Judges in
Court cases ENCOURAGE parties to settle,
The new Judge in the
Doctor's Data v Stephen Barrett Federal Court
case is no exception. After all, the court
system is overloaded.
Shortly after
Judge Edmond E. Chang issued his
Decision in
Barrett's Motion to Dismiss the entire case,
Chang indicated to the parties that it would be
a good time to talk "settlement." Chang
ordered settlement talks.
According to
Court documents filed, following the Judge's
request, Doctor's Data set up a meeting with
Barrett's Chicago law firm to discuss
settlement. Jeff Levens and Al Augustine,
attorneys for Doctor's Data, personally attended
the meeting with Peter M. Katsaros, of Golan &
Christie LLP, Barrett's Chicago attorneys.
Michael Botts, Defendants’ lead attorney, joined
via conference call. The documents say:
"During said meeting, Mr. Levens continued,
Mr. Augustine and he listed four components that
were and are integral to a settlement:
Defendants would (1) delete the offensive
articles from the Internet; (2) agree not to
discuss Plaintiff for a specified period of
time, other than to (3) publish a pre-agreed
retraction; and (4) pay some amount of money in
damages. It was emphasized that Plaintiff
would be extremely reasonable with respect to
its monetary demand were Defendants to agree to
the three non-monetary components.
Mr. Katsaros then told the court that no
settlement would be possible where Plaintiff had
demanded a “7-figure” payment. This statement
was not true, however, because no amount
whatsoever had been stated during the meeting of
September 10, 2010.
While keeping in mind that settlement is a
voluntary process; believing the court was
encouraging the parties to at least consider
engaging in voluntary settlement discussions;
and, knowing that it had been conveyed to this
court that Plaintiff’s primary goals are
non-monetary, Plaintiff’s attorneys believed the
spirit of the court’s directive was for Mr.
Levens to summarize, in a letter to defense
counsel, what Plaintiff intends to pursue and
prove if this case is not settled, discuss
Plaintiff’s demands, and explain why such
demands are necessary...
Plaintiff’s attorneys delivered such a letter
to defense counsel on Monday night, December 5,
2011, in accordance with this court’s order of
November 28, 2011. This letter, a copy of
which is readily available for this court’s
reference, pointed out many of Defendants’
objectionable activities, such as libeling
Plaintiff on the Internet, and conspiring with
others, some of whom were named therein, to
smear Plaintiff’s name and cause it to incur
huge litigation expenses in many lawsuits."
Just above, in
the bolded text, are words key to the
Plaintiff's strategy "Defendants’
objectionable activities, such as libeling
Plaintiff on the Internet, and conspiring with
others, some of whom were named therein, to
smear Plaintiff’s name."
What they are talking
about here is Barrett's support network - "some
of whom were named therein," and some WHO
WILL BE NAMED after Discovery properly
identifies them.
The document
goes on to say:
The letter did not itemize damages, because
(a) money is the least important of the
four-prong settlement demand; (b) without a
protective order in place, Plaintiff does not
trust Defendants to maintain complete
confidentiality; and (c) the reason this court
ordered damages to be itemized appears to have
been due to Mr. Kotsaros’ representation to the
court that Mr. Levens was pursuing a 7-figure
settlement, and this simply was not ever and is
not now true.
The letter concluded that if Defendants would
agree to cease their objectionable activities
and publish a retraction or an agreed
amelioration, Plaintiff would be amenable to
discussing, and would agree to, a monetary
settlement significantly less than what would be
pursued at trial.
Now it is time
for a laugh at attorney
Michael K. Botts, Esq's response.
Botts actually reverted back to a silly claim
made by Barrett, and the National Council
Against Health Fraud (NCAHF) in a series
of cases in California where the NCAHF said that
"You are guilty until you prove yourself
innocent..."
The Judge in
one of those cases, the NCAHF v King Bio case,
wrote "Furthermore, the Court notes that the
logical end-point of Plaintiff’s burden-shifting
argument would be to permit anyone with the
requisite filing fee to walk into any court in
any state in the Union and file a lawsuit
against any business, casting the burden on that
defendant to prove that it was not violating the
law. Such an approach, this Court finds, would
itself be unfair."
Here, once
again, Barrett, and his goofy support network
attempt to apply law they just made up out of
thin air. Read on:
In other words, despite the fact that there
exists a 5½-count complaint which sets out, with
exhibits and in specific detail, that which
Plaintiff alleges Defendants have done, and
despite the fact that Defendants have answered
[# 25], Mr. Botts gave Mr. Levens an ultimatum:
Were Plaintiff not to comply precisely with the
order and itemize its evidence and damages
against Defendants by 5:00 p.m., Friday
afternoon [December 9, 2011], he “will use
[such] failure to comply with the Order and
[such] refusal to remedy that failure to argue
[Plaintiff has] no damages and no provable
causes of action.” [Emphasis Added]1 Why Mr.
Botts thinks information exchanged—or not
exchanged—in settlement discussions can be used
to support a motion for summary judgment is an
enigma.
