007
3rd Circuit Affirms $7.4 Mil. Verdict in Suit Against VA
The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has upheld a $7.4 million verdict obtained by Raynes McCarty's Jerry McHugh and Regina Foley against the Department of Veterans Affairs stemming from its decision to expel a Delaware County man who suffered from “rage disorder” and just one day later murdered two of his children and two of their friends. ...Details >>

02/16/2007
Top 100 Most Influential People in State Public Affairs
Two Raynes McCarty Attorneys Identified as Top 100 Most Influential People in State Public Affairs...Details >>

02/07/2007
$1,750,000.00 Civil Rights Settlement for Widow of Undercover Officer Killed by Fellow Policeman
On February 2, 2007, Judge Stewart Dalzell approved a settlement by the City of Reading in a civil rights law suit filed by Gerald McHugh on behalf of the widow of a Reading police officer. The undercover officer - Michael H. Wise, II - died on June 4, 2004, when he was struck by a bullet fired by a fellow member of the Reading police force. ...Details >>

01/08/2007
Roy DeCaro and Stephen Raynes selected to be among 500 Best Plaintiff Lawyers
Roy DeCaro and Stephen Raynes were named as being among the 500 Best Plaintiff Lawyers in the United States by the Publication "Lawdragon."...Details >>

12/01/2006
$5 million verdict for child who died from liver damage caused by Tylenol
Roy DeCaro was the lead trial attorney for the family of a one year old child who died from liver failure caused by Tylenol. Mr. DeCaro convinced the jury that the drug company provided misleading and inadequate warnings about the concentration and toxicity of Infants’ Tylenol. The jury awarded the family $5,000,000.00 for the loss of their child. Recently, the trial court rejected the drug company’s request to overturn the verdict. ...Details >>

10/17/2006
Martin Brigham Honored
Martin Brigham received a lifetime achievement award from the Philadelphia area Occupational Safety and Health Project...Details >>

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In the News

PENNSYLVANIA SUPER LAWYERS

The Saint: Jerry McHugh Stays True to His Philly Roots

June 2005
by G. Patrick Pawling

Pennsylvania Super Lawyers - Gerald A. McHugh Some people think Jerry McHugh was born and raised in Philadelphia. This is not true. He’s from Philly. There’s a difference. As a state of mind and a place to live and work, Phil-a-del-phi-a is great – but a little fancy for McHugh, who lives in a modest twin house in a west Philly neighborhood bursting with blue-collar workers, welfare recipients and refugees. McHugh is a guy who enjoys a beer and a game. He drives a minivan with 91,000 miles on it and favors peanut butter and jelly sandwiches for lunch. He’s Philly all the way – a church-going, community-volunteering family kind of guy, as regular as it gets.

Except for his mind. And his will. And his faith. And his ability to help his fellow man.

McHugh is one of the best plaintiffs’ lawyers in Philly. No, check that, he’s one of the best in Pennsylvania. You wouldn’t know it unless he has to use it on you, but he has a mind that leaves bright people in awe. He’s brains and hard work and ethics all rolled into one unpretentious and powerful package.

“Jerry McHugh would be the ideal person to sit as a justice on the Pennsylvania Supreme Court,” says attorney S. Gerald Litvin of Morgan Lewis & Bockius, who hired McHugh for his first law firm job some 25 years ago.

“Through the years I’ve seen Jerry become the intellectual and moral leader of whatever group he is involved with, and this would clearly hold true if he were to become a member of Pennsylvania’s highest court,” Litvin says. “The same could be said if he were to ascend to the Supreme Court of the United States. This would be a better world if people like McHugh were making crucial decisions about how our society should properly operate.”

“He is brilliant,” says friend and fellow attorney Tom Foley, a candidate for the U.S. Senate in the 2000 Democratic primary. (McHugh was a principal advisor in the campaign.)

The CEO of the Southeastern Pennsylvania Chapter of the American Red Cross, Foley says McHugh is a complete lawyer.

“Great courtroom lawyers aren’t often particularly good book lawyers, but he has both of those things nailed,” says Foley , a Yale graduate and former Secretary of Labor and Industry in Pennsylvania. “And in Harrisburg you can go to Democratic or Republican leaders, and McHugh is the one they want to hear from.”

Getting to the A-Ha Moment
But don’t take Foley’s word for it. Consider, for example, the horse manure case.

It started when a physician implanted an experimental intraocular lens without the patient’s consent, and the patient suffered sight-threatening complications. You go after the physician, right?

But the plaintiff’s attorneys felt the potential compensation wasn’t commensurate with the damages. The other strategy would be to hold the hospital responsible for committing a battery. Trouble was, that wasn’t possible under state law. Only a person could commit a battery, not an institution.

McHugh and his team – who were brought in to help with the appeal by colleague Ron Wolf, who won the case in trial court but had it overturned by the judge – focused on trying to show that battery can occur by some means other than direct physical contact. This led McHugh’s team to a case going back to the 1800s in which the defendant spread horse manure on a chair, thinking it
would be funny when the plaintiff sat in it. The records don’t indicate whether anyone laughed, but the defendant was indeed charged with battery. The important part is he defended himself by arguing that he only spread it on the chair – since there was no touching there could be no battery.

