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		LloydDR(at)wernerco.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Wed Jan 17, 2007 6:44 pm    Post subject: Why is it such a bad thing | 
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				When you phrase it this way, which reading over the other posts for the
 third time, I finally see the light. I do agree that we are convicting
 before we know everything. Right or wrong with the verdict, we need to
 see everything they did before we pass judgment.
 Agreed, now I can move on...my Eggenfellner will be delivered in a
 couple of week wanna come help install it on the 10?
 Dan 
 
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		LloydDR(at)wernerco.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Wed Jan 17, 2007 6:53 pm    Post subject: Why is it such a bad thing | 
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				We covered this case in my undergrad, this was the third time this
 lawyer sued McDonalds because he felt the coffee was too hot. But the
 public at large drinking coffee at McDonalds refused to drink the coffee
 and complained when the temperature was decreased. This lawyer in
 particular had a case with her because she was elderly, and spilled the
 coffee on her genital area, and the pictures made for good press.
 Here is another example we used in class, when fry's come out of the
 fryer and are served direct to the public they are often hotter than the
 coffee, but no one has sued them for burning there mouth because you
 would be stupid to eat hot fry's. What actually happened with her was
 that she was in a car that was not moving at the time, she took the lid
 off of the cup, put in her condiments and incorrectly replaced the lid,
 when she then picked up the coffee by the lid it then spilled in her
 lap. So, the product was being used in a manner that it was not designed
 for, the cup was more than thick enough to protect her hand from
 burning, rather she picked it up by the lid, as well all have done. 
 What she had in her favor was a lawyer with a vendetta against McDonalds
 and other fast food chains, and good pictures of what happened, and high
 profile press. Look up the lawyer and his history and you will find an
 ambulance chaser.
 And yes I stayed at a Holiday Inn Express last night. I wrote my final
 paper for my law class on this case, so following Bob's statement, and
 guidelines I did investigate the facts and did not come to the same
 conclusion as the jury as to what was presented in the court
 proceedings. 
 Dan 
 
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		LloydDR(at)wernerco.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Wed Jan 17, 2007 7:15 pm    Post subject: Why is it such a bad thing | 
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				The NTSB report says that the first responders (volunteer fire fighters)
 were on site in less than 1 minute, and with in 1.5 minutes of their
 arrival the fire was out, the autopsy reveals death by inhalation of
 noxious fumes and burn trauma. So in reality he was dead before the fire
 department got there, he was how ever not dead before the public
 arrived, so in reality they should sue the public right?
 Within reasonable expectations I would say the fire department responded
 as quickly as possible.
 But I would say there is a significant difference in being in an
 emergency room and expecting correct care, versus suing the ambulance
 company because they took too long to get to where your car burned up
 with you inside of it.
 But I do agree with you that we are making judgments not based on all of
 the facts.   
 Dan
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		dan(at)rdan.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Wed Jan 17, 2007 7:15 pm    Post subject: Why is it such a bad thing | 
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				OK
   In Late 1999 I bought my first airplane a Cherokee, it was hangered in Arlington, the previous owner showed me right in front of our hanger door where an experimental airplane crashed during the airshow that summer, he was there and said it was the worse thing he'd ever seen, he tried to help, the gentleman in the plane's last words were "I'm dead".
   I looked at that burnt spot next to taxi way every time I taxied out of my hanger, it even had flowers on it once in a while.
    
   As a new pilot with my first airplane this really made me think if the was really what I wanted to do "fly airplane's" people die doing this.
   I was told it was  "pilot error" with a seatbelt around the control stick and lack of a good preflight, I wondered how someone could do this, then I was told they were in a rush to get off the ground.
   This has always been in my mind and I still look at the spot every once in  a while and in my mind I ask myself if I'm safe to fly and I will often do a control check,
   This has made me a better pilot,.,
   Bob I work close the the Snohomish County Courthouse and will go get the court record's if it's what we really need,
   Dan
   -8 Fuselage
   N728RV (reserved)
   
 
 Bob Collins <bcollinsrv7a(at)comcast.net> wrote:
   [quote]--> RV-List message posted by: "Bob Collins" 
 
 //Bob, I for one would like to know more. However that said, I have a hard
 time believing that any of it will sway me to believe someone else is
 responsible for his accident. 
 
