Thursday, June 5, 2008

Our Attorney Profile - Ryan Kroll

Current Employment Position

Associate

Areas of Practice

Land Use Planning-Liquor Law
Administrative/Governmental Relations
Appellate Law
Constitutional Law
Civil Litigation-Business
Personal Injury

Bar Admissions

California, 2005

Litigation Percentage:

100% of Practice Devoted to Litigation Matters

Education

University of Florida Levin College of Law, Gainesville, Florida, 2004, J.D. Magna Cum Laude

Honors: Florida Law Review

Order of the Coif

University of Florida Fischer School of Accounting, Gainesville, Florida, 2004, Master of Accounting

University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, 2000, B.S.

Major: Accounting

Licenses

Florida Certified Public Accountant - Inactive Status

Contact Information:

426 Culver Blvd., Playa del Rey, CA 90293

Phone
(310)822-9848
(800)405-4222

Fax:
(310)822-3512

E-mail:
rkroll@ssjlaw.com

Friday, May 30, 2008

62-Year-Old Salesperson Fired for Having Leukemia is Awarded $582,000 by Jury

The jury found that the defendant employer acted with malice, oppression and fraud, thus entitling him to punitive damages.

This was an employment discrimination case that also raised issues involving violations of the American Disabilities Act. It was tried by Stephen Allen Jamieson before a jury in Los Angeles Superior Court. The Honorable Ernest Williams presided over this case.

A 62-year-old gentleman was hired by a beverage company to be a route salesperson in the Los Angeles area. Three months after beginning his new job the plaintiff was diagnosed with chronic lymphatic leukemia. At that point in time, he had not yet satisfied his sales quota. He was subsequently fired.

No offer to settle was made prior to the trial. After 1 and ½ days of jury deliberation and after the judge told defendant to settle, the defendants finally made their first offer of $10,000.

The terminated employee rejected the offer. The jury returned with a verdict of $582,000. Based on the unconscionable acts of the employer shown to the jury by Mr. Jamieson throughout the trial, the jury also decided that the employer acted with malice, oppression and fraud, the necessary finding for punitive damages. The case settled the following morning in the courtroom just before the defendant was required to open up its books and records for a determination on the amount of punitive damages. The verdict was paid ten days later.

Friday, May 23, 2008

2008 ABC Seminar

SSJ Law Conducts Periodic Seminars on topics of interest to Alcohol Beverage Control Licensees and Discretionary Permit Holders at the State and Local levels. Clients and the general public are always welcome. Upcoming seminar is detailed below:

San Bernardino, California - May 29, 2008

2008 ABC Seminar Details
Topics: New Sales To Minors Penalties, New Abc Application Rules And Procedures, "New Director, New Chief Counsel, New Abc?”
1:00 to 3:00 p.m.
Hilton Hotel San Bernardino Map
285 E. Hospitality Lane, San Bernardino, California 92408
(510) 635-5300 (hotel information)
(619) 338-9848 (for reservations)

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Legal Help Live


800.405.4222





Solomon is a UCLA grad (UCLA Law) in law practice 40 years; Saltsman from USC (Loyola Law) was a prosecutor in the mid-70”s, Jamieson, also UCLA (Loyola Law) has been a trial lawyer for 20 years.

Ralph Barat Saltsman, Stephen Warrren Solomon and Stephen Allen Jamieson field KRLA listeners’ calls on legal issues from catastrophic personal injury to complaints about the post office losing a stamp; from how to find a criminal lawyer to represent a friend in a felony prosecution to how to get to visit a child not in that parent’s custody.

Solomon, Saltsman & Jamieson is a boutique law firm with many areas of expertise. The partners, STEPHEN WARREN SOLOMON, RALPH BARAT SATSMAN, STEPHEN ALLEN JAMIESON and RODNEY BRUCE EVANS have been profiled many times in legal periodicals as well as popular magazines and newspapers. They have hosted Legal Help Live on KRLA for aver 4 years as well as a weekly television show and provide professional commentary and topical articles in the press. Their experiences have been the subject of numerous newspaper articles. Solomon, Saltsman & Jamieson has collective experience in diverse areas of the law from Indian gaming to serious personal injury to land use to complex business litigation.

Your Hosts and Panelists:
Attorneys: Stephen Solomon/Ralph Saltsman/Stephen Jamieson

Listeners have called with questions on:

- Serious Traffic Accident Injuries
- Toxic Mold
- Medical and Dental Malpractice
- I.D. Theft
- Fraudulent Real Estate Transactions
- Elder Abuse
- Architect and Contractor Building Design and Construction Defects
- Truck Drive Traffic Tickets
- Bi-Coastal Divorce
- Employment Discrimination
- Child Custody Disputes
- Landlord - Tenant Disputes
- Probate and Estate Disputes
- Product Defects causing Personal Injury

Friday, May 16, 2008

Teenager Injured in Football Game Receives Jury Award of $7.57 Million for Missed Diagnosis by Treating Doctors

Stephen Allen Jamieson won a jury trial in the amount of $7.57 million dollars on behalf of a 19-year-old who had received a medical treatment far below the standard of care including a misdiagnosis of a bleed on his brain. This case was tried in Los Angeles County Superior Court, Southwest District (Torrance) before the Honorable Lois Smaltz.

In September 1995, the then 16-year-old plaintiff was practicing with his high school football team when he sustained several hard hits to the head from another player. In the evening his parents took him to the Urgent Care Center. The doctor failed to properly diagnose the problem as a concussion. There were no radiographic films done, no CT scan done. The doctor misdiagnosed the problem as dehydration and failed to place any definite limitation of the plaintiff’s participation in football over the next few days.

