Sued Michael Jordan, because he looks like him
Allen Heckard sued Michael Jordan and Phil Knight on July
2006. Heckard claims he has suffered emotional trauma because he looks like
Michael Jordan. Heckard has filed his look-alike case at the Washington County
Court in Oregon
and with a $832 million dollar head. Allen Heckard believes his life has been
rough since people continually think he is Michael Jordan. Heckard says when he
plays basketball, people are constantly telling him he plays like Michael
Jordan and this has been difficult for him. Heckard is only six feet tall, so
obviously those who assume he is Michael Jordan have little regard for height.
Heckard even wears Air Jordan
shoes, he says that they're the most comfortable.
In October 1998, A Terrence Dickson of Bristol Pennsylvania
was exiting a house he finished robbing by way of the garage. He was not able
to get the garage door to go up, because the automatic door opener was
malfunctioning. He couldn't re-enter the house because the door connecting the
house and garage locked when he pulled it shut. The family was on vacation, so
Mr. Dickson found himself locked in the garage for eight days. He subsisted on
a case of Pepsi he found, and a large bag of dry dog food. This upset Mr.
Dickson, so he sued the homeowner's insurance claiming the situation caused him
undue mental anguish. The jury agreed to the tune of half a million dollars and
change.
Sued the school for being called "GAY"
A small-town teenager who was bullied for years by
classmates because they believed he was gay was awarded $440,000 in a
settlement. The settlement ended a longrunning battle between the Tonganoxie
School District and 18-year-old Dylan Theno, who sued in May 2004 claiming he
was harassed with homophobic slurs from seventh grade until he quit school his
junior year. Theno, who testified that he isn't gay, recently earned his GED
and attends a vocational technical school in Kansas City.
Sued after breaking her ankle tripping over a toddler
In January 2000, Kathleen Robertson of Austin Texas was
awarded $780,000.00 by a jury of her peers after breaking her ankle tripping
over a toddler who was running amuck inside a furniture store. The owners of
the store were understandably surprised at the verdict, considering the
misbehaving tyke was Ms. Robertson's son.
Sued after being bitten for a beagle he provoked
In October 1999, Jerry Williams of Little Rock Arkansas
was awarded $14,500.00 and medical expenses after being bitten on the buttocks
by his next door neighbor's beagle. The beagle was on a chain in it's owner's
fenced-in yard, as was Mr. Williams. The jury felt the dog may have been
provoked by Mr. Williams who, at the time, was shooting it repeatedly with a
pellet gun.
Sued a restaurant after she slipped on a spilled drink
In May 2000, a Philadelphia
restaurant was ordered to pay Amber Carson of Lancaster, Pennsylvania
$113,500.00 after she slipped on a spilled soft drink and broke her coccyx. The
beverage was on the floor because Ms. Carson threw it at her boyfriend 30
seconds earlier during an argument.
Sued a nightclub after she fell while sneaking out
In December 1997, Kara Walton of Claymont, Delaware
successfully sued the owner of a night club in a neighboring city when she fell
from the bathroom window to the floor and knocked out her two front teeth. This
occurred while Ms. Walton was trying to sneak through the window in the ladies
room to avoid paying the $3.50 cover charge. She was awarded $12,000.00 and
dental expenses.
Sued Winnebago after crashing it
In November 2000 Mr. Grazinski purchased a brand new 32 foot
Winnebago motor home. On his first trip home, having joined the freeway, he set
the cruise control at 70 mph and calmly left the drivers seat to go into the
back and make himself a cup of coffee. Not surprisingly the Winnie left the
freeway, crashed and overturned. Mr. Grazinski sued Winnebago for not advising
him in the handbook that he couldn't actually do this. He was awarded
$1,750,000 plus a new Winnie. (Winnebago actually changed their handbooks on
the back of this court case, just in case there are any other complete morons
buying their vehicles.)
Sued amusement park for not warning him to be careful of
thunderstorms
Shawn Perkins of Laurel, Ind. Perkins was hit by lightning in the parking lot Paramount's Kings
Island amusement park in Mason, Ohio.
A classic "act of God", right? No, says Perkins' lawyer. "That
would be a lot of people's knee-jerk reaction in these types of
situations." The lawyer has filed suit against the amusement park asking
unspecified damages, arguing the park should have "warned" people not
to be outside during a thunderstorm.