 Would you at least concede that the issue here is NOT what caused the
 accident?
 
 // Even if the emergencies services didn't show up at all. Had they caused
 the crash and  then didn't respond accordingly to attempt to make their wrong
 right it would be different. But... They didn't. Instead they showed up
 and made every attempt 
 
 That very well may be true but since nobody -- so far -- has been able to
 identify one witness, one piece of testimony,one judge's instruction or one
 element of the case, we can't very well say that.
 
 Look, I'll tell you what. I'll bankroll the cost of picking up the court
 records. I know there's a lot of Rvers on the list who live in this area.
 Wouldn't someone be willing to go to the courthouse, pick up the documents,
 FEDEX 'em to me and I'll make them all available somehow online for proper
 discussion. If it shows this widow is just some money grubbing woman who
 should be lynched, so be it. If it shows something else, that's fine. But at
 least it'll be an informed opinion and informed deliberation.
 
 Anyone?
 
 Please?
 
 Bob
 Do not [quote][b]
 
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		Bob Collins
 
  
  Joined: 11 Mar 2006 Posts: 470 Location: St. Paul, Minnesota
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				 Posted: Wed Jan 17, 2007 7:16 pm    Post subject: Why is it such a bad thing | 
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				//Here is another example we used in class, when fry's come out of the fryer
 and are served direct to the public they are often hotter than the coffee,
 but no one has sued them for burning there mouth because you would be stupid
 to eat hot fry's. 
 Ummm... Well I ain't no law school grad but I did work at McDonald's and,
 well, huh?  The reason nobody eats french fries at McDonld's hotter than the
 coffee at mcdonald's is because nobody EVER got french fries at Mcdonald's
 hotter than the coffee because (a) they come out of the fryer and onto a
 holding area and then -- if you're really luck at McDonald's -- they're put
 into a smallerbag of fries sometime within the same week...all the while the
 heat is dissipating. In fact, the only heat at the time is two 200 watt
 bulbs.  This would be akin to taking a teaspoon of coffee blowing on it, and
 then sipping it. (2) The pag they're put into is a, well, bag. Not an
 insulated cup.
 
 Coffee, on the othre hand is poured directliy FROM the equivalent of the
 fryer, into an insulated cup, covered, and then it hits your lips.
 Well, nevertheless, Dan... When the RV List comes to lynch the lawyers as
 suggested, you can still hide at my house.
 
 When the hordes come, we'll shimmy up to the roof and throw scaling french
 fries at them!!!! (g)
 
 And, by the way, McDonald's shouldn't have been sued because the coffee was
 too hot. They should have been sued because their coffee really sucks.
 Do not archive
 
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  _________________ Bob Collins
 
St. Paul, Minn.
 
Letters from Flyover Country
 
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		Bob Collins
 
  
  Joined: 11 Mar 2006 Posts: 470 Location: St. Paul, Minnesota
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				 Posted: Wed Jan 17, 2007 8:19 pm    Post subject: Why is it such a bad thing | 
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				//The NTSB report says that the first responders (volunteer fire fighters)
 were on site in less than 1 minute, and with in 1.5 minutes of their arrival
 the fire was out, the autopsy reveals death by inhalation of noxious fumes
 and burn trauma. So in reality he was dead before the fire department got
 there, he was how ever not dead before the public arrived, so in reality
 they should sue the public right?
 Within reasonable expectations I would say the fire department responded as
 quickly as possible.
 
 I would also say 1 minute was a reasonable amount. However, that's an NTSB
 report. It doesn't tell me where that information came from. I presume the
 person was deposed during the court case, which is another reason I want to
 see the documents.  It also conflicts with someone who was there who posted
 on this thread earlier, " just have a couple of things to say on this.
 First, I was there and I did see the crash. The emergency services did NOT
 take 30 minutes to arrive. I don't know if it was 5 minutes as I didn't time
 it, but it wasn't much longer than that."
 
