When it came to arguing for Tort Reform, Senator Trent Lott was one of the more strident voices in Washington. Will his treatment by State Farm after Hurricane Katrina change his position?

Practice Areas

Library

Car Accidents

Have you been served a subpoena? Information on being a witness.

Article by a Local Doctor Discussing Neck Injuries and "Whiplash."

Serving the Mayor of Washington D.C.

Cell Phones and Car Accidents in Maryland, D.C. and Virginia

There Are Safe Cars, and There Are American Cars

Pedestrian & Bicycle Accidents

WMATA: Who's Driving the Bus?

Motorcycle Accidents

Be Safe and Share the Road With Motorcyclists

Insurance Practices, Claims and Coverage Issues

Maryland Legislature Passes Much Needed Litigation Reform for Uninsured Motorist Claims

GEICO's Advertising Blitz: What the Lizard Won't Tell You

Colossus Software: High-Tech Solutions for Lowball Settlements

The Harsh Education of Trent Lott

Hurricane Katrina: Seventeen Months and Counting

Defective Products & Consumer Protection

OxyContin: Pharmaceutical Company Addicts Thousands for Profit

The FDA: Is There a Doctor In The House?

Cheap Foreign Goods May Have Hidden Costs

RC2: Recall the Right Way

Big Pharma Gets New Federal Testing Guidelines

Medical Malpractice

Your Rights are Threatened by Limits on Medical Malpractice Recoveries

The Medical Malpractice "Crisis" Revisited

Professor Phillip Peters, Article on Medical Malpractice Suits

New Report Shows Medical Malpractice Insurers Price Gouging and Driving up Costs

Doctors Shouldn't Sleep On The Job

Wrongful Death

Secondary Impacts in Sports Can Kill

Plane Crashes, Injuries and Deaths

TWA Flight 800: Ten Years and Nothing has Changed

Personal Injury Documents

Why You Should Choose Lewis & Tompkins to Represent You

Attorney Resources

Civil Rules of Civil Procedure - D.C. Superior Court

Litigation Forms

D.C. Superior Court Multidoor Dispute Resolution Forms and Instructions

Preparing for a Deposition

D.C. Casefilexpress Filing Instructions

Pattern Discovery

Judge Wetzel's Discovery Checklist for Virginia Trial Attorneys

General

Preparing for a Deposition

Insurance Company Phone Numbers!

The Use of Presentation Technology in the Courtroom

Veterans Administration Identity Theft: Inexcusable Negligence

Insurance Companies Deny Claims, Reality

view all

The Harsh Education of Trent Lott

Senator Trent Lott on Tort Reform:

"You know, obviously we should [enact tort reform]...Someday it will happen, and the sooner the better." - 1/24/01

"The Democrats seem to think that the answer is a lawsuit. Sue everybody." - 7/20/01

"It's sue, sue, sue... That's not the answer."- 8/4/01

"I'm among many Mississippi citizens who believe tort reform is needed."- 5/8/02

"If their answer to everything is more lawsuits, then yes, that's a problem, because I certainly don't support that." - 8/2/02

These quotes were all compiled by a group called the Center for Justice and Democracy, and they all very obviously reflected Senator Trent Lott’s stance on tort reform. He was for it. He thought lawsuits against insurers and manufacturers and pharmaceutical companies were bad for business, and a problem that needed to be addressed.

At least until September of 2005.

Senator Lott found out about how insurance companies treat their customers the hard way. When his $400,000 beach house in Mississippi was wiped out in Hurricane Katrina, he presented his claim to State Farm. When State Farm denied the claim, Senator Lott decided that “…sue, sue, sue” in fact WAS the answer.

In an article in the New York Times, the Senator says that he was shocked by State Farm’s “insensitivity and outright meanness” in the rejection of so many claims. He also found that the insurance contracts that he signed were loaded with what he called “a bunch of subterfuges,” which made the contracts difficult for lawyers (or apparently Senators) to understand. He then filed a lawsuit against State Farm.

To Mr. Lott we can only say “Welcome to the real world.”

While we certainly don’t find any joy in Mr. Lott’s predicament, we hope that this first hand experience with how insurance companies treat their customers will help him re-think his positions. Most of that tort-reform legislation that he supports was written by the very industry that denied his claim. The insurance industry also denied the claims of thousands of other Americans after Katrina, and they routinely deny claims after a car accident, or a house fire, or any event in which they are expected to actually live up to their financial obligations. All tort reform legislation does it make it even easier for insurers to do what they already do, which is deny, stall, and offer settlements that are worth only fractions of what would be right or necessary.

We hope Mr. Lott is successful in his lawsuit. We hope that he gets full value for his damaged house. And, most importantly, we hope he remembers that most of us AREN’T Senators, and don’t carry the weight of that position into our lives. When WE get denied or damaged by insurance companies, filing lawsuits turns out to be our only choice. Legislation that makes it harder to do that won’t help the average American at all, but it would certainly help the same people that told Mr. Lott to read the fine print when he asked them to deliver.

Ask an Attorney

Name:

Phone:

Email:

Tell us more:


Lewis & Tompkins
927 15th Street N.W., 9th Floor
Washington, DC 20005

Phone: 202-296-0666

Resources

Car Accidents

view all

Motorcycle Accidents

view all

Truck Accidents

view all

Insurance Practices, Claims and Coverage Issues

view all

Traumatic Brain and Spinal Cord Injuries

view all

Defective Products & Consumer Protection

view all

Medical Malpractice

view all

Wrongful Death

view all

Plane Crashes, Injuries and Deaths

view all

Attorney Resources

view all

Maryland Courts

view all

Washington D.C. Courts

view all

Virginia Courts

view all

Research and Issues

view all

Attorneys in Other States

view all

Client Resources

view all

General

view all