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Law Offices of Michael Withey

Free Consultation (206) 405-1800

601 Union Street, Suite 4200 · Seattle, WA 98101

Chemicals Used in Hair Styling Can Cause Burns and Breathing Problems

October 11th, 2010

Mike Withey, Seattle consumers’ attorney, has represented numerous clients who have had third degree burns to their hair and scalp caused by chemicals used in the hair styling process.  Read about one such case which resulted in a significant recovery for a young woman in Seattle. http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2002484596_hairdo10m.html

Many of the woman have suffered unsightly 3rd degree burns, scaring and bald spots after dye products were applied and they were placed under a heat source.  Many such products contain chemicals known to cause burns to the skin, although proper care in the selection and application of these products can prevent any damage from occuring. 

A recent news story hightens the concern about the “Brazilan Blow Out” which promises frizz free hair but also contains formaldehyde, a chemical known to cause respiratory problems to both stylists and customers alike.  The link to the story is found at http://www.komonews.com/news/local/104676369.html

Court Rules Builders’ Group Violated Trust Duties

October 11th, 2010

Court Finds I-1082’s Prime Sponsor Breached Trust

(Olympia, WA) – Judge Carol Murphy of the Thurston County Superior Court found that the Building Industry Association of Washington and its affiliates (BIAW) have mishandled tens of millions of dollars in member trust funds received as part of the State Department of Labor and Industry’s retrospective refund program. The Judge found that the BIAW violated its legal duties to 6,000 small businesses involved in the program by:

  1. Failing to provide an annual accounting to its members;
  2. Failing to have a CPA review the finances of the Trust;
  3. Commingling trust funds with the funds of the BIAW’s for profit subsidiary Member Service Corporation (MSC);
  4. Allowing the MSC rather than the Trust to accrue well over a half a million dollars in interest earned on Trust assets;

 

Commingling funds and skimming interest are serious financial improprieties. The judge stated that she was ordering the BIAW, MSC, and the Washington Builders’ Benefit Trust to comply with state law, with the governing trust documents, and with her ruling on the breaches of trust.  The lawsuit was filed by Seattle attorney Mike Withey and Knoll Lowney with the assistance of Andy Friedman and Tonna Farrar from Pheonix Arizona. 

BIAW is I-1082’s prime sponsor and has spent more than half a million dollars to pass it. Under I-1082, the BIAW would broker its members to big insurance companies, like AIG, in return for a cut of the premiums.

 Judge Muphy’s decision Thursday concludes a three-year-old case alleging breach of trust between the BIAW – one of Washington’s biggest conservative political funders – and its members.

 Five small businesses filed suit claiming that the BIAW failed its fiduciary duty in managing funds from the “retrospective rating” (retro) program through the Washington Builders Benefit Trust. This program is meant to promote worker safety by refunding part of workers’ compensation premiums to safe workplaces.

Today’s decision comes on the heels of the BIAW’s $584,000 settlement last week with the Office of the Attorney General for campaign finance violations in 2008. This fine – the second largest from the Public Disclosure Commission in recent history – also came from the BIAW’s financial mismanagement of retro dollars.

Knoll Lowney and Michael Withey, lawyers for petitioners, can also be reached for comment at (206) 650-1044 or knoll@igc.org and mike@witheylaw.com.

Mike Withey Joins Public Justice To Fight Health Insurance Greed

October 6th, 2010

Mike Withey and Public Justice have just taken on a vitally important fight for injury victims against insurance company greed!

In CGI Technologies Inc. v. Rose, we will be defending a seriously injured car-accident victim — Rhonda Rose — who was sued by her health insurance carrier for the money it paid to cover her medical expenses. The insurance company is arguing that, because Ms. Rose sued the driver who caused the accident and recovered a small portion of her damages, it is entitled to repayment of 100% of its benefits. If the company succeeds, it will walk away without paying out a penny on Ms. Rose’s policy, while she is left without fair compensation for her injuries.

Rhonda Rose was badly hurt in a car accident that left her with permanent back and neck injuries. Her medical expenses were initially covered by her employer-funded health insurer. She then retained counsel and sued the driver who caused her injuries, but ultimately settled for only 25% of her damages because that was the limit of the driver’s insurance.

In February, however, her health insurance company sued her and her lawyer in federal court in Washington for complete reimbursement of the medical expenses her insurance policy covered. The insurer insists that, because Ms. Rose received some compensation from the person who injured her, it is entitled to get all of its money back — before Ms. Rose or the attorney who won her compensation are entitled to anything.

Public Justice has taken on this case because it is a disturbing example of a national campaign by insurance carriers to line their own pockets by raiding their beneficiaries’  recoveries. Across the country, employer-based insurance plans have been aggressively pursuing personal-injury victims for full reimbursement — or “subrogation” — of the medical expenses their insurance is supposed to cover. This trend has devastating consequences for personal-injury victims, who can be left worse off — and the insurers better off — than if the victim had never sued the wrongdoer at all.  The victims can be stripped of compensation for covered medical expenses and all other damages, including uncovered medical expenses, lost wages, and pain and suffering. 

Subrogation lawsuits like this one do more than just harm individual victims and line the pockets of greedy insurance companies. They also pose a major threat to access to justice in America. The risk of full subrogation can make it economically infeasible for a lawyer to take on a case. And, without the ability to attract counsel, injury victims have no means of seeking full compensation for their injuries. If the insurance companies can get away with this, many injured people will get no compensation or representation at all – and the wrongdoers who injured them will never be held accountable. 

To read the complaint in CGI Technologies v. Roseclick here.

Public Justice’s litigation team in this case includes Paul Stritmatter and Mike Withey of Seattle, along with Public Justice attorneys Matthew Wessler and Leslie Brueckner, Caitlin Palacios of Washington D.C., and Michael Nelson of Seattle, Washington, who represented Ms. Rose in her underlying lawsuit against the driver who caused the accident. Michael Nelson’s law firm, Nelson Langer Engle PLLC, has also been named as a defendant in the case.