 The NTSB was unusually specific about the time, but did not offer any source
 for the information. There was a brief regading the use of the NTSB report
 in the case that was filed on December 13. Obviously, I don't know what it
 says.
 
 Terry Watson was kind enough to send me the court records index
 ((http://tinyurl.com/2rle3d)). There are a few things I noticed in the list
 including 5 jury requests of the judge on Dec. 22. I'd love to know what
 those requests were because they would help us ascertain the level of their
 stupidity. There's also records of the judges instructions. And even more
 important, there are jury notes available. If I can get the name of the
 jurors, I would have no problem calling them and finding out what was behind
 their verdict (the jurors, I don't believe, set the $10 million penalty. I
 believe the jurors found liability only. But I could be wrong.)
 
 Interesting to me, though I don't know if it's significant, that the judge
 on this trial was changed at least once. The eventual judge in the case --
 David Kurtz -- wasn't appointed a judge by the governot until after the case
 had been filed. Here's some background on him.
 http://www.governor.wa.gov/news/news-view.asp?pressRelease 28&newsType=1 .
 He's filling an unexpired term.
 
 Another judge who ruled on a motion fo rreconsideration (of what, I do not
 know) in early December was Eric Lucas. Background on him here:
 http://www1.co.snohomish.wa.us/Departments/Superior_Court/About/Judges/Judge
 +Lucas.htm.  That ruling came the day the trial -- with Kurtz on the bench
 -- opened. Hmmmm. It was Lucas who rejected the rquest for a summary
 judgment in October 2006. (There were about 5 different summary judgement
 requests and hearings)
 
 A judge was changed because of some sort of prejudice in 2004. Judge David
 F. Hulbert was taken off the case. Why? Beats me.
 
 //But I would say there is a significant difference in being in an emergency
 room and expecting correct care, versus suing the ambulance company because
 they took too long to get to where your car burned up with you inside of it.
 But I do agree with you that we are making judgments not based on all of
 the facts.   
 
 What if they didn't come at all. I'm just pointing this out not to say the
 ambulance company should be sued in this case, but that they have a
 responsibility for action that does not go away just because the person made
 the decision to get in the car and drive. The level of responsibility is
 certainly a debatable one, but the assertion that there is not a convergence
 in risky activities of multiple responsibilities is a non-starter for me.
 
 The lawyer for the defense -- although I don't know which defendants -- is a
 pilot and sure seems to know aviation.
 http://www.carneylaw.com/attorneys/getProfile.asp?attorney_id=78. If anyone
 feels like having an e-mail conversation with him for some background, you
 can reach him at laveson(at)carneylaw.com . He might also have just been a
 witness. I'm not sure.
 
 Other filings came from Barbara Lawrence-tolbert, who I think is the
 director of the fly-in.
 
 There was a filing from someone named James T. Nilo, that someone filed a
 motion to supress. I did find a James Nilo in Virginia. According to a Web
 site "Nilo was instrumental in significantly reducing the cost of mandatory
 rescue and fire fighting training at Virginia's airports. Due to the
 prohibitive cost of constructing a training center, fire and rescue
 personnel had to travel out of state to receive training at unfamiliar
 airports. Nilo recognized that simulation training would be a cost-effective
 alternative and secured funding to purchase a Mobile Aircraft Rescue and
 Fire Fighting Training Simulator. In addition to significantly reducing
 costs, the simulator allows training to be held at airports where personnel
 work.  "
 
 If I had to guess, I'd guess Nilo was testifying on fire and rescue
 operations at airports.
 
 You know, this is a heck of an interesting story, and not just because I
 like airplanes. I can remember when the Seattle Post Intelligencer was a
 decent newspaper. They didn't cover this. No newspaper did. Mighty too bad.
 
 Do not archive
 
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St. Paul, Minn.
 
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		n395v
 
  
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 450
 
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				 Posted: Wed Jan 17, 2007 8:20 pm    Post subject: Re: Why is it such a bad thing | 
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				 	  | Quote: | 	 		  | I'm guessing EAA will be just fine. It's a flippin' money machine with deep pockets and fat cat corporate benefactors | 	  
 
 Gosh, that makes it crystal clear to me why it was OK to hose the eaa with a huge settlement.
 