Sued against fast-good giants for being fat
Caesar Barber, 56, of New
York City. Barber, who is 5-foot-10 and 270 pounds,
says he is obese, diabetic, and suffers from heart disease because fast food
restaurants forced him to eat their fatty food four to five times per week. He
filed suit against McDonald's, Burger King, Wendy's and KFC, who "profited
enormously" and asked for unspecified damages because the eateries didn't
warn him that junk food isn't good for him. The judge threw the case out twice,
and barred it from being filed a third time. Is that the end of such McCases?
No way: lawyers will just find another plaintiff and start over, legal scholars
say.
Sued his old school for being kicked off the school's
baseball team
Cole Bartiromo, 18, of Mission
Viejo, Calif. After
making over $1 million in the stock market, the feds made Bartiromo pay it all
back: he gained his profits, they said, using fraud. Bartiromo played baseball
at school, but after his fraud case broke he was no longer allowed to
participate in extracurricular sports. Bartiromo clearly learned a lot while
sitting in federal court: he wrote and filed his own lawsuit against his high
school, reasoning that he had planned on a pro baseball career but, because he
was kicked off the school's team, pro scouts wouldn't be able to discover him.
His suit demands the school reimburse him for the great salary he would have
made in the majors, which he figures is $50 million.
Pedo priest sued his victim for warning others about him
Priest David Hanser, 70. Hanser was one of the first
Catholic priests to be caught up in the sex abuse scandal. In 1990, he settled
a suit filed by one of his victims for $65,000. In the settlement, Hanser
agreed not to work with children anymore, but the victim learned that Hanser
was ignoring that part of the agreement. The victim appealed to the church,
asking it to stop Hanser from working near children, but the church would not
intervene. "It's up to the church to decide where he works," argued
the priest's lawyer. When the outraged victim went to the press to warn the
public that a pedo priest was near children, Hanser sued him for the same
$65,000 because he violated his own part of the deal - to keep the settlement
secret. The message is clear: shut up about outrageous abuse, or we'll sue you
for catching us.
Sued the neighbor he was trying to steal from
In June 1998, a 19 year old Carl Truman of Los Angeles won $74,000.00 and medical
expenses when his neighbor ran his hand over with a Honda Accord. Mr. Truman
apparently didn't notice someone was at the wheel of the car whose hubcap he
was trying to steal.
Moved to a storage unit, then sued the storage yard
Wanda Hudson, 44, of Mobile,
Ala. After Hudson lost her home to foreclosure, she
moved her belongings to a storage unit. She says she was inside her unit one
night "looking for some papers" when the storage yard manager found
the door to her unit ajar - and locked it. She denies that she was sleeping
inside, but incredibly did not call for help or bang on the door to be let out!
She was not found for 63 days and barely survived; the formerly
"plump" 150-pound woman lived on food she just happened to have in
the unit, and was a mere 83 pounds when she was found. She sued the storage
yard for $10 million claiming negligence. Even though the jury was not allowed
to learn that Hudson had previously diagnosed
mental problems, it found Hudson
was nearly 100 percent responsible for her own predicament - but still awarded
her $100,000.
Sued his dog-sitter after the dog escaped
Doug Baker, 45, of Portland,
Ore. Baker says God
"steered" him to a stray dog. He admits "People thought I was
crazy" to spend $4,000 in vet bills to bring the injured mutt back to
health, but hey, it was God's dog! But $4,000 was nothing: he couldn't even
take his girlfriend out to dinner without getting a dog-sitter to watch him.
When the skittish dog escaped the sitter, Baker didn't just put an ad in the
paper, he bought display ads so he could include a photo. His business
collapsed since he devoted full time to the search for the dog. He didn't
propose to his girlfriend because he wanted the dog to deliver the ring to her.
He hired four "animal psychics" to give him clues to the animal's
whereabouts, and hired a witch to cast spells. He even spread his own urine
around to "mark his territory" to try to lure the dog home! And, he
said, he cried every day. Two months in to the search, he went looking for the
dog where it got lost - and quickly found it. His first task: he put a collar
on the mutt. (He hadn't done that before for a dog that was so
"valuable"?!) After finding the dog, he sued the dog sitter,
demanding $20,000 for the cost of his search, $30,000 for the income he lost by
letting his business collapse, $10,000 for "the temporary loss of the
special value" of the dog, and $100,000 in "emotional damages"
- $160,000 total. God has not been named as a defendant.
