Cripple Yourself While in Prison for Child Rape, Rake in the Americans with Disabilities Act Bucks
This from the L.A. Weekly is a couple of weeks old but only came to my attention today, an interesting story about a man in a wheelchair who has sued Los Angeles businesses nearly 1,000 times for violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Some details. Jon Carpenter had been a Sunday school teacher in Utah arrested for sexual abuse of a minor in incidents involving two 8-year-old girls. Then:
the day after he was sentenced in 1989, according to jail reports, Carpenter stood atop his bunk bed and dove head-first into the concrete floor. When a guard later asked if he'd jumped intentionally, Carpenter replied, "Yes, I did, it's better than being in this place for six months."
Two days later, the state of Utah informed Judge George E. Ballif that Carpenter was a permanent quadriplegic and asked that Ballif "suspend execution of the sentence until such time as the defendant has achieved medical stability," arguing that "further incarceration or therapy in this matter would serve little purpose and in any event is not appropriate at the present time."
So the wheelchair-bound Carpenter moved to Los Angeles and starting filing Americans with Disabilities Act lawsuits, nearly a thousand so far in L.A. County alone, 257 in 2012 alone.
According to David Peters, who heads Lawyers Against Lawsuit Abuse, Carpenter has sued 94 pharmacies for everything from steep ramps and failure to remodel access areas to lack of Braille or hearing-assistance technology for the blind and deaf.
Carpenter's hearing and vision, Peters says, were perfectly fine.
California is a rare state that lets people who allege an ADA violation personally win pots of cash in court — $4,000 minimum per violation, plus attorney's fees, which can reach tens of thousands of dollars.
Small businesses can be sued if the paper towel dispenser in the bathroom is too high; the customer counter is too tall; aisles are too narrow; or the grade of their wheelchair ramp is steeper than 3 percent.
But in California, defense attorney James Link says, those regulations run about 435 pages. "I had one case where the coat hook in the men's accessible stall at a P.F. Chang's was too high."….
"California is the only jurisdiction on the planet that has minimum financial damages for claims of this nature," Peters says, referring to the $4,000 floor. He estimates that 42 percent or more of the nation's ADA lawsuits are filed in California. "There are lawyers who have moved from other states just to file these lawsuits here," he says. "It's more profitable than [selling] narcotics."
According to Link, more than 3,000 ADA lawsuits were filed in L.A. County in the last three years — more than 1,700 of them by attorneys Morse Mehrban of L.A. and Mark Potter of San Diego's Center for Disability Access.
"I stand by every case," Potter says via email. "This is an important federal civil right that we are talking about."
Link scoffs. "If you're trying to clean up the stores and restaurants that you frequent, that's one thing. But if you are going to 1,000 different businesses … that's just trolling." (Mehrban, who didn't respond to the Weekly's calls, this year told ABC 7 News, "Isn't every lawsuit technically extortion?")
Technically! Carpenter's M.O.:
Carpenter and his current attorney, Potter, almost always target mini-malls or small businesses, which must create parking spots for special vans like the one he drives. They also must provide parking lot space for a wheelchair to be lowered, and special signage. Get a detail wrong — even the color of the sign — and Carpenter can sue for $4,000 and up.
"We didn't know that we needed a parking spot for a van," says Avi Hadid, owner of a mini-mall at Western Avenue and Washington Boulevard. He settled with the convicted child abuser for $10,000 — cheaper than hiring a lawyer. A friend of Hadid's, who owns a gas station, also was sued by Carpenter. "They say they're going to pay," Hadid says. "I'm sure he made so much money from that, this guy."
My 1995 Reason cover feature on the ADA's ability to gin up lawsuit money for nuisances while doing little to help those unable to walk, see, or hear (the people most in need of the costly adjustments that ADA often demands).
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BETTER CALL SAUL!!
my favorite one is the (paraphrased)...
"Flight 432 = a tragedy that has affected all of us in some way, be it lost family, friends, or falling debris. In moments like this, after the grieving and coming together, we all share the same thought = 'Who Can I Sue?'"
FTW
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7B-hSSiaEAw
I figure this one is more appropriate
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pPd67CEL54E
You know why sharks never attack Attorney Potter when he goes swimming?
Professional courtesy,
The ghost of Edward Kennedy and his ADA still haunts us today.
There's a guy in SF who has been doing the same. Haven't heard of him in a while, so I'm not sure if he quit (why would he?), or the judges found some sort of reason to stop the extortion.
We have several in LA. One sued my family for not having a properly signed disabled parking space on the property.
They fucked with the wrong people. Both the attorney and the plaintiff ended up paying us.
It pays to record everything on video.
Good for you.
Where again is the part of the Constitution that gives the federal government the power to determine how high a business's counter should be?
The same FYTW clause they use for everything else?
Oh, you want a serious answer? "Interstate commerce". Which is the same FYTW clause they use for everything else.
The FYTW clause.
Commerce Clause.
It was a rhetorical question. I know damn well it's the FYTW clause, which is what the ridiculous reading of the commerce clause has become. Unless you really believe the drafters of the Constitution intended to nullify the rest of the document by inserting a power to regulate "commerce among the several states", which really means fedgov can do anything they want because everything is somehow or other connected to "commerce".
And if you do you can be elected to congress.
The commerce clause only needed only final touch, the ability to regulate inactivity. But the invention of the penaltax fixed that for them.
Again - Example 2,234,076,364,i92 why I decline to even discuss any jobs located in Cali when the headhunters call. Worst workers comp, worst EVERYTHING as an employer. We're still working on moving our last parts depot out of there into Nevada.
How any business survives in that state is truly beyond me. Place is TFU for me...will not ever work there. Too bad it's so fucked up, cause it's SO beautiful...
How any business survives in that state is truly beyond me
Did you check into cronyism as a possibility?
This guy is another reason I believe the death penalty is way, way underused.
Someone could just call the police on this guy, claiming he's selling drugs out of his house. Either he'll catch a stray or he'll begin suing the police department.
Your Honor, there's no way you can possibly execute my client, the Execution Gurney is the wrong height.
+1 parking space
The two 8 year old girls should sue him for every penny he is getting and ever will get.
This guy came through Long Beach last year and sued a couple of bars I frequent. It's a damn shame this guy is able to operate this scam. Although in one bar, the men's restroom got a much needed renovation. So... No this guy still sucks.
Gee, I wonder which stores get hurt more: Mom and Pops or the Walmarts?
Lawyers say that all the hosts blood tastes the same.
"I had one case where the coat hook in the men's accessible stall at a P.F. Chang's was too high."....
Is that how Bloomberg got so rich?
What a horrible waste of a human being. It's a shame he didn't die.
At the very least a humiliation in the mold of a "Big Lebowski - you are faking it" type deal.
Nah, just push him into the alley, tip him over, splash some scalding melted PB on him and let the rats devour one of their own.
If his sentence was suspended until he was stabilized, why isn't he back in the pokey in Utah?
For raping little girls? Don't you know, they've potheads to lock up. Can't be wasting valuable prison space with child molesters.
Civil rights and special privileges are interchangeable terms now.
If I've got this straight, this dude molested two children and while in jail permanently injured himself and because he did so they let him go free? WTF?