 Bet several of the brilliant, open minded, unbiased, absolutely fair jurors think exactly the same way.
 
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		Bob Collins
 
  
  Joined: 11 Mar 2006 Posts: 470 Location: St. Paul, Minnesota
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				 Posted: Wed Jan 17, 2007 8:32 pm    Post subject: Why is it such a bad thing | 
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				Well the point was that people who are worrying that the award will result
 in the end of the airshow in Arlington probably don't have anything to worry
 about.
 
 But you knew that, Milt. You knew that. 
 
 Do not archive
 
 --
 
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		Bob Collins
 
  
  Joined: 11 Mar 2006 Posts: 470 Location: St. Paul, Minnesota
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				 Posted: Wed Jan 17, 2007 8:44 pm    Post subject: Re: Why is it such a bad thing | 
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				I just found something in the NTSB report that Gary Sobek was kind enough to post.
 
 "After pulling out the necessary hose and completing the hook-up of their respirator system, which they began while en route, the firefighters applied water on the flaming wreckage. Within a minute to a minute and a half after their arrival, the fire was extinguished."
 
 I wonder if one of the issues that was discussed was not necessarily the response time, but the equipment that was used. I'm no first responder -- although my son is -- but do you use water on a fuel-fed fire?
 Do not archive
 
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		Mark Sletten
 
 
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 43 Location: St. Jacob, IL (Near St. Louis, MO)
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				 Posted: Thu Jan 18, 2007 4:44 am    Post subject: Why is it such a bad thing | 
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				This argument continues to chase its own tail…  
    
 Tim Bryan said:  
    
 “I have a hard time believing that any of it will sway me to believe someone else is responsible for his accident. Even if the emergencies services didn't show up at all. Had they caused the crash and then didn't respond accordingly to attempt to make their wrong right it would be different.  But… They didn't. Instead they showed up and made every attempt short of getting someone else hurt to do what they are trained to do.”  
 What Bob has asked is “How do you know?” How do you know what the responding EMS personnel did Tim? Were you there? If you were, are you a trained EMS responder? Do you know what the standard is for response time and actions?  
 Those who continue to offer “facts” to this list to further their arguments have obviously lost the ability to discern the difference between fact and opinion. Most have only read about the story here on this list, yet speak as though there is no chance their view of the situation might be skewed. I remember my old gaffer telling me as a young lad (kindergarten I believe) “There are at least two sides to every story.”  
 Beyond my stupefaction with that, I find it personally distressing that members of a community with which I identify myself are calling for violent action against a family who used to be a member of that community – even if the call to violence is only figurative. Let’s assume for a moment (shouldn’t be much of a problem considering all the assumption going around) that there IS more to this case than we’ve read here on the list, and those calling to “hang the family” are doing so from a position of ignorance. What if a member of that family were reading your vitriol? I wince (literally, not figuratively) at that thought…  
 Aside from that, the closed minds and self-righteousness only gives those you abhor (greed lawyers) further ammunition. I’m sure any competent lawyer reading through this thread would laugh at how “stupid” we are…  
 DO NOT ARCHIVE  
 Mark Sletten  
    
        [quote][b]
 
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		jsflyrv(at)verizon.net Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jan 18, 2007 5:31 am    Post subject: Why is it such a bad thing | 
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				Well said Mark, and trust me the family and lawyers are reading this. I 
 was there, but well not comment on what I did or did not see because
 I have had lawyers call me from reading this list before. As I recall 
 some of our own RV family tried desperately
 to help Don but were unable to because of the fire, It was a very sad 
 day and for anyone that was not a witness to be commenting on what happened
 without knowing the facts is total BS. IMO
 
 Jerry
 do not archive
 
 Mark Sletten wrote:
 
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   This argument continues to chase its own tail…
 
  Tim Bryan said:
 
  “I have a hard time believing that any of it will sway me to believe 
  someone else is responsible for his accident. Even if the emergencies 
  services didn't show up at all. Had they caused the crash and then 
  didn't respond accordingly to attempt to make their wrong right it 
  would be different. But… They didn't. Instead they showed up and made 
  every attempt short of getting someone else hurt to do what they are 
  trained to do.”
 
