San Diego Union-Tribune

ATTORNEYS IN CONDO COLLAPSE SEEK $100M

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Attorneys who worked to secure settlement­s topping $1 billion in the collapse of a beachfront Florida condominiu­m building in which 98 people died are requesting about $100 million in fees and costs, according to a new court filing.

The total represents a discount of as much as $200 million compared with the amounts typically charged by lawyers in major class-action lawsuits, Miami attorney Philip Freidin said in the document. The settlement­s also avoid court battles that could have taken years and cost even more.

Freidin was asked to recommend fees for 132 attorneys who worked more than 34,000 hours on the lawsuits that followed the June 24, 2021, collapse of the Champlain Towers South building in Surfside, Fla. The settlement­s for wrongful death and property loss were announced in May.

The total of about $100 million is reasonable “given that this litigation is among the most difficult, complex, and high-profile class actions I have witnessed in 53 years of practicing law,” Freidin said in the filing. “But no one expected this kind of result, ever. It’s unpreceden­ted. And without this team, it would not have happened.”

The final amount of fees and costs will be determined by Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Michael Hanzman, who has already given preliminar­y approval to the victim settlement­s negotiated by the lawyers. The money would come from those settlement­s, which total more than $1.02 billion.

A fairness hearing to allow people to comment on the settlement­s is set for June 23.

“The court will determine what an appropriat­e fee is, likely after holding a hearing and after the individual victims receive their individual awards,” attorneys Harley Tropin and Rachel Furst said in an email.

And the legal work is not yet done. Each person who files a claim for a share of the settlement­s is entitled to an individual hearing on their amount, which could last into August. It’s not immediatel­y clear if additional fees would be charged out of the settlement­s for lawyers in those hearings.

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