Policeman confused a Taser with a gun, killed a suspect,
then sued Taser
The City of Madera, Calif. Madera police officer Marcy Noriega had the
suspect from a minor disturbance handcuffed in the back of her patrol car. When
the suspect started to kick at the car's windows, Officer Noriega decided to
subdue him with her Taser. Incredibly, instead of pulling her stun gun from her
belt, she pulled her service sidearm and shot the man in the chest, killing him
instantly. The city, however, says the killing is not the officer's fault; it
argues that "any reasonable police officer" could "mistakenly
draw and fire a handgun instead of the Taser device" and has filed suit
against Taser, arguing the company should pay for any award from the wrongful
death lawsuit the man's family has filed. What a slur against every professionally
trained police officer who knows the difference between a real gun and a stun
gun! And what a cowardly attempt to escape responsibility for the actions of
its own under-trained officer.
Sued the school over 10-day suspension
Kids across America
are warned to stay away from "nose candy" in anti-drug campaigns. But
a Kanawha County student is fighting his
suspension for pretending to put actual candy up his nose. According to a
lawsuit filed in Kanawha Circuit Court on December 2006, a student-athlete at Sissonville High School was given Smarties candy as
a reward for good academic performance. In front of his teacher and fellow
classmates, the student pretended to put one of the small candy discs up his
nose.
Sued him for having the same name
The Tribune Co. of Chicago,
Ill. The newspaper chain owns
several newspapers, as well as the Chicago Cubs baseball team. One of its
newspaper carriers was Mark Guthrie, 43, of Connecticut. One of its ball players was
Mark Guthrie, 38, of Illinois.
The company's payroll department mixed the two up, putting the ballplayer's
paycheck into the paper carrier's bank account. The carrier allowed them to
take back 90 percent of the improperly paid salary, and said they could have
the rest after they gave him a full accounting to ensure he not only got his
own pay, but wouldn't have any tax problems for being paid $300,000(!) extra.
The Tribune Co., rather than provide that reasonable assurance, instead sued
him for the rest of the money.
Sued Consumer Reports magazine after bad review
"High Tech" retailer Sharper Image sells a lot of
its "Ionic Breeze" air filters. As part of a comparative review of
many air filters, Consumer Reports magazine found the "Ionic" unit
was the worst performer. SI complained, saying it didn't do a "fair"
test. CU asked what sort of test should be done, but SI never replied - until
it sued CU. A federal judge ruled the suit not only had no merit, but was
actually an illegal attempt to squelch public discussion. SI was ordered to pay
CU $400,000 to cover its legal defense costs.
Sued GM because of roof standards after accident
Edith Morgan, mother of Kansas City Chiefs football star
Derrick Thomas, who died after being thrown from his SUV in a crash while
speeding in a snowstorm. Morgan said Thomas's neck was broken because the SUV's
roof collapsed a few inches - not from rolling down the highway because he
wasn't wearing a seatbelt - and sued General Motors. Her lawyer begged jurors
to award more than $100 million in damages, perhaps more - he "did not
want to put an upper limit on it." GM pointed out that Thomas's oversize
SUV was exempt from federal roof crush standards, yet it met them anyway. The
jury sent a message: of that $100 million, it awarded Morgan ...nothing.
Sued Radio Shack for misspelling her town
Tanisha Torres of Wyndanch,
N.Y. The woman sued Radio Shack
for misspelling her town as "Crimedanch" on her cell phone bill. She
didn't even ask them to change it; she just sued. "I'm not a
criminal," she whined. "My son plays on the high school football
team." Yeah, that makes sense. The name "Crimedanch" is a common
joke; police in the area confirm it's a high-crime area. Still, Torres claimed
she suffered "outrage" and "embarrassment" at having to see
that spelling on her private phone bill. The suit seeks unspecified damages.
Sued Mazda because it failed to provide instructions about
the seatbelt
Mary Ubaudi of Madison County, Ill. Ubaudi was a passenger
in a car that got into a wreck. She put most of the blame on the deepest pocket
available: Mazda Motors, who made the car she was riding in. Ubaudi demands
"in excess of $150,000" from the automaker, claiming it "failed
to provide instructions regarding the safe and proper use of a seatbelt."
