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Cabraser is one of the nation's leading personal injury law firms
representing clients nationwide in personal injury lawsuits involving
dangerous drugs, medical devices, and other products. |
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News Article Excerpt |
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| July 17, 2005 |
The Detroit News, "Danger Under the Hood; A little girl dies; attention turns to a faulty Ford part; More than 500 fires reported in pickups, SUVs; probe centers on cruise-control switch" |
The noise woke Tanika Washington just before dawn, a sound like heavy raindrops beating on the roof.
But when she sat up in bed, she realized it was the crackling of fire.
"I think something's burning," she said to her husband, Juan. "I think the house is on fire."
And when Juan opened their bedroom door, a wall of fire was on the other side, raging through the hallway of their split-level home. In the minutes that followed, the house in northern Georgia burned to the ground, and four members of the Washington family escaped with their lives.
But Blake Washington, the couple's 4-year-old daughter, died in her bed in the blaze on New Year's Day 2004, the victim of what baffled local investigators said was a fire of undetermined origin.
Nobody suspected that clues may have existed in the smoldering remains of the family's 2001 Ford F-150 pickup until a federal investigation of Ford vehicle fires became public earlier this year.
With millions of Ford pickups and SUVs now under scrutiny for dangerous fires, the Washington case may prove to be a tragic example of the consequences of a hidden automotive defect.
On Friday, the Washington family filed a wrongful death suit in a Georgia state court against Ford Motor Co., alleging that a defective cruise-control deactivation switch in the F-150 caused the fire that killed Blake.
"We expect to prove that the physical evidence is consistent with the fire originating in the Ford," said Mark Chalos of the law firm Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein in Nashville, Tenn. For Blake Washington's parents, the lawsuit is all about getting to the truth behind the tragedy that changed their lives forever. "We lost a child and nothing's going to bring her back, no amount of money," said Tanika Washington. "I want somebody to give a damn that we lost our baby."
For more information on vehicle fires and this case in particular, please visit our stand-alone website covering vehicle dangers, defects and injuries, http://www.vehicle-injuries.com. |
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| Lieff
Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein, LLP is a fifty-plus
attorney law firm that has represented plaintiffs nationwide
since 1972. We have offices in San Francisco, New York
and Nashville. We represent plaintiffs in class and
group actions and in individual lawsuits in cases involving
substantial losses. For the last five years, the National
Law Journal has selected Lieff
Cabraser as one of the top plaintiffs' law firms in
the nation. |
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Cabraser attorneys provide legal advice and practice law for clients in
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