  What Bob has asked is “How do you know?” How do you know what the 
  responding EMS personnel did Tim? Were you there? If you were, are you 
  a trained EMS responder? Do you know what the standard is for response 
  time and actions?
 
  Those who continue to offer “facts” to this list to further their 
  arguments have obviously lost the ability to discern the difference 
  between fact and opinion. Most have only read about the story here on 
  this list, yet speak as though there is no chance their view of the 
  situation might be skewed. I remember my old gaffer telling me as a 
  young lad (kindergarten I believe) “There are at least two sides to 
  every story.”
 
  Beyond my stupefaction with that, I find it personally distressing 
  that members of a community with which I identify myself are calling 
  for violent action against a family who used to be a member of that 
  community – even if the call to violence is only figurative. Let’s 
  assume for a moment (shouldn’t be much of a problem considering all 
  the assumption going around) that there IS more to this case than 
  we’ve read here on the list, and those calling to “hang the family” 
  are doing so from a position of ignorance. What if a member of that 
  family were reading your vitriol? I wince (literally, not 
  figuratively) at that thought…
 
  Aside from that, the closed minds and self-righteousness only gives 
  those you abhor (greed lawyers) further ammunition. I’m sure any 
  competent lawyer reading through this thread would laugh at how 
  “stupid” we are…
 
  DO NOT ARCHIVE
 
  Mark Sletten
 
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
   
 
 
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		n616tb(at)btsapps.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jan 18, 2007 6:04 am    Post subject: Why is it such a bad thing | 
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				Mark,  
    
 Let’s be clear on something.  I never called for anybody to be lynched nor did I start this thread.  Yes, I was there, but no I am not a first responder.  What I said was only based on one thing.  This man died at his own hand.  His death was caused by the smoke inhalation which was caused by the fire and caused by the wreck.  Nobody contributed to any of this.  If the fire fighters did something adverse in his rescue, than they need to have further training.  If instead we start lynching the first responders for their attempts, then were will we be?  The responders didn’t cause the fire or the crash or the death.  If they caused him to suffer more because of their attempts, well your car will probably suffer more damage from the wrecker tipping it back over than when you rolled it into the ditch.  This is just the way it is.  
    
 That said, I also said I WOULD be interested in seeing the actual facts.  I just can’t imagine what could be in there that might change my mind about “Who was at fault for this accident”.  I also can’t see what could possibly be worth this large judgment.  I NEVER said I wanted to lynch anybody and I was ready to throw a verdict now.  
    
 I just wanted to clear up my position since you quoted me.  
 Tim  
            
   
 From: owner-rv-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-rv-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Mark Sletten
  Sent: Thursday, January 18, 2007 6:44 AM
  To: rv-list(at)matronics.com
  Subject: Re: Why is it such a bad thing  
   
    
 This argument continues to chase its own tail…  
    
 Tim Bryan said:  
    
 “I have a hard time believing that any of it will sway me to believe someone else is responsible for his accident. Even if the emergencies services didn't show up at all. Had they caused the crash and then didn't respond accordingly to attempt to make their wrong right it would be different.  But… They didn't. Instead they showed up and made every attempt short of getting someone else hurt to do what they are trained to do.”  
 What Bob has asked is “How do you know?” How do you know what the responding EMS personnel did Tim? Were you there? If you were, are you a trained EMS responder? Do you know what the standard is for response time and actions?  
 Those who continue to offer “facts” to this list to further their arguments have obviously lost the ability to discern the difference between fact and opinion. Most have only read about the story here on this list, yet speak as though there is no chance their view of the situation might be skewed. I remember my old gaffer telling me as a young lad (kindergarten I believe) “There are at least two sides to every story.”  
 Beyond my stupefaction with that, I find it personally distressing that members of a community with which I identify myself are calling for violent action against a family who used to be a member of that community – even if the call to violence is only figurative. Let’s assume for a moment (shouldn’t be much of a problem considering all the assumption going around) that there IS more to this case than we’ve read here on the list, and those calling to “hang the family” are doing so from a position of ignorance. What if a member of that family were reading your vitriol? I wince (literally, not figuratively) at that thought…  
 Aside from that, the closed minds and self-righteousness only gives those you abhor (greed lawyers) further ammunition. I’m sure any competent lawyer reading through this thread would laugh at how “stupid” we are…  
 DO NOT ARCHIVE  
 Mark Sletten  
     	  | Quote: | 	 		  |   http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?RV-List  | 	  01234
   
