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Posts Tagged ‘navy’

Variety Columnist Dies of Mesothelioma

Friday, October 16th, 2009

Armand “Army” Archerd, a Variety columnist and Hollywood personality for more than 50 years, died recently from mesothelioma. Archerd was considered a journalist of exceptional integrity and his column was read daily by movers and shakers in the industry.

Over the years, Archerd interviewed and wrote about the biggest names in the business including Marilyn Monroe, Charlie Chaplin, Humphrey Bogart, and Warren Beattie, among many others. In 1985, Archerd broke the Rock Hudson AIDS story, and in 1992 he made public Julia Robert’s breaking-off of her engagement with Keifer Sutherland.

Archerd also served as the greeter and interviewer on the red carpet of the Academy Awards for nearly five decades. In 1984, he was given a star on Hollywood’s Walk of Fame, just outside Mann’s Chinese Theater. He was one of the first journalists to receive the honor.

Archerd fought mesothelioma for five years, with the last two years being particularly difficult. Archerd’s five year fight with mesothelioma is remarkable, as the average survival time after diagnosis is one year. His wife Selma said that Army believed he developed mesothelioma after being exposed to asbestos while working in shipyards during his service in the Navy during World War II.

It is not publicly known if Archerd sought legal representation from a mesothelioma attorney for his disease, or if his wife will seek it on behalf of his estate now that he has passed. While we don’t know the details of his exposure and illness, our mesothelioma attorneys have represented numerous veterans as they sought financial compensation from asbestos companies that supplied the military and have won.

Asbestos Manufacturers Blame Navy

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

Recently, we’ve litigated several mesothelioma cases involving men who were exposed to asbestos while serving in the Navy.  Asbestos products were used extensively in Navy ship  systems from 1940s through the 1970s.  Pumps, boilers, turbines, engines, motors, gaskets, valves, packing, fireproofing, and flame retardants all typically contained asbestos and service men and women that served during these years, either on the ships or in shipyards, had a risk of being exposed to some level of asbestos.

The Navy asbestos exposure clients we’ve represented were never warned during their service that exposure causes a host of asbestos-related conditions, including the deadly disease, malignant mesothelioma.

Today, it is increasingly difficult for manufacturers to argue that they weren’t aware that asbestos was dangerous – a tactic they leaned heavily on for the first years of mesothelioma litigation.  This difficulty stems from the large number of cases throughout the country that have proven that knowledge of the danger was widespread and widely covered up throughout the industry.  We have established that manufacturers saw that they were making huge profits from their asbestos products and made the decision that profit was more important than protecting human life.

In the Navy asbestos exposure cases we’ve litigated recently, defendants have taken a different approach: blame the Navy.  During trial, they argue that it is the Navy’s fault that these men and women were exposed to asbestos. They argue that the Navy knew about the dangers of asbestos and controlled the working environment of the sailors.

In representing our clients, one of the biggest flaws our mesothelioma attorneys have demonstrated against the argument above is the fact that the Navy actually relied on the product manufacturers to warn about the dangers of the products that they made and sold to the Navy.  Navy specifications actually required manufacturers to place warnings on their products, but these companies ignored those requirements. In addition, most of these manufacturers also produced the identical products for commercial use and never warned those commercial customers about the dangers of asbestos either.  The truth is, they were negligent and didn’t warn either military users or commercial users because it would negatively impact sales.  They pretend they are the victims of the Navy’s negligence.

At SEGLaw, our extensive experience with mesothelioma cases has made us extremely familiar with the defenses typically argued by asbestos product manufacturers.  We’re also skilled in out-maneuvering unusual or new defenses these defendants desperately try to use to escape responsibility for their negligent actions.  We take great pride in the settlements we’ve negotiated and verdicts we’ve won for our clients, the real victims.