In this introductory course, class counsel Susan Chana Lask provides a step by step approach to filing a class action case. Learn whether your case will qualify, what the effect of filing is and how the court certifies the case as a class action. In addition, this course covers FRCP 23 and offers tips and strategies that will help any attorney understand the basics of filing and defending a class action lawsuit.
Susan Chana Lask is a New York licensed attorney with over 20 years experience nationwidein State and Federal Courts and Appellate Courts. In 2005, she was admitted to the United StatesSupreme Court by invitation of New York Law School. She was appointed in a quasi-judicialposition by the State of New York as a surrogate judge for the mentally handicapped. Sheconducted trials and made judgments in New York City’s Civil Court as an arbitrator in casesranging from airline negligence to attorney malpractice. She is a major media commentator namedin the media as New York’s “High-Powered attorney”. In the late ‘80’s, she organized, digested andprepared for trial complex litigation class action cases at the prestigious Rivkin, Radler, Dunne &Bayh’s hazardous waste insurance defense department, including the Agent Orange and MortonThiokol cases. In 2001, her class action Paul v. New York State Dept. Of Motor Vehicles, et. al.resulted in the City of New York agreeing to remove an unjust traffic violation law. On March 20,2008, she was the first attorney to argue and win class certification against two New Jersey countyprisons for violating constitutional rights of non-criminal arresstees by blanket strip searching them.Personally, her prized class action achievement was her single handedly taking on the drugmanufacturer Sanofi- Aventis to change their warnings on the sleep medication Ambien. When noother attorney would help because they did not see money at the end of the case, Ms. Lask steppedup and filed the class action in March, 2006 with plaintiff Janet Maikenen for the rights of tens ofthousands of people claiming injuries. Ms. Lask appeared on major media outlets nationwidevowing that she would not stop until the warnings were corrected. NewsWeek, The New YorkTimes, CNN and more covered Ms. Lask’s case. By December, 2006 the FDA investigated theclaims and on March 14, 2007 the FDA ordered 13 sleep medication manufacturers, includingSanofi-Aventis, to post proper warnings that sleep-walking, sleep-eating and other reactions couldoccur; the exact warnings Ms. Lask advocated for. Although not a dime was won, Ms. Lask is proudto have made the public aware of the issue and obtain the very warnings she demanded in thecomplaint not just against the defendant, but resulting against many manufacturers. Subsequently,people have been helped from Ms. Lask’s Ambien action, including her consulting pro bono in aCalifornia case where criminal charges were dismissed against a young man because her workproved a sleep medication caused his behavior.
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