         [quote][b]
 
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		LloydDR(at)wernerco.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jan 18, 2007 6:13 am    Post subject: Why is it such a bad thing | 
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				Too true, you would have laughed at us, we went to several McDonalds
 around town, measuring various temps of the fry's at various times. We
 found that during lunch time and other periods of high volume service
 the French fry's did not sit the correct amount of wait time in the bin,
 IE they were taken directly from the fryer, salted and distributed to
 the customer. In these cases we asked for an example fry to measure
 temperature's, and about 50% of the time the internal temp of the fry
 was well over 200 degree's. This quickly dissipated over time, and like
 you said they are supposed to sit in the bin cooling off, but that is
 often not the case, we used this as a contrasting argument for the class
 and one based on inconsistencies in what the lawyer was targeting as a
 problem. In other words he was an ambulance chaser and that is what we
 proved with our "mock" defense of McDonald's.
 Since then I have decided that being a geek is a much nobler profession
 and that is why I hide in the back room and do not talk to anyone other
 than in emails.
 Just my .0002
 Dan 
 
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		LloydDR(at)wernerco.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jan 18, 2007 6:29 am    Post subject: Why is it such a bad thing | 
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				Nope water should not be used, rather AFFF, this is what we were trained
 to use on all class B fires. Good catch another thing I noticed was that
 they said the first people to arrive had fire extinguisher that were too
 small and ran out, so that might be part of it. I too would be willing
 to chip in some money to get copies of the actual proceedings. Do you
 want to talk to the person who volunteered to get the info for us and
 just tell me what I owe you for my half.
 Dan 
 
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		cjensen(at)dts9000.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jan 18, 2007 6:30 am    Post subject: Why is it such a bad thing | 
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				The issue of assumed liability is interesting, wherein by contracting
 emergency services, the Fly In may actually have increased its liability
 because now there was an implied expectation of response times, fire
 fighting effectiveness, et al.  Would the fly in participants have been
 safer with no emergency response equipment on site?  No, but the Fly In
 organizers may well have had less liability.  
 
 Yes, this stands good reason on its head, but an analog to this was the
 downhill skiing industry in the '60s.  A few people had mangled
 themselves by getting up close and personal with the chair lift
 standards or trees on the very edge of downhill runs.  Thinking that
 dead patrons were unlikely to be return customers, the Ski Operators
 under took a program of padding the standards (poles) that supported the
 lifts and lights, if they had them.  As proof of the concept of
 unintended consequences, they shortly thereafter started getting sued by
 pole-kissers that were injured or killed, alleging that padding was
 insufficient or ineffectual.  And, the plaintiffs were winning.  The Ski
 Lift Operators responded by removing the padding and allowing the bare
 steel to again be exposed....end of problem since the poles and trees
 were a known hazard and the exposure was willingly undertaken by those
 who paid a fee to ply the slopes.
 
 I don't know what the current ski operator practices are in this regard.
 Myself, I gave up downhill in the '80s....I got tired of running into
 poles and trees.
 
 Chuck Jensen
 P.S. As Bob Collier has repeatedly warned, factual knowledge is a wee
 bit short in this matter as to what the jury considered and decided, but
 lack of facts never slowed speculations--in fact, it usually accelerates
 it!
  
