Tort Reform, Corporate Liability and the Rights of Injured Americans

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Escaping Responsibility for Corporate Products or Practices that Injure or Kill Americans

Tort Reform, Corporate Liability and the Rights of Injured Americans
Through the corporate-funded American Legislative Exchange Council, global corporations and state politicians VOTE BEHIND CLOSED DOORS to change the laws to limit the rights and remedies of Americans injured or killed by corporations. These so-called "model bills" erode the rights of an injured person, or that person's family, who files a complaint alleging that a corporation caused injury or death and should be held responsible for all the damages its actions caused.

Through ALEC, corporations have "a VOICE and a VOTE" on specific changes to the law that are then proposed in state legislatures. Do you?

How corporations undermine the rights of injured Americans

The bills try to change Americans' rights by:

To see a full list of these bills, click here

This information is available for download as a one-page fact sheet here.


Governor Scott Walker's "Tort Reforms"

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Wisconsin Governor and ALEC alumni Scott Walker’s first action upon taking office was to push "tort reform" measures from the ALEC corporate wish list to protect corporations from lawsuits. This bill, Wisconsin Act 2, passed on a party-line vote and was signed into law by Walker in January 2011. It incorporates several "tort reform" bills supported by ALEC corporations. For example, it:
  • Adopts parts of ALEC's "Punitive Damage Standards Act," limiting the ability to hold corporations accountable for outrageous acts of negligence or recklessness.
  • Draws liberally from the ALEC "Product Liability Act," giving corporations free rein to manufacture shoddy products that can wound or maim, so long as the product is approved by a regulatory agency (and even though corporations routinely work to water-down regulatory safety standards), even if the corporation knew the product was dangerous. See also the ALEC Regulatory Compliance with Liability Act."
  • Draws from elements of the "Comparative Fault Act" and "Joint and Several Liability Act" in changing the standards for apportioning fault to corporations.
  • Extends liability protections to the nursing home industry (which supported Walker in the election), similar to ALEC bills such as the "Non-Economic Damages Act," limiting awards in cases involving for long-term skilled nursing home providers.

After Governor Walker changed the rights of injured Wisconsin residents, ALEC publicly applauded his actions.
For a marked-up version of Wis Act 2 noting the relevant ALEC bills, click here.


For an updated look at ALEC's "tort reform" agenda in Wisconsin, see the Center for Media and Democracy's in-depth report, "ALEC Exposed in Wisconsin: The Hijacking of a State."


This information is available for download as a one-page fact sheet here.

Did you know about ALEC and . . .

Limiting Damages for the Loss of Your Child, Spouse, or Parent

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One of the corporate-politician proposals of ALEC would limit the ability of a family to recover for emotional damages due to the death or injury of a loved one. This type of legislation basically makes working class or poor people's lives -- as well as the elderly -- worth less to their families because any damages for pain and suffering due to the death of a child, spouse, or parent would be limited to an amount equal to twice their loved one's lost earnings. These kinds of corporate provisions try to prevent a jury of YOUR peers from awarding you damages for all you have lost or suffered, AFTER a jury finds that your loved one's death was the result of corporate negligence, misconduct, or greed.

Is a local legislator who was elected to represent YOU actually protecting the profits of global corporate wrongdoers through such legislation instead of YOU and YOUR FAMILY?

Barring Corporate Liability for Killing Your Dog or Cat

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In addition to limiting the rights of people injured by corporations, under the guise of limiting "frivolous" litigation, one ALEC resolution from 2006 supports making it harder for you to obtain any compensation from a company whose negligence killed your family pet. In 2009, Americans learned that many U.S. pet food companies had shipped the production of food for their four-legged companions overseas and that Chinese contractors had contaminated the pet food with melamine to increase profit margins, resulting in serious injuries and death to numerous dogs and cats in the U.S.

If passed in your state, ALEC's corporation-backed proposal would make it very difficult for YOU to recover any damages for the loss of your beloved animal companion due to corporate negligence or misconduct in manufacturing pet food.


Oh, the Hypocrisy!

Despite ALEC's efforts to limit the rights of injured Americans to vindicate their losses through personal injury lawsuits, ALEC's then-Executive Director, Duane Parde, brought a tort lawsuit against his own orthopedic surgeon for malpractice in 2002, according to the American Association for Justice. Parde demanded $250,000 in damages, alleging he "suffered permanent injury and damage, sustained and continues to sustain conscious pain and suffering, loss of quality of life, and otherwise incurred and continues to incur losses and expenses."


This information is available for download as a one-page fact sheet here.

More Helpful Resources HERE

Additional resources on ALEC's corporate agenda:


READ the "Model Bills" HERE

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Click here for a zip file of bills relating to Tort Reform, Corporate Liability, and the Rights of Injured Americans


Full list.png

For a full list of individual bills from this section, click here


For descriptions of some of these bills, scroll up or click here

Search the Tobacco Library

ALEC, tort reform, and ALEC corporations are also discussed in the tobacco library, the archive of internal tobacco industry documents. Additionally, a search for a term like "Koch Industries" -- a long-time funder of ALEC-- reveals numerous documents of interest.

<tdo>search_term="American Legislative Exchange Council" and "tort reform" </tdo>
(Searching here will take you to a third-party website not connected to ALEC Exposed.)


Read more about the ALEC "tort reform" agenda at prwatch.org, and see the Center for Justice & Democracy's 2010 "America's Worst Top Model" report.

Learn MORE about the "Model Bills" ALEC Corporations Are Backing to Rewrite YOUR Rights

The Center for Media and Democracy analyzed the bills ALEC politicians and corporations voted for. More analysis is available below and also at ALEC Exposed's sister sites, PRWatch and SourceWatch.

Join the Conversation!

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