Two days later, the teenager collapsed on the playing field within a few minutes of the start of the football game. He was later diagnosed with a massive brain hemorrhage and was comatose for a month. He was left with brain damage resulting in loss of function in one arm and one leg and cognitive deficiencies.

Solomon, Saltsman and Jamieson filed a lawsuit for negligence against the school district as well as the doctor, the Urgent Care Center for which he worked, and the hospital that sponsored the Urgent Care Center.

The defendants in this action vigorously litigated this matter. There were over thirty depositions taken. Expert witnesses were required in many different fields such as athletic training, accident reconstruction, biomechanics, engineering and sports of psychology. The malpractice issue required the hiring of medical experts such as a neuropsychiatrists and psychologists. After more than two years, Mr. Jamieson and Stephen W. Solomon settled with the school district for $1,800,000.

Four months later Stephen Jamieson took the case against the urgent care doctor and his employers to trial before a superior court in Torrance, California. The medical issues were perceived by the defense to be the weaker portion of the case, particularly considering that Torrance is a relatively conservative jurisdiction, and that there are inherent difficulties associated with a medical malpractice action (i.e., MICRA limitations).

Therefore, the defense offered only $50,000 prior to trial. After three weeks in trial, Mr. Jamieson convinced the jury to return a verdict in the amount of $7,570,000.

Sunday, May 11, 2008

City TV Airs Legal Help Live

City TV Airs
Legal Help Live
Terence Lyons,
Santa Monica Mirror

If you associate live television only with the likes of Sid Caesar or Uncle Miltie, or you think the “live” in television died out in the late 1950s, think again. Legal Help Live has taken the drama and spontaneity of talk radio, added the thoughtfulness and some of the humor of a Steve Allen project and put it on television – on Santa Monica’s CityTV, channel 16 (and channel 36 in Los Angeles) to be exact.




The show features the lawyers of Solomon, Saltsman & Jamieson, a Westside firm that practices in a variety of legal fields (including even Indian gaming law; details below). Last week, this reporter had an opportunity to sit in “the studio” (also known as the Santa Monica City Council chambers) for an hour of on-air legal questions and answers, and to talk off-camera with the lawyers.

Legal Help Live is a one-hour show – airing Wednesdays at 4:00 p.m. – in which two partners from the firm field questions from telephone callers on everything from serious traffic accident injuries to identity theft to elder abuse. Last Wednesday, February 7, Brian from Santa Monica asked about a DUI, Joe from Sun Valley wanted an update on medical marijuana dispensaries and Amos inquired as to what could be done about potholes in the San Fernando Valley, among other calls.

The show began in 2000 as a radio program on KRLA in which firm lawyers presented a moderated debate on various legal subjects from week to week, explained partner Ralph Saltsman. The station began to get calls from listeners wanting to put questions to the lawyers, and so the show evolved into the call-in format in response to audience demand. That required less preparation time than the debates, the lawyers said, but it also required a lot of thinking-on-your-feet (or in-your-seat) in front of an open microphone.

Article referred to on broadcast

The call-in format on live television also provides an impromptu atmosphere and the opportunity for the lawyers to engage in entertaining riposte and repartee, whether it is on the subject of a caller’s question or current topics in the law which the lawyers themselves raise from time to time. Stephen Solomon, for example, tends to more conservative views (from favoring the death penalty to eating meat) while Ralph Saltsman leans more to the left. (And, lawyers being lawyers, this reporter imagines that they can create friendly disagreement on the spot.)

After the show had been on radio for about five years, CityTV manager Robin Gee and a colleague from LA’s cable channel 36 came to a studio session and later asked the firm to bring the show to television, where it has been for about two years now.

Senior partner Stephen Solomon has been practicing law since the 1960s, when he started in Santa Monica and officed in Ernie White’s insurance building at Arizona Avenue and Lincoln Boulevard. An early client who operated a local nightclub caused Solomon to develop some expertise in what lawyers call “ABC law” (as in, the California Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control), and when years later an American Indian tribe had a liquor license problem, he wound up developing expertise in Indian gaming law, and now represents several tribes.

The lawyers say that although they get “a lot of follow-up calls” from TV callers letting them know how the on-air advice worked out, the show has not really resulted in paying business to the law firm. Nevertheless, they keep the call-in telephone number live to their offices between shows, and younger associate lawyers in the firm offer advice and guidance to 25 or 30 callers a week. “We look upon it as a public service,” says partner Stephen Jamieson.

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Legal Help Live Hosted by Stephen Solomon, Ralph Saltsman and Stephen Jamieson

Weekly Television Show
Call on or off the air at (800) 405-4222

Viewers can receive answers to their legal questions on the call-in program “Legal Help Live”. Previous programs can be viewed anytime online at: www.la36.org/publica/publica.html

Broadcast times include...

Ch 36 - Los Angeles
Wednesdays 4pm (live)
Thursdays 4pm (replay)
Ch 16 - Santa Monica
Wednesdays 4pm (live)
Weekdays 4pm (replay)
Fridays 7pm (replay)
Sundays 4pm (replay)


Hosted by Stephen Solomon, Ralph Saltsman and Stephen Jamieson, attorneys from the Law Offices of Solomon, Saltsman and Jamieson, P.C., the program provides practical suggestions to callers as well as provides commentary and updates on current pending litigation of interest to the public.