May is a particularly perilous month for motorcycle and bicycle riders given the Alaska Personal Injury Law Group’s totally non-scientific sampling of individuals who contact our office throughout the year. After six months or more of winter, auto and truck drivers are simply not used to looking for motorcycles and…
Articles Posted in Wrongful Death Claims
Highway Traffic Deaths Continue to Fall
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) estimates that 32,788 people died in traffic accidents in the United States in 2010, the lowest number of motor vehicle related deaths since 1949. This is a remarkable achievement given that the population of the United States more than doubled between 1949 (149…
Dangerous Toys and the Holiday Season
Christmas is the time for toys. Parents expect that toys have been designed and manufactured with safety in mind. That is not a safe assumption. Ninety five percent (95%) of the toys sold in the United States are now manufactured overseas, mainly in China. In the last 10 years, the…
Aviation Crash Cases Can Remain in Alaska State Courts
The Alaska Personal Injury Law Group recently obtained a favorable ruling on a matter of great importance for aviation law in Alaska. Apparently reversing a prior contrary decision, the Federal District Court ruled that aviation wrongful death and personal injury claims cannot normally be transferred (“removed”) from Alaska State Courts…
Diet Supplement Found To Exacerbate Prostate Cancer–Another Spiked Product
The coming issue of Clinical Cancer Research will publish two case reports concerning the progression of prostate cancer believed to have been caused by a dietary supplement “spiked” with pharmaceutical compounds. “Spiking” is, unfortunately, an all too common practice in that industry. While claiming to sell “all natural” products, and…
NTSB Investigation of Kodiak Servant Air Crash Will Take Time
On January 5, 2008, a Servant Air Piper Navajo Chieftain with 10 people aboard crashed shortly after take off from Kodiak, Alaska. The pilot and five passengers tragically died in the crash. Surviving passengers reported that a baggage door popped open shortly after takeoff and the pilot was attempting to…
Alaska “Tort Reform” Damage Limits Become More Restrictive With Each Passing Year
The “tort reform” statute passed by the Alaska Legislature in 1997 continues to whittle away, automatically, year after year, at the real damages available to Alaska families who have lost a loved one due to a defendant’s negligent or reckless conduct. The 1997 legislation limited the amount of “non-economic damages”…
Glenn Highway Crash Kills Native Leaders
On Saturday, January 12, 2008, two Alaska Native leaders and their 16-year-old granddaughter were killed in a three-car collision on the Glenn Highway. Allan and Sophia Chase, and Melissa Pike were struck when a Chevrolet truck crossed the center line and sideswiped their vehicle, which caused their vehicle to hit…