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Claims Management – Fighting Fraudulent Lawsuits with RICO: Two recent lawsuits aggressively using RICO may be the new model for fighting back

Businesses and insurers often deal with fraudulent lawsuits. Two recent lawsuits, aggressively using the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), may be the new model for fighting back. Read more >>

Businesses and insurers often deal with fraudulent lawsuits. Two recent lawsuits, aggressively using the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), may be the new model for fighting back. <a href="/in-the-news/fighting-fraudulent-lawsuits-with-rico-two-recent-lawsuits-aggressively-using-rico-may-be-the-new-model-for-fighting-back">Read more >></a>

Businesses and insurers often deal with fraudulent lawsuits. Two recent lawsuits, aggressively using the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), may be the new model for fighting back.

In a recent op-ed written for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, American Tort Reform Association President Tiger Joyce states, “Many personal injury lawyers have come to believe that there is minimal risk in promulgating fraudulent lawsuits.” Citing a 2013 Wall Street Journal opinion article entitled, “The Economic Truth About Lying,” by author and attorney Matthew L. Lifflander, Joyce notes that “his interviews over several years with ‘personal-injury trial lawyers about their actual experience with perjury or fraudulent documents in litigation’ suggest that ‘at least 25 percent of cases’ may include elements of perjury or fraud.” Some, including Lifflander, have proposed forward-thinking reforms that contain a statutory civil tort for litigants damaged by the untruthful. Joyce points out that such reforms will require actions by politicians and judges.

Instead of looking to the future, CSX Transportation and Chevron have aggressively used existing RICO statutes to file lawsuits that punish attorneys and others for filing and prosecuting fraudulent lawsuits.

Using RICO

The RICO Act was originally enacted in 1970 as a powerful tool for criminal prosecutors to fight organized crime. Since then, the statute has evolved into a much broader remedy to address private civil wrongs. RICO can be an effective weapon for companies facing fraudulent litigation, since it gives them control of the means to penalize attorneys who are responsible for fraudulent lawsuits. The law permits private parties to sue someone for engaging in a racketeering enterprise in which wire fraud, mail fraud, or other illegal acts are involved.

Chevron Corporation v. Donziger

In 2011, an Ecuadorian court entered an $18.2 billion judgment against Chevron Corporation in an action brought by 47 individuals referred to as the Lago Agrio Plaintiffs (LAPs). In February 2011, Chevron filed an action in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York against the LAPs, their lead U.S. attorney Steven Donziger, his firm, and others involved in the Agrio litigation. Chevron claimed that the judgment was the product of fraud and that acts associated with its procurement are significant parts of a pattern of racketeering activity in violation of RICO. The pattern included extortion, wire fraud, money laundering, and obstruction of justice.

The RICO and fraud claims rest on the allegations that Donziger and others substantially executed, funded, and directed a scheme to extort and defraud Chevron, which included fabricating evidence, corrupting and intimidating the Ecuadorian judiciary to obtain a tainted judgment, influencing U.S. public officials with false representations to cause them to investigate Chevron, making false statements to U.S. courts, and intimidating and tampering with witnesses in U.S. court proceedings to cover up their improper activities. Similar to the CSX litigation, the defendants filed motions to dismiss.

While some of Chevron’s claims were dismissed, the RICO claims were allowed to proceed. The trial of those claims began in October 2013 as a bench trial in front of Judge Lewis Kaplan and has not been concluded as of the writing of this article.

Regardless of the outcome in these cases, RICO allegations survived pre-trial motions for a determination on the merits of the case. Using RICO may not be the answer to every fraudulent suit that is filed, but at least two companies have successfully used RICO to fight back in significant cases involving fraud.

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Members of indigenous communities in the Amazon in Ecuador would like to know: What happened to the more than $20M reportedly raised on their behalf by now-disbarred NY lawyer Steven Donziger? #FollowtheMoney
https://t.co/z9Zcht7zgh
#Factsmatter: An international arbitration panel found ‘no cogent evidence’ supporting #Ecuador’s claim that #Texaco failed to comply with terms of remediation in #Amazon. https://t.co/7TqQ6sJhik
The @WSJ sums this case up nicely, “[Steven Donziger] and his team fabricated evidence, promised $500,000 to an #Ecuadorean judge to rule in their favor, ghostwrote much of the final verdict and took other actions that ‘perverted’ the course of #justice. Mr. Donziger disputes the… https://t.co/soQ1qreULA
Shameless. Disbarred and convicted of criminal contempt of court for bribing an Ecuadorian judge in an attempted extortion scheme, @SDonziger is nonetheless accepting invitations to speak at #climate rallies. Read more about this adjudicated racketeer: https://t.co/5eac0lRmN7
Sworn testimony: While Texaco met its environmental obligations in the Amazon, #Ecuador’s national oil company did “absolutely nothing” to address its own remediation in the area. #FactsMatter:
https://t.co/7TqQ6sJhik

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