One hopes Mazda's attorneys make her swear in court that she has never before
worn a seatbelt, has never flown on an airliner, and that she's too stupid to
figure out how to fasten a seatbelt.
Sued Blain and Copperfield to demand they reveal their
secrets to him
Christopher Roller of Burnsville,
Minn. Roller is mystified by professional
magicians, so he sued David Blaine and David Copperfield to demand they reveal
their secrets to him - or else pay him 10 percent of their lifelong earnings,
which he figures amounts to $50 million for Copperfield and $2 million for Blaine. The basis for his
suit: Roller claims that the magicians defy the laws of physics, and thus must
be using "godly powers" - and since Roller is god (according to
him), they're "somehow" stealing that power from him.
Sued neighbors after being scared of them walking on her
front porch
Wanita "Renea" Young of Durango, Colo.
Two neighborhood teens baked cookies for their neighbors as an anonymous
gesture of good will, but Young got scared when she heard them on her front
porch. They apologized, in writing, but Young sued them anyway for causing her
distress, demanding $3,000. When she won(!!) $900, she crowed about it in the
newspaper and on national TV. Now, she's shocked (shocked!) that everyone in
town hates her for her spite, and is afraid she may have to move. But hey: she
won.
Sued the bank for loss of sleep over fee
Barnard Lorence of Stuart,
Fla. Lorence managed to overdraw
his own bank account. When the bank charged him a service fee for the
overdraft, he filed suit over his "stress and pain" and loss of sleep
over the fee. A few hundred thousand bucks, he says, will only amount to a
"slap on the wrist", whereas the $2 million he's suing for is more
like being "paddled".
Sued a store for "allowing" wild birds to fly
around in the air
Rhonda Nichols. She says a wild bird "attacked"
her outside a home improvement store in Fairview
Heights, Ill.,
causing head injuries. That's right: outside the store. Yet Nichols still held
the Lowe's store responsible for "allowing" wild birds to fly around
free in the air. She never reported the incident to the store, but still sued
for "at least" $100,000 in damages. In January 2006, the case was
thrown out of court.
Sued the phone company after having complications with the
doctor
Michelle Knepper of Vancouver,
Wash. Knepper picked a doctor out
of the phone book to do her liposuction, and went ahead with the procedure even
though the doctor was only a dermatologist, not a plastic surgeon. After having
complications, she complained she never would have chosen that doctor had she
known he wasn't Board Certified in the procedure. (She relied on the phonebook
listing over asking the doctor, or looking for a certificate on his wall?!) So
she sued ...the phone company! She won $1.2 million plus $375,000 for her
husband for "loss of spousal services and companionship."
Sued the rescue workers who saved her
Barbara Connors of Medfield, Mass. Connors was riding in a car driven by her
70-year-old(!) son-in-law when they crashed into the Connecticut
River, and Connors sank with the car. Rescue divers arrived within
minutes and got her out alive, but Connors suffered brain damage from her
near-drowning. Sue the driver? Sure, we guess that's reasonable. But she also
sued the brave rescue workers who risked their lives to save hers.
Sued Home Depot after a prankster smeared glue on the toilet
seat
Bob Dougherty. A prankster smeared glue on the toilet seat
at the Home Depot store in Louisville, Colo., causing Dougherty to stick to it
when he sat down. "This is not Home Depot's fault," he proclaimed,
yet the store graciously offered him $2,000 anyway. Dougherty complained the
offer is "insulting" and filed suit demanding $3 million.
Sued hospital for having to see the doctors rushing to help
their mother
Sisters Janice Bird, Dayle Bird Edgmon and Kim Bird Moran
sued their mother's doctors and a hospital after Janice accompanied her mother,
Nita Bird, to a minor medical procedure. When something went wrong, Janice and
Dayle witnessed doctors rushing their mother to emergency surgery. Rather than
malpractice, their legal fight centered on the "negligent infliction of
emotional distress" - not for causing distress to their mother, but for
causing distress to them for having to see the doctors rushing to help their
mother. The case was fought all the way to the California Supreme Court, which
finally ruled against the women. Which is a good thing, since if they had
prevailed doctors and hospitals would have had no choice but to keep you from
being anywhere near your family members during medical procedures just in case
something goes wrong. In their greed, the Bird sisters risked everyone's right
to have family members with them in emergencies.
Source : http://2spare.com
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