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		Bob Collins
 
  
  Joined: 11 Mar 2006 Posts: 470 Location: St. Paul, Minnesota
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				 Posted: Thu Jan 18, 2007 6:45 am    Post subject: Why is it such a bad thing | 
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				//  His death was caused by the  smoke inhalation which was caused by the fire and caused by the wreck.   Nobody contributed to any of this.  If the fire fighters did something  adverse in his rescue, than they need to have further training.  If instead  we start lynching the first responders for their attempts, then were will we  be? 
   
  If we do that -- and we shouldn't -- without having the  full story, then we will be where we are: completely uninformed, not interested  in finding out what really happened, and dangerous in our ability to spread  supposition as fact to other readers who don't know any  better.
   
  I'm no big fan of the whole Seven Habits thing (Seven  Habits of Highly Effective People -- Steven Covey), but it is hard to argue with  one of the first rules "Seek FIRST to understand."  The Wright Brothers  didn't say "I think we can fly so therefore we can,  c'mon Orville let's go  for a bike ride," they investigated it, figured out what areas they were right  about, and what areas they were wrong about and constantly reassessed their  conclusion based on their desire to be more informed.
   
  The trouble is in our AM-talk-radio driven society, we  seem to be losing the ability to step outside the pack and say, "hmmmmm, maybe  what the host is telling me right, and maybe what he's saying is wrong, I wonder  if I have enough information to know for sure."
   
  Granted I'm overly sensitive to this. I'm in the news  business and I see -- every day -- the decline in critical thinking or even the  interest in it. I cover politics for a living. You now what the politicians do  in Minnesota at election time? They change their name to Anderson. why? Becuae  they know a lot of voters (and certainly not a majority, but enough to make a  difference), will look at a name like "anderson" and say, "hey, good  Scandanavian name,  she'll make a fine attorney  general."
   
  People have criticized the jury awad (although I still  am pretty sure the jury had nothing to do with the size of the award) for being  stupid. Maybe they were. Maybe they weren't. Everett, Washington -- as far as I  kow -- is full of really smart people, though.  
   
  We just have to stop this.  And, no, you didn't  call for a lynching and violence again people in our RV community. But the guy  who started this thread did. And nobody -- nobody -- stepped in to say, "shame  on you." 
   
  We are better than this.  I just know  it.
   
  Bob
   
  Do not archive in the archaic  archive
     [quote][b]
 
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  _________________ Bob Collins
 
St. Paul, Minn.
 
Letters from Flyover Country
 
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		Bob Collins
 
  
  Joined: 11 Mar 2006 Posts: 470 Location: St. Paul, Minnesota
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				 Posted: Thu Jan 18, 2007 7:01 am    Post subject: Why is it such a bad thing | 
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				//Nope water should not be used, rather AFFF, this is what we were trained
 to use on all class B fires. Good catch another thing I noticed was that
 they said the first people to arrive had fire extinguisher that were too
 small and ran out, so that might be part of it. 
 
 Maybe, although I took from the reading (and I well be making my own set of
 assumptions), that they were mostly just plain folks, other aircraft owners
 with extinguishers in their planes etc. In fact, as I read it, I thought,
 "wow, there were some real heroes who were first on scene trying to get the
 guy out of a burning wreck, who had the presence of mind to remember they
 had those extinguishers and were able to quickly get them."
 
 The other thing that I found interesting in the NTSB report was that the
 plane only got up 70-100 feet before it crashed.
 
 //I too would be willing to chip in some money to get copies of the actual
 proceedings. Do you want to talk to the person who volunteered to get the
 info for us and just tell me what I owe you for my half.
 
 I'm going to send an e-mail to the clerk today and find out what the best
 way for getting them is.  There's no way I can afford to get all the paper
 in this case at a buck a page, so I have to kind of cherrypick through the
 list and figure out what can provide the most bang for the....ummm... Buck.
 
 Bob
 
 Do not archive
 
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St. Paul, Minn.
 
Letters from Flyover Country
 
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		n395v
 
  
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 450
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jan 18, 2007 7:14 am    Post subject: Re: Why is it such a bad thing | 
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				 	  | Bob Collins wrote: | 	 		  Well the point was that people who are worrying that the award will result
 in the end of the airshow in Arlington probably don't have anything to worry
 about.
 