The court’s response (translated here): “Horse****.” It ruled that the defendant was in possession of the offensive substance and arranged for it to come into contact with the plaintiff. The lack of direct contact didn’t matter. Similarly, in the hospital case, the experimental lens was in the possession and control of the hospital, and it arranged for the lens to be placed in the victim’s body (without his knowledge that it was experimental). That case was a precedent-setter – and classic McHugh. The hospital ended up paying $1.75 million to the plaintiff.

“I am happiest when you get the moment of “a-ha,” he says. “it could be in discovery, it could be on cross, could be when you are going over the engineering blueprints for the fourth time ...then you get it, and that’s when the time and energy and sacrifice start making a difference.”

Faith Translated Into Action
If somebody would say something bad about McHugh, this would be the place in the story to put it. But when the subject is McHugh, negative words are tough to come by. For a trial lawyer, that’s saying something.

OK, so people like McHugh. But what has he accomplished? He wrote and published two books before he got out of law school: Christian Faith & Criminal Justice – Toward a Christian Response to Crime and Punishment and Decision Making and Self Awareness Skills – A Curriculum for Residents of Correctional Institutional Institutions.

He co-wrote, with Litvin, the book on tort law in Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania Torts: Law and Advocacy.

He’s a partner at Raynes McCarty.

He has tutored convicts in Holmesburg.

He helped turn a trash-strewn eyesore of a lot on Florence Street in West Philadelphia into a fenced-in community flower garden.

He has drafted or co-drafted six important Pennsylvania laws, most of which were intended to help children and low-income people.

He helped with the founding of a halfway house for ex-cons, Hospitality House, which has taken on a second role as a drug treatment center.

He has handled tort litigation of every kind – product liability, construction accidents, workplace injury, aviation accidents, wrongful death, medical malpractice securing settlements and verdicts in the seven and eight figures more than thirty times.

He was legal strategist in the wrongful-death case filed against John duPont for the murder of Olympic wrestler Dave Schultz in 1996, a case handled by the heavy-hitting trio of Litvin, Art Raynes and McHugh, which reportedly settled for some $35 million, a number McHugh declines to confirm.

He represented the victims of a highly publicized police chase on I-95, a case that settled for seven figures.

He is one of only two lawyers to have won both the Bar Association's Fidelity Award for service to justice and the Philadelphia Trial Lawyers Association’s Musmanno Award for protection of the innocent and injured. These two awards are considered the most prestigious a Philadelphia lawyer can win.

And he does it all with his publicity machine running at low volume.

“You won’t see me on the radar a lot in terms of results,” McHugh says. “You have to put ‘victory’ in quotes because of the adversity of the families and the tragedies. That doesn’t sit real comfortably with me.”

What does feel comfortable is the idea that he can achieve some measure of justice. “There is a great emotional satisfaction in feeling you are accomplishing something important and helpful... in being an advocate and dealing with meaningful issues,” he explains.

He also finds great emotional satisfaction in his family. He married his high school sweetheart, Maureen Tate, and they have four children. They met in a class for youth leaders run by the Archdiocese. She was president of the umbrella group for all of the service programs in Catholic high schools known as the Community Service Corps. Even then they shared what McHugh calls “a common belief that faith must be translated into action.”

His grounding in Jesuit education – he graduated from St. Joseph's Preparatory School before moving on to St. Joseph’s University and the University of Pennsylvania Law School – taught him how to lead without pushing, to guide without preaching. He has the ability to be, as he says, a “professional irritant,” without being off-putting. He describes himself as a product of the “Catholic left.”

“He is just a man of tremendous faith,” says Brother Joe Dudek, who is doing missionary work in rural Mississippi but who came to know McHugh when they worked on community projects in Philly. “ His faith drives everything. He really tries to live a good Christian life in the way we all hope to... I don’t even want to tell you how much money he gave to Hospitality House.

“He could be doing drug vigils on the corner or going to Harrisburg to meet with the governor or moving furniture at Hospitality House ...he is very comfortable wherever he happens to be, and that comes from knowing who he is,” says Dudek. “He never lost whatever he got growing up on the streets of Philly.”

Philadelphia Freedom
McHugh has never lived more than three blocks from the apartment above his dad’s old real estate office at 48th and Baltimore, where he spent the first seven years of his life. When he stands on his front porch he can still see it. Why has he never strayed?

“Because this is home,” he says. “Remembering where you come from is one thing. Being part of where you come from is something else. I wanted my kids to grow up in the real world and not be divorced from how the vast majority of people live.”

Even if McHugh were to accept a position as a judge and move to, say, Harrisburg or Washington, D.C., he would still be Philly where it counts: in his head and his heart.

“I guess what I’m trying to say,” McHugh explains, “is you don’t have to remember where you came from if you never left.”

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