Albuquerque Journal

Coronaviru­s lawsuits the nation’s next pandemic

- Diane Dimond www.DianeDimon­d.com; e-mail to Diane@ DianeDimon­d.com.

It is a sure bet that lots of lawyers have not stopped working during the stay-at-home pandemic quarantine. Judging from the number of COVID-19 related lawsuits that have been filed, lawyers may be the most fully employed of all the occupation­s, excluding health care workers.

The number of lawsuits stemming from the pandemic increases every day. Some of the suits seem legit; others appear farreachin­g, and some just make you mad.

Cities and towns are suing their governors for either not acting fast enough to issue a call for quarantine or not acting quickly enough to lift business restrictio­ns so communitie­s can try to get back to normal again.

Two states, Missouri and Mississipp­i, are suing China for unleashing the viral scourge and failing to warn the global population.

Students are suing their universiti­es for either remaining open too long, thus potentiall­y exposing them to COVID-19, or closing promptly and refusing to quickly offer tuition and room-and-board refunds.

Airlines and ticket brokers have been sued for canceling flights or events. Amusement parks, ski resorts and gyms have been sued for failure to refund customers pre-paid passes or membership­s. There are lawsuits against nursing homes alleging the wrongful deaths of elderly residents. Other suits decry the initial lack of protective gear for health care workers. Litigation has commenced against banks that first helped existing customers apply for federal loans ahead of others. Cruise lines have been sued, and so has FOX News after a host called the pandemic a “hoax.” A strip club sued for the right to get federal pandemic recovery money. The Target corporatio­n was sued for misleading claims about the germ-killing ability of its hand sanitizer.

Countless workers across the country are suing employers for “allowing” them to be exposed to the virus. Business owners are suing insurance companies for refusing to make them whole following mandatory government closures. But insurance carriers have been quick to point out that a majority of so-called “business interrupti­on insurance” covers loss of income due to fire, flood or other disasters but not loss of income because of viruses or bacteria.

However, take the case of the Houstonbas­ed Star Cinema Grill theater chain. It paid some $40,000 in premiums for a $1 million “pandemic event” insurance policy which, reportedly, promised to “vaccinate your bottom line” during an outbreak. Yet when the chain tried to collect, their attorney says, they were told COVID-19 losses were not covered because “It is not a named disease.” We’ll see how that plays out.

The sheer number of these lawsuits is out of control! And unless wise judges quash the questionab­le suits, attorneys will be busy litigating them for years.

We have adopted a philosophy in the U.S. that some person or entity must be held responsibl­e for every act of nature, accident, random crime or malady that befalls us. It is hard to say if the lawyers put this idea upon the citizenry or if the profession­al victims among us went crying to clever lawyers who saw a lucrative opening. But there it is — the new American motto: when something bad happens, someone must pay.

Trillions in federal money has been doled out to keep businesses afloat so American workers have jobs to go back to.

But think about it. Will shuttered-business owners take the risk of reopening if they are worried an employee who contracts the virus might then file a costly lawsuit blaming them for resuming operations too soon or for not being vigilant enough? Where does the personal responsibi­lity of the worker to keep themselves safe come in to play? Will some of the taxpayer-provided rescue money somehow be diverted to pay off such lawsuits?

This pandemic will pass, but it will leave many of us with lingering fears. In the meantime, it will continue to attract those who view this crisis as an opportunit­y to make money.

Yes, lawyers provide a valuable service. But, like any profession, there are the unscrupulo­us who manufactur­e reasons to file grievances, deliberate­ly target “deep pocket” businesses both large and small and file opportunis­tic claims with dollar signs in their eyes. These predatory practices are not new, but when they happen in times of national crisis, the perpetrato­rs should be ashamed.

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CRIME AND JUSTICE

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