 But you knew that, Milt. You knew that. 
 
 Do not archive
 
 -- | 	  
 
 Bob,
 
 You are correct, I knew that and do not mean to belittle your opinion. I know from your many posts and the hotline you are an honest open minded individual and would be that way on a jury.
 
 My point is that you are a rarity and most jurors bring a strong bias to the jury room. Doesn't matter what the charge from the judge is when the door is closed the jury does as it pleases.
 
 I am a prime example, were I on the that jury I would enter the court with a mindset of there is no way the eaa or first responders are gonna get burnt and I am certain there would be one or more in the room who subscribe to the deep pocket theory. I think at best the outcome of a trial is  slightly biased in the favor of fact and strongly biased in favor of raw emotion, sympathy for surviving family, and prejudice.
 
 I believe this is supported by the 2 extremes of responses to this thread.
 
 do not archive
 
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		jpl(at)showpage.org Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jan 18, 2007 7:24 am    Post subject: Why is it such a bad thing | 
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				I personally believe there's something wrong with the system when a  
 person *can't* assume liability for his own actions.
 
 I believe strongly in the concept of "informed consent".  If I buy an  
 airplane one of you built, I know the dangers and you should be  
 absolved of any liability provided you don't hide known defects from  
 me.  It's not your job to tell me what the dangers are -- it's your  
 job to say, "This airplane was built by me and you should get it  
 inspected before you fly it.  Also, I deviated from the plans when I  
 installed a whatchamacallit, so you'll want to have your mechanic pay  
 special attention to that and fix it if he's not satisfied."  If I  
 then take the plane for a ride and the wings fall off cause you  
 forgot to put the bolts back in last night when getting it ready for  
 sale, that's my fault, not yours.  You TOLD me to get it inspected  
 before I fly it, after all.
 
 Unfortunately, our legal system doesn't agree with me.
 
 -Joe
 do not archive
 
 On Jan 18, 2007, at 8:29 AM, Chuck Jensen wrote:
 
 [quote] 
 
  The issue of assumed liability is interesting, wherein by contracting
  emergency services, the Fly In may actually have increased its  
  liability
  because now there was an implied expectation of response times, fire
  fighting effectiveness, et al.  Would the fly in participants have  
  been
  safer with no emergency response equipment on site?  No, but the  
  Fly In
  organizers may well have had less liability.
 
  Yes, this stands good reason on its head, but an analog to this was  
  the
  downhill skiing industry in the '60s.  A few people had mangled
  themselves by getting up close and personal with the chair lift
  standards or trees on the very edge of downhill runs.  Thinking that
  dead patrons were unlikely to be return customers, the Ski Operators
  under took a program of padding the standards (poles) that  
  supported the
  lifts and lights, if they had them.  As proof of the concept of
  unintended consequences, they shortly thereafter started getting  
  sued by
  pole-kissers that were injured or killed, alleging that padding was
  insufficient or ineffectual.  And, the plaintiffs were winning.   
  The Ski
  Lift Operators responded by removing the padding and allowing the bare
  steel to again be exposed....end of problem since the poles and trees
  were a known hazard and the exposure was willingly undertaken by those
  who paid a fee to ply the slopes.
 
  I don't know what the current ski operator practices are in this  
  regard.
  Myself, I gave up downhill in the '80s....I got tired of running into
  poles and trees.
 
  Chuck Jensen
  P.S. As Bob Collier has repeatedly warned, factual knowledge is a wee
  bit short in this matter as to what the jury considered and  
  decided, but
  lack of facts never slowed speculations--in fact, it usually  
  accelerates
  it!
 
  --
 
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		cjensen(at)dts9000.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jan 18, 2007 7:32 am    Post subject: Why is it such a bad thing | 
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				Bob,
 
 I'll contribute also.  I tried sending you the offer off line but my
 emails to you bounced back.  Your spam/garbage blocker must be very
 intuitive and recognized me immediately.
 
 Chuck Jensen
  
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