Mr. Botts was asked whether he really
expected Mr. Levens to send him “proof that DDI
did not commit fraud or conspire with
nonstandard doctors to trick grieving parents
into chelating their autistic children, as
opposed to expecting Defendants to present proof
that Plaintiff did. Mr. Botts, displaying no
recognition of the fact that the burden of proof
is on the defense in a case of slander, answered
in the affirmative.
Then Jeff Levens, tiring, I think, of the Barrett/Botts
legal blithering said to the court:
In sum, while this court had the best of
intentions in encouraging the parties to explore
settlement, it has become clear that defense
counsel never intended to seriously consider
settling now any more than they did in September
2010. Instead they saw the court’s order as an
opportunity to:
A. Obtain substantial discovery from
Plaintiff—evidence and a litany of
damages—without having to reveal anything
themselves;
B. Turn the law upside down by requiring DDI
to prove a negative, for Mr. Botts claims
actually to believe the burden of proof in a
case of libel per se is on the plaintiff, and
that DDI must prove it has not committed fraud
or conspired with physicians.
C. Avoid having to reveal that they have no
evidence whatsoever that Plaintiff has committed
fraud or conspiracy; and,
D. Learn all about Plaintiff’s financial
losses, even though Plaintiff has made it clear
that if the three non-monetary components were
to be resolved, Plaintiff would settle for
substantially less than its damages, anyway.
Accordingly, Plaintiff respectfully requests
that this court withdraw its order of November
28, 2011, in its entirety, and order discovery
to proceed, for what began as a court-sponsored
encouragement to amicably resolve this dispute
has evolved into a defense tactic to persist in
obfuscating the issues, and it is evident they
have no intention of agreeing to the aforesaid
non-monetary components.
In the alternative, Plaintiff requests
revisions to the order of November 28, 2011:
A. Include a protective order such that all
communications exchanged among all counsel
during settlement negotiations are confidential;
B. Strike the requirement that Plaintiff
re-state Defendants’ liability, and clarify that
the onus remains Defendants’ to produce
information to substantiate their claims of
fraud and conspiracy. Mr. Botts claims it is
Plaintiff’s obligation to identify “exactly what
those statements were, facts supporting your
assertion that each statement is not true, and
specification of the associated damage.”
However, the statements are specified in the 5½
counts and exhibits which remain viable, and the
burden is his to demonstrate the truth of his
clients’ claims, not vice versa.
C. Require that Plaintiff reveal, in
settlement negotiations, only so much of its
damages as are necessary to support the amount
demanded. Plaintiff’s counsel has identified
DDI’s four-prong settlement demand, including
three non-monetary components; and, while
damages will have to be disclosed in discovery,
this is a pre-discovery exercise in which
monetary damages are not the pivotal issue.
The
screeching --
Jeff Levens said, in a
footnote to the document:
"This is the third time Mr. Botts has imposed
an ultimatum on Mr. Levens, with his e-mail in
13.5-point bolded font. The first was when he
decided Mr. Levens should be sanctioned if he
did not make a litany of changes in the
complaint; the second, when Mr. Levens wouldn’t
be bullied during preparation of a status
report. [#48] Plaintiff, not to mention Mr.
Levens, really hope he will quit doing this at
some point."
So what did
the Judge say in response?
Well, the
judge didn't seem to like Barrett's attitude.
His official response to Jeff Levens' Motion to
Clarify was:
"MINUTE entry before Honorable Edmond E.
Chang: This entry supplements the 12/15/11 order
concerning Plaintiff's motion to withdraw
the 11/28/11 settlement-letter exchange order
88. As explained at 11/28/11 status hearing
and again at the 12/15/11 motion hearing, the
Court does not compel parties to participate in
settlement discussions -- even if good-faith
settlement discussions would be sensible in
light of the expense, delay, and uncertainty of
further intensely-contested litigation -- and
thus the Court will not require the parties to
further exchange settlement demand and offer
letters.
It is worth noting, however, that
the parties and counsel could not even complete
an exchange of settlement letters. That failure,
as well as the blows struck by both sides in the
litigation to-date, does not bode well for a
cooperative discovery process. The parties are
admonished that the Court will closely monitor
discovery and the already-long discovery
deadlines set in the 12/15/11 order shall be
non-extendable absent the most extraordinary of
circumstances."
The parting
shot...
Jeff Levens has a different style then his
partner Al Augustine. Al, to me, reminds
me of Dragnet's Sergeant Friday "Just
the facts, Maam..." Jeff bites...
Below is Jeff's last footnote
- and it says volumes...
"Just to give Mr. Botts a
taste of Plaintiff’s damages, Mr. Levens assured
him in the e-mail exchange that DDI has suffered
losses of more than $1 million in insurance
premiums and deductibles alone, due to
Defendants’ conspiracies. Mr. Botts rejected
this, insisting that Mr. Levens deliver, by 5p
last Friday, “an itemization of the damages
beginning with those that you knew of when you
filed the suit and going up to the present
time.” Such a demand does not reflect the
attitude of a lawyer trying to settle a case, or
a defendant who is relieved that the plaintiff
is not seeking 7 figures if the case settles. It
is rather the demand of a lawyer who is “playing
the system,” gleaning what he can while
revealing nothing."