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Latest Insurance Industry Propaganda Seeks to Eliminate Corporate Accountability
Tillinghast Towers Perrin Estimate of Cost of the Tort System is “A Wild Exaggeration” and “Sketchy at Best” According to Independent Analysis

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(Monday, March 13, 2006 -Washington DC)—In response to new propaganda from Tillinghast Towers Perrin (TTP), an insurance industry consulting firm, Ken Suggs, President of the Association of Trial Lawyers of America (ATLA), today issued the following statement:

“The civil justice system holds negligent corporations and CEOs accountable when they endanger the public’s health and safety to increase corporate profits – it’s no wonder they’ll use phony studies to attack it.

“The real costs are created by those who cause injuries, not by those who are injured through no fault of their own – the truth is some corporations put their bottom line before the health and safety of the public, and the civil justice system is the last resort for Americans to hold them accountable.

“When a child is injured because Firestone refused to pull exploding tires from the market, or when a company like Enron decides to cook the books at the expense of shareholders, that's the cost of corporate negligence and fraud – and without the civil justice system, those costs would fall on victims or the taxpayers.

“This study is as valid as Enron’s quarterly accounting statements.”

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Past “Tort Tax” Studies from Tillinghast-Towers Perrin Have been Widely Discredited and called a “Wild Exaggeration”

Today, Tillinghast Towers Perrin (TTP), an insurance industry consulting firm, will release an updated version of their study that purports to measure the so-called “litigation tax” – the costs associated with the U.S. tort system. If past editions of this study are any indication, the updated version will contain the same flawed methodology that led Business Week magazine to call a previous version a “wild exaggeration.” Indeed, the Wall Street Journal has reported that the updated study “include[s] payment that don’t involve the legal system at all.”

  • TTP Study Has Been Widely Discredited; Business Week Called it a “Wild Exaggeration.” The 2005 edition of the TTP study was widely discredited because it includes the cost of the insurance industry – multimillion dollar salaries for insurance CEOs, rent on office buildings, and administration overhead – in the “cost” of lawsuits. Business Week editorialized that the study “includes everything from payouts for fender-benders to the salaries of insurance industry CEOs. It's a wild exaggeration.”[1] And as Washington Monthly magazine has noted, the 2004 edition of the TTP study didn’t even include costs associated with running the courts: “…the insurance-industry consulting firm Tillinghast-Towers Perrin (TTP), …includes in its definition of the ‘tort system’ insurance company administrative costs and overhead and the salaries of highly paid insurance company CEOs (Maurice ‘Hank’ Greenberg, chairman of AIG, one of the world's largest insurance companies, makes $29 million a year). One thing TTP doesn't include: court budgets, which makes its study seem a lot more like an assessment of the insurance industry than of the legal system.”[2]

  • Congressional Quarterly Called Conclusions of TTP Study “Sketchy at Best.” Congressional Quarterly Weekly magazine did an entire story describing the evidence behind the figures cited by President Bush in his call for legal restrictions “sketchy at best.” They examined the “tort tax” figure and found, “Nearly all the assertions about the growing cost of the tort system are based on the figures from just one actuarial and management consulting firm, Tillinghast Towers-Perrin, that works for the insurance industry, which has a stake in limiting lawsuits. … The company’s estimates of tort costs include the insurance industry’s administrative expenses and payments on claims that never involve courts or lawyers, such as auto collisions.”[3]

  • TTP Admitted that Past Study Not a Reflection of the Tort System. After being criticized for the methodology, TTP was forced to admit in their 2005 edition that “the costs tabulated in this study are not a reflection of litigated claims or of the legal system.”[4]

  • The Study’s Primary Author Said Study Used in a Misleading Way. Russ Sutter, primary researcher for the study, admitted in 2005 that tort-reform advocates use the data “in a way that's probably misleading.”[5]

  • Analysis of Past Studies Revealed Flawed Data. A May 2005 report[6] from the Economic Policy Institute (EPI), a nonprofit, nonpartisan think tank in Washington D.C. revealed that TTP's reports are one-sided, exaggerating the impact of the tort system and ignoring its benefits, and that evidence supporting them is shaky or nonexistent. Claims that the tort system harms the U.S. economy do not square with the data. In fact, there is a good deal of evidence to the contrary. EPI's careful examination concludes that nearly half of the “costs” of the tort system described in the Tillinghast study are actually payments made to from wrongdoers to injured people for lost wages, property damage, or medical care – costs that are the result of injuries caused by the defendants and would be borne by society one way or another, whether by government programs or charities, or absorbed by the victims and their families.

  • Wall Street Journal: New Version of TTP Study “Includes Payments that Don’t Involve the Legal System at All.” The Wall Street Journal previewed the new version of the TTP report, and noted that it includes costs that are not part of the legal system: “…critics of past years' studies -- and there are many -- say the number and the projections that come with it are deeply flawed. For instance, they include payments that don't involve the legal system at all. Say somebody smashes his car into the back of your new SUV and his insurance company sends you a $5,000 check to fix the damage. That gets counted as a tort cost in Tillinghast's number. Critics say it's just a transfer payment from somebody who wasn't driving carefully to somebody who has been legitimately wronged. How is that evidence of a system run amok?”[7]

  • Bush Administration Statistics Show that the Number of Federal Tort Trials is Down Nearly 80 Percent Since 1985. This summer the Bush Justice Department reported that the number of tort (personal injury) cases resolved in U.S. District Courts fell by 79 percent between 1985 and 2003. In 1985, 3,600 tort trials were decided by a judge or jury in U.S. District Courts. By 2003, that number had dropped to less than 800.[8]

  • The Number of State Tort Trials is Decreasing. According to the most recent statistics from the Bureau of Justice Statistics, the number of tort trials at the state level has decreased. These statistics were compiled as part of the Bureau’s survey of state civil justice systems in the nation’s largest 75 counties. Among these counties, the number of tort trials decreased 31.8% between 1992 and 2001.[9] [“Civil Trial Cases and Verdicts in Large Counties, 2001”, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 4/04]


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[1] “How Partisanship Puts Big Solutions Out Of Reach,” Business Week editorial, 3/14/05

[2] “False Alarm,” Stephanie Mencimer, Washington Monthly, October 2004

[3] “‘Tort Reform’ Battle: A Simple Case of Complexity,” Congressional Quarterly Weekly, 1/29/05

[4] “U.S. Tort Costs: 2004 Update,” Tillinghast-Towers Perrin at 4

[5] “Tort issue creates a tussle,” Kansas City Star, 5/18/05

[6] “The frivolous case for tort law change; Opponents of the legal system exaggerate its costs, ignore its benefits,” Lawrence Chimerine and Ross Eisenbrey, The Economic Policy Institute, 5/17/05; http://www.epi.org/content.cfm/bp157; (202) 775-8810

[7] “Math Divides Criticas As Startling Toll of Torts Is Added Up,” Wall Street Journal, 3/13/06

[8] “Federal Tort Trials and Verdicts, 2002-03”, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 8/17/05

[9] “Civil Trial Cases and Verdicts in Large Counties, 2001”, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 4/04

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As the world's largest trial bar, ATLA promotes justice and fairness for injured persons, defends the constitutional right to trial by jury, and strengthens the civil justice system through education and disclosure of information critical to public health and safety. With 60,000 members worldwide, ATLA provides lawyers with the information and professional assistance they need to serve clients successfully and protect the democratic values of the civil justice system.

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