Defective Products

productProducts that are poorly designed or manufactured cause countless injuries and deaths each year. The State and Federal agencies charged with ensuring product safety and protecting the consumer often take action only after the product has become the subject of national news. In the meantime corporations continue to turn out dangerous and defective products that harm our loved ones.

The law of Product Liability has developed over the years due in large part to an understanding by the Courts that the corporate profit motive often takes precedent over the corporations concern for consumer safety. Moreover, rarely does the harmed consumer have the necessary resources to take on a corporate manufacturer of a defective product.

Roselli & Associates has the financial resources and experience to represent victims of defective products against even the largest corporation. It is simply demonstrative of our commitment to justice.

If you or a loved one suffered a serious injury as a result of a defective or dangerous product, please contact us so that we may obtain for you the compensation that is deserved.

 

Other Cases of Interest

Parasites In Salad Found To Be The Cause Of Man’s Mystery Illness

Confidential Settlement

Rodney M. v. Grocery Store and Grower
Broward County, Florida
Attorney for Plaintiff: Robert M. Roselli

Robert M. Roselli represented Rodney M., a 50 year old man who developed abdominal pain, fevers, rashes and liver lesions caused by a parasite that local doctors were unable to identify or treat. After ten months, Rodney contacted a Harvard University Professor of Parasitic Diseases who asked the question no other doctor had: Did you eat watercress? Immediately, Rodney recalled that several weeks before he fell ill, he watched a TV show espousing the health benefits of watercress and began eating raw watercress salads bought from a local grocery store. The Harvard doctor performed a blood serum analysis that identified the culprit: fasciola hepatica. While extremely rare in the U.S. human population, this parasite is found in most Florida livestock that graze near waterways laden with watercress. Rodney was then treated with an anti-parasitic agent normally used in animals. After six months, his symptoms resolved and his labs returned to normal. For the suffering endured by Rodney M. a lawsuit was filed against the grocery store and the Palm Beach County grower. Ultimately, expert analysis revealed that the watercress farm contained all of the elements needed for this parasite to thrive, including an abundance of a particular snail species known to serve as an intermediary host for this parasite. In the words of one expert, it was a "snail graveyard". After three years of contentious litigation a settlement was reached before trial for $325,000.00.

See also: New England Journal of Medicine Vol. 346, Number 15

Defective Tire Causes Death Of A Pregnant Passenger

Confidential Settlement

Estate of Sonia L. et. al v. Tire Manufacturer
Fort Lauderdale, Broward County, Florida
Attorney for Plaintiff: Robert M. Roselli

A group of co-workers in a 12-passenger van suffered catastrophic injuries, including the death of a 28 year old pregnant young lady, after a defective tire caused their vehicle to crash. Robert M. Roselli, after being retained by the family of the deceased young lady as well as the other passengers, took immediate action to preserve the vehicle and tires. Experts were retained to perform analysis on the evidence, determining that a defective rear tire had indeed caused the tragic crash. A lawsuit was brought against the tire manufacturer and ultimately a substantial confidential settlement was reached on behalf of the injured passengers and the family of deceased passenger.

School Teacher Rendered Quadriplegic After Eating Contaminated Hot Dog – Then Dies

Confidential Settlement

Estate of Christine B. v. Meat Packing Plant
Okaloosa County, Florida
Attorney for Plaintiff: Robert M. Roselli

Christine B., a 57 year old school teacher was rendered a quadriplegic and ultimately died after nearly two (2) years and over $1 million in medical bills. She contracted Listeriosis from eating contaminated hot dogs and lunchmeats processed and sold by a large supermarket chain. Unlike other pathogens, listeria monocytogenes [LM] may not manifest symptoms for several weeks leading to a delayed diagnosis, long after the food product and packaging are gone. For that reason, LM cases are complex and costly, requiring complex expert analysis of the DNA (serotype) of the pathogen and the eating and shopping habits of the victim to establish the causal connection between the illness and the food product. Contentious litigation and discovery revealed that the processing plant had an alarming history of product contamination that was ignored by management so as to avoid a massive recall. The plant shipped over 1.7 million pounds of product to its supermarkets during this time and it was only after the lab tipped off the USDA that a massive recall was initiated. By then it was too late for Christine and the bacteria attacked and destroyed her cervical spinal cord. Christine was survived by three adult daughters who continue to be haunted by the feelings of helplessness and hopelessness while watching their mother suffer the nightmare of horrors of quadriplegia until she died. After over four years of litigation the case was settled for a substantial confidential sum.

 

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